150 metres


150 metres is a sprint event in track and field. It is a very rarely contested non-championship and not an IAAF-recognised event. Given the proportion of standard running tracks, the event typically incorporates a bend when held in a track and field stadium, although some especially-built tracks allow the event to take place entirely on a straight.
The event was given a high-profile outing in 1997 as an intermediate contest between two 1996 Olympic champions: Donovan Bailey and Michael Johnson. Johnson pulled up mid-race, allowing Bailey to win the $1 million prize. This race coincided with a period of similar 150 m meetings between Bailey and the 1992 Olympic champion Linford Christie; the pair raced three years running for high cash prizes in Sheffield, England, in 1995, 1996 and 1997, with Christie winning the first two outings and Bailey winning the last.
The Manchester City Games in England – a competition featuring a long, raised track on one of the city's major streets – has provided many of the event's highlights since 2009, including the men's world best of 14.35 seconds, set by Usain Bolt in 2009. Allyson Felix ran the fastest ever 150 m race by a woman in 2013, although faster times have been recorded at intermediate stages of the 200 m event. The Great North City Games features a similar setup to the Manchester event and has provided several of the best men's and women's times. The British events typically attracted American, British and Caribbean competitors, and athletes from these places account for nearly all the top 25 best times for men and women. A one-off 150 m race on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro was held in 2013 and Bolt finished in a time close to his own world record.
The 150 m had some significance as a regular indoor event in the 1960s and 1970s as a result of indoor tracks matching that distance. Wales held a national championship over the distance up to 1972 and Finland briefly has a women's national championship in the mid 1960s. A relay version of the distance was contested at the 1967 European Athletics Indoor Championships and was won by the Soviet Union's women's team. The distance attracted the attention of 1980 Olympic 200 m champion Pietro Mennea, whose hand-timed run of 14.8 seconds in Cassino, Italy, in 1983 stood as a world best time for over a quarter of a century. Italy also provided a women's 150 m best that same decade, with Jamaican Merlene Ottey setting a time of 16.46 seconds in Trapani in 1989 – a world best mark which was unbeaten for over two decades.

All-time top 25

RankTimeTypeWind AthleteNationalityDatePlaceRef
114.35straight+1.1Usain BoltJamaica17 May 2009Manchester
214.41+straight-0.4Tyson GayUnited States16 May 2010Manchester
314.65straight+1.4Walter DixUnited States17 September 2011Gateshead
414.69straight-0.2Noah LylesUnited States16 June 2019Boston
514.71straight+1.3Yohan BlakeJamaica17 May 2014Manchester
614.81straight+0.2Nethaneel Mitchell-BlakeGreat Britain20 May 2018Boston
714.83+bend+0.4Michael JohnsonUnited States1 August 1996Atlanta
814.87straight+1.4Marlon DevonishGreat Britain17 September 2011Gateshead
814.87straight-0.1Wallace SpearmonUnited States20 May 2012Manchester
814.87straight+0.6Reece PrescodGreat Britain8 September 2018Gateshead
1114.88straight+1.4Daniel BaileyAntigua and Barbuda31 March 2013Rio de Janeiro
1214.90straight-1.0Christophe LemaitreFrance25 May 2013Manchester
1214.90straight-0.2Michael RodgersUnited States14 September 2013Newcastle
1414.91straight+1.4Bruno de BarrosBrazil31 March 2013Rio de Janeiro
1514.93+bend+0.3John RegisGreat Britain20 August 1993Stuttgart
1514.93straight0.0Miguel FrancisAntigua and Barbuda18 June 2016Somerville
1714.94+bend+1.2Maurice GreeneUnited States27 August 1999Seville
1814.97+bend+0.3Carl LewisUnited States20 August 1993Stuttgart
1814.97bend+0.9Linford ChristieGreat Britain4 September 1994Sheffield
2014.98straight+1.5Darvis PattonUnited States15 May 2011Manchester
2114.99bend+1.7Ian MackieGreat Britain31 May 1997Cardiff
2114.99Indoorn/aDonovan BaileyCanada1 June 1997Toronto
2114.99+bend+0.3Frankie FredericksNamibia20 August 1993Stuttgart
2114.99+bend+1.2Claudinei da SilvaBrazil27 August 1999Seville
2515.00straight+1.3Kemar Bailey-ColeJamaica17 May 2014Manchester

Assisted marks

Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second is not counted for record purposes. Below is a list of the fastest wind-assisted times. Only times that are superior to legal bests are shown.