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Hammer throw
Throwing event in track and field competitions
Throwing event in track and field competitions
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| event | Hammer throw |
| image | File:Hammer Throw (PSF).png |
| WRmen | URS Yuriy Sedykh (1986) |
| ORmen | URS Sergey Litvinov (1988) |
| CRmen | CAN Ethan Katzberg (2025) |
| WRwomen | POL Anita Włodarczyk (2016) |
| ORwomen | POL Anita Włodarczyk (2016) |
| CRwomen | POL Anita Włodarczyk (2015) |
the event in regular track and field competitions
The hammer throw (Abbreviated as HT) is one of the four throwing events in regular outdoor track-and-field competitions, along with the discus throw, shot put and javelin.
The hammer used in this sport is not like any of the tools also called by that name. It consists of a metal ball attached by a steel wire to a grip. These three components are each separate and can move independently. Both the size and weight of the ball vary between men's and women's events. The men's hammer weighs 7.26 kg for college and professional meets; the women's hammer weighs 4 kg.
History
Tradition traces it to the Tailteann Games in Tara, Ireland, around the year 1830 BC. Some time later the Celtic warrior Culchulainn reputedly took a chariot axle with a wheel still attached, spun it around and hurled it a long way. The wheel was later replaced by a rock with a wooden handle attached. A sledgehammer began to be used for the sport in Scotland and England during the Middle Ages. In current times, the hammer has changed to the more modern 16 lb. ball attached to a wire and a handle, but the Scottish hammer throw as seen in Highland Games still feature the older style of hammer throw with the rock and the solid wood handle.
While the men's hammer throw has been part of the Olympics since 1900, the International Association of Athletics Federations did not start ratifying women's marks until 1995. Women's hammer throw was first included in the Olympics at the 2000 summer games in Sydney, Australia, after having been included in the World Championships a year earlier.
Competition
The men's hammer weighs 7.26 kg and the women's weighs 4 kg, with the wire in either case no more than 122 cm in length. Like the other throwing events, the competition is decided by who can throw the implement the farthest.
The throwing motion starts with the thrower swinging the hammer back-and-forth about two times to generate momentum. The thrower then makes three, four or (rarely) five full rotations using a complex heel-toe foot movement, spinning the hammer in a circular path and increasing its angular velocity with each rotation. Rather than spinning the hammer horizontally, it is instead spun in a plane that angles up towards the direction in which it will be launched. The thrower releases the hammer as its velocity is upward and toward the target.
Throws are made from a throwing circle. The thrower is not allowed to step outside the throwing circle before the hammer has landed and may only enter and exit from the rear of the throwing circle. The hammer must land within a 34.92º throwing sector that is centered on the throwing circle. The sector angle was chosen because it provides a sector whose bounds are easy to measure and lay out on a field (10 metres out from the center of the ring, 6 metres across). A violation of the rules results in a foul and the throw not being counted.
the men's hammer world record is held by Yuriy Sedykh, who threw at the 1986 European Athletics Championships in Stuttgart, West Germany on 30 August. The world record for the women's hammer is held by Anita Włodarczyk, who threw during the Kamila Skolimowska Memorial on 28 August 2016. Sedykh's 1986 world record has been noted for its longevity, and for dating from "a time when track and field was starting to realize the scale of performance-enhancing drug use" (AP). According to Russian doping whistleblower Grigory Rodchenkov, Sedykh was a heavy user of steroids, which Sedykh denied.
The throwing distance depends on the velocity and height at which the hammer is released, but also on other factors that are not under the athlete's control. In particular, Earth's rotation affects it via the location's latitude (due to the centrifugal force, the hammer will fly a bit further in a location closer to the equator) and to a lesser extent also via the throw's azimuth (i.e. its compass direction, due to Coriolis forces). According to a 2023 study, such effects are large enough that the top 20 world-record rankings for both men and women at the time could somewhat change if they were adjusted for latitude and azimuth.
|File:Hammer throw.jpg |The traditional Highland games version of the event |File:2017 European Athletics U23 Championships, hammer throw women final2 15-07-2017.jpg |Thrower inside a hammer cage, with the markings for the throwing circle and the throwing sector visible on the ground |File:Scottish hammer throw illustration.jpg |Scottish hammer throw illustration from Frank R. Stockton's book Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy |File:John Flanagan.jpg |John Flanagan in the hammer throw competition at the Summer Olympics 1908 in London |File:Hammerthrow wire.jpg |The contemporary version of the hammer throw |File:Hammer Throw Practice.jpg |Athlete practicing the hammer throw event |File:Men's Hammer Throw Final - 28th Summer Universiade 2015 Gwangju.webm |Men's Hammer Throw Final – 28th Summer Universiade
Safety issues
Hammer throwing has been described as involving "inherent danger [...]. Athletes, coaches, and spectators participating in the event are at risk; steel hammers [...] are hurled through the air at great speeds, [travel] far distances, and [are] sometimes difficult to spot in flight." For example, hammer throws resulted in four deaths in Europe in 2000 alone, and have caused deaths and permanent brain damage injuries in the United States too.
