1500 metres

Source From Wikipedia English.

The 1500 metres or 1,500-metre run (typically pronounced 'fifteen-hundred metres') is the foremost middle distance track event in athletics. The distance has been contested at the Summer Olympics since 1896 and the World Championships in Athletics since 1983. It is equivalent to 1.5 kilometers or approximately 1516 miles. The event is closely associated with its slightly longer cousin, the mile race, from which it derives its nickname "the metric mile".

Athletics
1500 metres
Olavi Salsola, Olavi Salonen and Olavi Vuorisalo (The three Olavis) break the 1,500 m world record in 1957 in Turku, Finland.
World records
Men1500 metres - Wikidata Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR) 3:26.00 (1998)
Women1500 metres - Wikidata Faith Kipyegon (KEN) 3:49.11 (2023)
Short track world records
Men1500 metres - Wikidata Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) 3:30.60 (2022)
Women1500 metres - Wikidata Gudaf Tsegay (ETH) 3:53.09 (2021)
Olympic records
Men1500 metres - Wikidata Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) 3:28.32 (2021)
Women1500 metres - Wikidata Faith Kipyegon (KEN) 3:53.11 (2021)
World Championship records
Men1500 metres - Wikidata Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR) 3:27.65 (1999)
Women1500 metres - Wikidata Sifan Hassan (NED) 3:51.95 (2019)
World junior (U20) records
Men1500 metres - Wikidata Ronald Kwemoi (KEN) 3:28.81 (2014)
Women1500 metres - Wikidata Lang Yinglai (CHN) 3:51.34 (1997)

The demands of the race are similar to that of the 800 metres, but with a slightly higher emphasis on aerobic endurance and a slightly lower sprint speed requirement. The 1500 metre race is predominantly aerobic, but anaerobic conditioning is also required.

Each lap run during the world-record race run by Hicham El Guerrouj of Morocco in 1998 in Rome, Italy averaged just under 55 seconds (or under 13.8 seconds per 100 metres).

1,500 metres is three and three-quarter laps around a 400-metre track. During the 1970s and 1980s this race was dominated by British runners, along with an occasional Finn, American, or New Zealander. Through the 1990s, many African runners began to win Olympic medals in this race, especially runners from Kenya, Ethiopia, and East Africa, as well as North African runners from Morocco and Algeria. In the 2020s, European runners began to emerge again in the men's event, with Jakob Ingebrigtsen, the youngest of a dynasty of Norwegian middle-distance runners, winning Olympic Gold in 2021, and Scottish and British runner Jake Wightman winning the World Championship title the following year at the head of an all-European podium. Faith Kipyegon of Kenya maintained Africa's grip on the global titles in the female event in the same time period, although here again, Europeans Sifan Hassan and Laura Muir, and Americans such as Jenny Simpson also contended for the podium.

In the Modern Olympic Games, the men's 1,500-metre race has been contested from the beginning, and at every Olympic Games since. The first winner, in 1896, was Edwin Flack of Australia, who also won the first gold medal in the 800-metre race. The women's 1,500-metre race was first added to the Summer Olympics in 1972, and the winner of the first gold medal was Lyudmila Bragina of the Soviet Union. During the Olympic Games of 1972 through 2008, the women's 1,500-metre race has been won by three Soviets plus one Russian, one Italian, one Romanian, one Briton, one Kenyan, and two Algerians. The 2012 Olympic results are still undecided as a result of multiple doping cases. The best women's times for the race were controversially set by Chinese runners, all set in the same race on just two dates four years apart at the Chinese National Games. At least one of those top Chinese athletes has admitted to being part of a doping program. This women's record was finally broken by Genzebe Dibaba of Ethiopia in 2015.

In American high schools, the 1,600-metre run, also colloquially referred to as "metric mile", is the designated official distance by the National Governing Body the NFHS. Because of the legacy, since US customary units are better-known in America, the mile run (which is 1609.344 metres in length) is more frequently run than the 1,500-metre run. For convenience, national rankings are standardized by converting all 1,500-metre run times to their mile run equivalents.

Strategy

Many 1500 metres events, particularly at the championship level, turn into slow, strategic races, with the pace quickening and competitors jockeying for position in the final lap to settle the race in a final sprint. Such is the difficulty of maintaining the pace throughout the duration of the event, most records are set in planned races led by pacemakers or "rabbits" who sacrifice their opportunity to win by leading the early laps at a fast pace before dropping out.

The person who wins the race is behind watching.

