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The 400 metres, or 400-meter dash, is a sprint event in track and field competitions. It has been featured in the athletics programme at the Summer Olympics since 1896 for men and since 1964 for women. On a standard outdoor running track, it is one lap around the track. Runners start in staggered positions and race in separate lanes for the ...
For the two-mile run, they run 3200 meters. For the long-hurdle race, they run 300 meters instead of the 400 metres hurdles. Some states ran over lower hurdle heights for a period of time. In field events, boys throw different weights of their implements than with international open division or the more comparable junior-division implements ...
60 meter dash (1983–present) 200 meter dash (1983–present) 400 meter dash (1983–present) Distance events. 800 meter run (1983–present) Mile run (1965–present) 3,000 meter run (1983–present) 5,000 meter run (1983–present) Hurdle Events. 60 meter hurdles (1983–present) Relay events. 1,600 meter relay (1983–present) Distance ...
Olympic gold medalist and track coach Michael Johnson shares how to run a fast 400-meter dash, ... a length you run at 100 percent for the entire time, says Johnson. ... average person can just go ...
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, the world's top 400-meter hurdler, wins the 400-meter dash at U.S. nationals in 49.74 seconds, 10th-fastest time in history.
A handicap 440-yard dash (402.3 m) competition was held at 1904 Summer Olympics after the 1904 Olympic men's 400 m race. An American, F. Darcy, won the race with a time of 50.8 (12-yard start). George Underwood, also of the United States, came second with no handicap and James Peck of Canada came third off a six-yard headstart. [5]
The 400 metres (400 meter or 400 m race) is the successor to the 440 yard dash. [5] An athlete who competes in the 400 m may still be referred to as 'quarter-miler' though this rounded, metric distance is 2 1/3 meters shorter than a full 440-yard (quarter mile) race. [6]
This is a list of NCAA Division I outdoor champions in the 400 meters or its imperial equivalent 440 yard dash. For men, the imperial distance was contested until 1975 excepting Olympic years starting in 1932. Metrication occurred in 1976, so all subsequent championships were at the metric distance.