To mitigate such risks, a C-shaped "hammer cage" was introduced, which is built around the throwing circle, preventing the hammer from flying off in unwanted directions. In 2004, the IAAF changed its rules to increase the mandatory height of hammer cages to 10m and reduce their "danger zone" angle to around 53°. The change also moved the cage gates further away from the throwing circle, thus reducing the risk of a misdirected hammer bouncing back on the thrower.
All-time top 25
| *- denotes top performance (only) for other top 25 athletes who fall outside the top 25 hammer throw marks* |
|---|
Men
- Correct as of September 2025.
| Ath.# | Perf.# | Mark | Athlete | Nation | Date | Place |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Yuriy Sedykh | 30 August 1986 | Stuttgart | ||
| 2 | Sedykh #2 | 22 June 1986 | Tallinn | |||
| 3 | Sedykh #3 | 3 July 1984 | Cork | |||
| 2 | 4 | Sergey Litvinov | 3 July 1986 | Dresden | ||
| 5 | Litvinov #2 | 30 August 1986 | Stuttgart | |||
| 6 | Sedykh #4 | 11 August 1986 | Budapest | |||
| 7 | Sedykh #5 | 13 July 1984 | London | |||
| Sedykh #6 | 17 August 1984 | Moscow | ||||
| 9 | Litvinov #3 | 3 July 1984 | Cork | |||
| 10 | Litvinov #4 | 11 July 1986 | London | |||
| Sedykh #7 | 4 September 1988 | Moscow | ||||
| 12 | Sedykh #8 | 20 August 1984 | Budapest | |||
| 13 | Sedykh #9 | 3 July 1986 | Dresden | |||
| 3 | 14 | Vadim Devyatovskiy | 21 July 2005 | Minsk | ||
| 15 | Litvinov #5 | 10 September 1986 | Rome | |||
| 4 | 16 | Koji Murofushi | 29 June 2003 | Prague | ||
| 17 | Litvinov #6 | 26 September 1988 | Seoul | |||
| 18 | Sedykh #10 | 9 July 1986 | Moscow | |||
| 5 | 19 | Ethan Katzberg | 16 September 2025 | Tokyo | ||
| 20 | Litvinov #7 | 9 July 1986 | Moscow | |||
| 6 | 21 | Igor Astapkovich | Belarus | 6 June 1992 | Seville | |
| 22 | Sedykh #11 | 14 September 1984 | Tokyo | |||
| 23 | Sedykh #12 | 8 June 1986 | Leningrad | |||
| 7 | 24 | Ivan Tsikhan | 9 July 2008 | Grodno | ||
| 8 | 25 | Igor Nikulin | 12 July 1990 | Lausanne | ||
| 9 | Jüri Tamm | 9 September 1984 | Banská Bystrica | |||
| 10 | Adrián Annus | 10 August 2003 | Szombathely | |||
| 11 | Paweł Fajdek | 9 August 2015 | Szczecin | |||
| 12 | Tibor Gécsek | 19 September 1998 | Zalaegerszeg | |||
| 13 | Andrey Abduvaliyev | 26 May 1990 | Adler | |||
| 14 | Aleksey Zagornyi | 10 February 2002 | Adler | |||
| 15 | Ralf Haber | 16 May 1988 | Athens | |||
| 16 | Szymon Ziółkowski | 5 August 2001 | Edmonton | |||
| 17 | Olli-Pekka Karjalainen | 14 July 2004 | Lahti | |||
| 18 | Bence Halasz | 12 August 2025 | Budapest | |||
| 19 | Rudy Winkler | 5 July 2025 | Eugene | |||
| 20 | Heinz Weis | 29 June 1997 | Frankfurt | |||
| 21 | Balázs Kiss | 4 June 1998 | Saint-Denis | |||
| 22 | Karsten Kobs | 26 June 1999 | Dortmund | |||
| 23 | Merlin Hummel | 16 September 2025 | Tokyo | |||
| 24 | Krisztián Pars | 16 August 2014 | Zürich | |||
| 25 | Günther Rodehau | 3 August 1985 | Dresden |
Annulled marks
- Ivan Tsikhan of Belarus also threw 86.73 in Brest on 3 July 2005. This performance was annulled due to doping offences.
