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Track Date Meet Ref 3:37.347 Rebecca Twigg (USA) Hamar (NOR) Indoor: 20 August 1993: World Championships: 3:36.227 Marion Clignet (FRA) Bogota (COL) Open air: 29 September 1995: World Championships: 3:36.081 Rebecca Twigg (USA) Bogota (COL) Open air: 30 September 1995: World Championships 3:31.924 Antonella Bellutti (ITA) Cali (COL) Open air: 6 ...
The following table shows the world record progression in the Women's 3,000 metres. The first record officially recognised by the IAAF was set on 6 July 1974 by Lyudmila Bragina from the Soviet Union. As of June 21, 2009, the IAAF has ratified nine world records in the event. [1]
Masters athletics is a class of the sport of athletics for athletes of over 35 years of age. The events include track and field, road running and cross country running.These are the current world records in various five-year-groups, maintained by WMA, the World Association of Masters Athletes, which is designated by the World Athletics (formerly IAAF) to conduct the worldwide sport of Masters ...
3000m individual pursuit (sea level) 3:15.663 Chloé Dygert United States 19 October 2024 World Championships: Ballerup, Denmark [22] 3000m team pursuit [d] (progression) 3:14.051 Dani King Laura Trott Joanna Rowsell Great Britain 4 August 2012 Olympic Games: London, United Kingdom [29] Hour record (sea level) 49.254 km Ellen van Dijk Netherlands
The women's 3000m team pursuit discipline for 3 riders was introduced by the UCI at the 2007–08 track cycling season. After the 2012–13 track cycling season the UCI changed the discipline into a 4000 m team pursuit with 4 riders.
The 24-year-old, who won two Olympic gold medals in 2024, capped off her brilliant year by smashing her own women’s 5,000m road world record at the Cursa dels Nassos race in Barcelona, Spain.
A world record holder in the event and a silver medalist at the Tokyo Olympics, Girma was in the middle of a crowded pack as runners started the last of 7.5 laps. Girma started to pull away from ...
Jeruto's 8:53.02 was the Championship record and the #3 time ever run, still less than a second faster than she had run a year earlier on this same track at the Prefontaine Classic. Getachew's 8:54.61 moved her to the #4 position in history, with Abebe's 8:56.08 putting her in #5.