Women
- Correct as of September 2025.
| Ath.# | Perf.# | Mark | Athlete | Nation | Date | Place |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Anita Włodarczyk | 28 August 2016 | Warsaw | ||
| 2 | Włodarczyk #2 | 29 July 2017 | Władysławowo | |||
| 3 | Włodarczyk #3 | 15 August 2016 | Rio de Janeiro | |||
| 4 | Włodarczyk #4 | 1 August 2015 | Władysławowo | |||
| 5 | Włodarczyk #5 | 27 August 2015 | Beijing | |||
| 6 | Włodarczyk #6 | 23 July 2017 | Białystok | |||
| 2 | 7 | Camryn Rogers | 15 September 2025 | Tokyo | ||
| 3 | 8 | DeAnna Price | 26 June 2021 | Eugene | ||
| 9 | Włodarczyk #7 | 12 July 2016 | Władysławowo | |||
| 4 | 10 | Brooke Andersen | 20 May 2023 | Tucson | ||
| 11 | Andersen #2 | 4 May 2024 | Tucson | |||
| 12 | Włodarczyk #8 | 15 August 2017 | Warsaw | |||
| Andersen #3 | 20 April 2023 | Charlottesville | ||||
| 14 | Włodarczyk #9 | 6 May 2017 | Doha | |||
| 15 | Włodarczyk #10 | 27 June 2017 | Ostrava | |||
| 16 | Włodarczyk #11 | 18 June 2016 | Szczecin | |||
| 17 | Włodarczyk #12 | 22 July 2018 | Lublin | |||
| 18 | Włodarczyk #13 | 31 August 2014 | Berlin | |||
| 19 | Włodarczyk #14 | 21 May 2016 | Halle | |||
| 20 | Włodarczyk #15 | 29 May 2016 | Forbach | |||
| 5 | 21 | Betty Heidler | 21 May 2011 | Halle | ||
| 22 | Andersen #4 | 24 May 2025 | Tucson | |||
| 23 | Andersen #5 | 8 June 2025 | Lucca | |||
| 24 | Andersen #6 | 30 April 2022 | Tucson | |||
| 25 | Andersen #7 | 17 July 2022 | Eugene | |||
| 6 | Rachel Richeson | 11 April 2025 | Ramona | |||
| 7 | Tatyana Lysenko | 5 July 2012 | Cheboksary | |||
| 8 | Janee' Kassanavoid | 21 May 2022 | Tucson | |||
| 9 | Gwen Berry | 8 June 2018 | Chorzów | |||
| 10 | Wang Zheng | 29 March 2014 | Chengdu | |||
| 11 | Zhao Jie | 15 September 2025 | Tokyo | |||
| 12 | Zhang Wenxiu | 28 September 2014 | Incheon | |||
| 13 | Aksana Miankova | 29 June 2008 | Minsk | |||
| 14 | Gulfiya Agafonova | 12 June 2006 | Tula | |||
| 15 | Zhang Jiale | 2 August 2025 | Quzhou | |||
| 16 | Krista Tervo | 11 June 2025 | Lahti | |||
| 17 | Oksana Kondratyeva | 30 June 2013 | Zhukovskiy | |||
| 18 | Hanna Skydan | 23 August 2023 | Budapest | |||
| 19 | Silja Kosonen | 15 March 2025 | Nicosia | |||
| 20 | Martina Hrašnová | 16 May 2009 | Trnava | |||
| 21 | Malwina Kopron | 26 August 2017 | Taipei City | |||
| 22 | Kamila Skolimowska | 11 May 2007 | Doha | |||
| 23 | Mariya Bespalova | 23 June 2012 | Zhukovsky | |||
| 24 | Volha Tsander | 21 July 2005 | Minsk | |||
| 25 | Yekaterina Khoroshikh | 24 June 2006 | Zhukovsky |
Annulled marks
The following athletes had their performances (over 77.00 m) annulled due to doping offences:
- Tatyana Lysenko (Russia) 78.80 (2013) and 78.15 (2013).
- Aksana Miankova (Belarus) 78.69 and 78.19 (both 2012).
- Gulfiya Agafonova (Russia) 77.36 (2007).
Olympic medalists
Men
Women
World Championships medalists
Men
Women
Season's bests
Men
| Year | Mark | Athlete | Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1971 | Walter Schmidt | Lahr | |
| 1972 | Anatoliy Bondarchuk | Kyiv | |
| 1973 | Anatoliy Bondarchuk | Moscow | |
| 1974 | Aleksey Spiridonov | Munich | |
| 1975 | Walter Schmidt | Frankfurt | |
| 1976 | Yuriy Sedykh | Sochi | |
| 1977 | Karl-Hans Riehm | Gelsenkirchen | |
| 1978 | Karl-Hans Riehm | Heidenheim | |
| 1979 | Sergey Litvinov | Leipzig | |
| 1980 | Yuriy Sedykh | Moscow | |
| 1981 | Klaus Ploghaus | Obersühl | |
| 1982 | Sergey Litvinov | Moscow | |
| 1983 | Sergey Litvinov | Moscow | |
| 1984 | Yuriy Sedykh | Cork | |
| 1985 | Jüri Tamm | Budapest | |
| 1986 | Yuriy Sedykh | Stuttgart | |
| 1987 | Sergey Litvinov | Karl-Marx-Stadt | |
| 1988 | Yuriy Sedykh | Moscow | |
| 1989 | Heinz Weis | Berlin | |
| 1990 | Igor Nikulin | Lausanne | |
| 1991 | Igor Astapkovich | Reims | |
| 1992 | Igor Astapkovich | Seville | |
| 1993 | Andrey Abduvaliyev | Nitra | |
| 1994 | Andrey Abduvaliyev | Budapest | |
| 1995 | Andrey Abduvaliyev | Tashkent | |
| 1996 | Lance Deal | Milan | |
| 1997 | Heinz Weis | Frankfurt | |
| 1998 | Tibor Gécsek | Zalaegerszeg | |
| 1999 | Karsten Kobs | Dortmund | |
| 2000 | Igor Astapkovich | Staiki | |
| 2001 | Koji Murofushi | Toyota | |
| 2002 | Aleksey Zagornyi | Adler | |
| 2003 | Koji Murofushi | Prague | |
| 2004 | Ivan Tsikhan | Minsk | |
| 2005 | Vadim Devyatovskiy | Minsk | |
| 2006 | Vadim Devyatovskiy | Minsk | |
| 2007 | Ivan Tsikhan | Osaka | |
| 2008 | Ivan Tsikhan | Grodno | |
| 2009 | Primož Kozmus | Celje | |
| 2010 | Koji Murofushi | Rieti | |
| 2011 | Krisztián Pars | Szombathely | |
| 2012 | Ivan Tsikhan | Brest | |
| 2013 | Krisztián Pars | Dubnica | |
| 2014 | Pawel Fajdek | Warsaw | |
| 2015 | Pawel Fajdek | Szczecin | |
| 2016 | Pawel Fajdek | Bydgoszcz | |
| 2017 | Pawel Fajdek | Ostrava | |
| 2018 | Wojciech Nowicki | Székesfehérvár | |
| 2019 | Wojciech Nowicki | Poznań | |
| 2020 | Rudy Winkler | Wallkill | |
| 2021 | Pawel Fajdek | Chorzów | |
| 2022 | Wojciech Nowicki | Munich | |
| 2023 | Wojciech Nowicki | Oslo | |
| 2024 | Ethan Katzberg | Nairobi | |
| 2025 | Ethan Katzberg | Tokyo |
Women
| Year | Mark | Athlete | Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Carol Cady | Los Gatos | |
| 1989 | Yelena Pichugina | Frunze | |
| 1990 | Larisa Baranova | Adler | |
| 1991 | Alla Davydova | Adler | |
| 1992 | Olga Kuzenkova | Bryansk | |
| 1993 | Olga Kuzenkova | Krasnodar | |
| 1994 | Svetlana Sudak | Minsk | |
| 1995 | Olga Kuzenkova | Moscow | |
| 1996 | Olga Kuzenkova | Sydney | |
| 1997 | Olga Kuzenkova | Munich | |
| 1998 | Olga Kuzenkova | Tolyatti | |
| 1999 | Mihaela Melinte | Rüdlingen | |
| 2000 | Olga Kuzenkova | Tula | |
| 2001 | Olga Kuzenkova | Adler | |
| 2002 | Olga Kuzenkova | Annecy | |
| 2003 | Yipsi Moreno | Savona | |
| 2004 | Yipsi Moreno | Havana | |
| 2005 | Tatyana Lysenko | Moscow | |
| 2006 | Tatyana Lysenko | Tallinn | |
| 2007 | Tatyana Lysenko | Adler | |
| 2008 | Aksana Miankova | Minsk | |
| 2009 | Anita Włodarczyk | Berlin | |
| 2010 | Anita Włodarczyk | Bydgoszcz | |
| 2011 | Betty Heidler | Halle | |
| 2012 | Aksana Miankova | Minsk | |
| 2013 | Tatyana Lysenko | Moscow | |
| 2014 | Anita Włodarczyk | Berlin | |
| 2015 | Anita Włodarczyk | Władysławowo | |
| 2016 | Anita Włodarczyk | Warsaw | |
| 2017 | Anita Włodarczyk | Cetniewo | |
| 2018 | Anita Włodarczyk | Lublin | |
| 2019 | DeAnna Price | Des Moines | |
| 2020 | Hanna Malyshik | Minsk | |
| 2021 | DeAnna Price | Eugene | |
| 2022 | Brooke Andersen | Tucson | |
| 2023 | Brooke Andersen | Tucson | |
| 2024 | Brooke Andersen | Tucson | |
| 2025 | Camryn Rogers | Tokyo |
References
- (September 2020). "Terms and Abbreviations". World Athletics.
- [https://hammerthrow.org/what-is-the-hammer/origins/ 'Origins']. Hammer Throw, undated. Retrieved 28 January 2025
- "Hammer Throw".
- (1 August 2021). "Tokyo 2020: Why the Olympic hammer throw may become a new national obsession". [[Stuff (website).
- . ["Laying Out Sector Angles for the Track and Field Throwing Events"](http://www.pntf.org/officials/ivars/Throwing_Event_Sector_Angles_Rev_F1.pdf).
- (2021-09-14). "Yuriy Sedykh, hammer world record holder, dies at 66".
- (2023-06-27). "Change of world-record rankings of shot put and hammer throw due to the effects of Earth rotation and athlete's height". Scientific Reports.
- Academy, U. S. Sports. (2010-07-09). "An Analysis of Hammer Throw Facility Safety Factors in NCAA Division I".
- (2008-12-29). "Catastrophic Injuries Pull Focus On Field Event Safety".
- (2004). "Hammer throw safety cages". New Studies in Athletics.
- (7 May 2017). "All-time men's best hammer throw". IAAF.
- (16 September 2025). "Men's Hammer Throw Final Results".
- Phil Minshull. (9 August 2015). "Fajdek throws 83.93m in Szczecin". IAAF.
- (12 August 2025). "Gyulai István Memorial - Hungarian Athletics Grand Prix - Men's Hammer Throw Final".
- (5 July 2025). "Results Hammer Throw Men".
- "All-time women's best hammer throw". World Athletics.
- (28 August 2016). "Wlodarczyk extends hammer world record in Warsaw". IAAF.
- (15 September 2025). "Women's Hammer Throw Final Results".
- Roy Jordan. (27 June 2021). "Holloway, Thomas, Benjamin and Price shine on superb day in Eugene". World Athletics.
- "Track Scoreboard".
- (4 May 2024). "Hammer Throw Result".
- (20 April 2023). "Hammer Throw Result". Flash Results.
- "Hammer Throw Results".
- "Hammer Throw Results".
- (30 April 2022). "World U20 sprint records fall as Knighton runs 19.49 and Tebogo clocks 9.96". World Athletics.
- (17 July 2022). "Women's Hammer Throw Results". World Athletics.
- "Allman throws 73.52m North American discus record in Ramona | REPORTS | World Athletics".
- (22 May 2022). "Kassanavoid climbs to No.6 all time with 78.00m hammer throw". World Athetlics.
- Jon Mulkeen. (8 June 2018). "Berry and Nowicki topple hammer favourites in Chorzow". IAAF.
- (15 September 2025). "Women's Hammer Throw Final Results".
- (2 August 2025). "Karalis clears 6.08m in Volos as records fall around the world, athletes target Tokyo".
- "Women's Hammer Throw Final".
- (23 August 2023). "Hammer Throw Qualification Results". World Athletics.
- "Hammer Throw Results".
- (26 August 2017). "Women's Hammer Final Results". 2017.taipei}}{{Dead link.
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