— Filbert Bayi, former world record holder

Continental records

  • Updated 16 September 2023.
Area Men Women
Time Athlete Nation Time Athlete Nation
Africa (records) 3:26.00 WR Hicham El Guerrouj   Morocco 3:49.11 WR Faith Kipyegon   Kenya
Asia (records) 3:29.14 Rashid Ramzi   Bahrain 3:50.46 Qu Yunxia   China
Europe (records) 3:27.14 Jakob Ingebrigtsen   Norway 3:51.95 Sifan Hassan   Netherlands
North, Central America
and Caribbean
(records)
3:29.02 Yared Nuguse   United States 3:54.99 Shelby Houlihan   United States
Oceania (records) 3:29.41 Oliver Hoare   Australia 3:56.92 Linden Hall   Australia
South America (records) 3:33.25 Hudson de Souza   Brazil 4:05.67 Letitia Vriesde   Suriname

All-time top 25

Men (outdoor)

  • Updated 16 July 2023.
Ath.# Perf.# Time Athlete Nation Date Place Ref.
1 1 3:26.00 Hicham El Guerrouj   Morocco 14 July 1998 Rome
2 3:26.12 El Guerrouj #2 24 August 2001 Brussels
2 3 3:26.34 Bernard Lagat   Kenya 24 August 2001 Brussels
4 3:26.45 El Guerrouj #3 12 August 1998 Zürich
3 5 3:26.69 Asbel Kiprop   Kenya 17 July 2015 Monaco
6 3:26.89 El Guerrouj #4 16 August 2002 Zürich
7 3:26.96 El Guerrouj #5 8 September 2002 Rieti
4 8 3:27.14 Jakob Ingebrigtsen   Norway 16 July 2023 Chorzów
9 3:27.21 El Guerrouj #6 11 August 2000 Zürich
10 3:27.34 El Guerrouj #7 19 July 2002 Monaco
5 11 3:27.37 Noureddine Morceli   Algeria 12 July 1995 Nice
12 3:27.40 Lagat #2 6 August 2004 Zürich
13 3:27.52 Morceli #2 25 July 1995 Monaco
14 3:27.64 El Guerrouj #8 6 August 2004 Zürich
6 14 3:27.64 Silas Kiplagat   Kenya 18 July 2014 Monaco
16 3:27.65 El Guerrouj #9 24 August 1999 Seville
17 3:27.72 Kiprop #2 19 July 2013 Monaco
18 3:27.91 Lagat #3 19 July 2002 Monaco
19 3:27.95 Ingebrigtsen #2 15 June 2023 Oslo
7 20 3:28.12 Noah Ngeny   Kenya 11 August 2000 Zürich
21 3:28.21+ El Guerrouj #10 7 July 1999 Rome
8 22 3:28.28 Timothy Cheruiyot   Kenya 9 July 2021 Monaco
23 3:28.32 Ingebrigtsen #3 7 August 2021 Tokyo
24 3:28.37 Morceli #3 9 September 1995 Monaco
El Guerrouj #11 8 August 1998 Monaco
9 3:28.75 Taoufik Makhloufi   Algeria 17 July 2015 Monaco
10 3:28.76 Mohamed Katir   Spain 9 July 2021 Monaco
11 3:28.79 Abdalaati Iguider   Morocco 17 July 2015 Monaco
12 3:28.80 Elijah Manangoi   Kenya 21 July 2017 Monaco
13 3:28.81 Mo Farah   Great Britain 19 July 2013 Monaco
Ronald Kwemoi   Kenya 18 July 2014 Monaco
15 3:28.95 Fermín Cacho   Spain 13 August 1997 Zürich
16 3:28.98 Mehdi Baala   France 5 September 2003 Brussels
17 3:29.02 Daniel Kipchirchir Komen   Kenya 14 July 2006 Rome
Yared Nuguse   United States 15 June 2023 Oslo
19 3:29.05 Josh Kerr   Great Britain 7 August 2021 Tokyo
20 3:29.11 Abel Kipsang   Kenya 16 July 2023 Chorzów
21 3:29.14 Rashid Ramzi   Bahrain 14 July 2006 Rome
22 3:29.18 Vénuste Niyongabo   Burundi 22 August 1997 Brussels
Mario García   Spain 15 June 2023 Oslo
24 3:29.23 Jake Wightman   Great Britain 19 July 2022 Eugene
25 3:29.26 Azeddine Habz   France 15 June 2023 Oslo

Women (outdoor)

  • Updated April 2024.
Ath.# Perf.# Time Athlete Nation Date Place Ref.
1 1 3:49.11 Faith Kipyegon   Kenya 2 June 2023 Florence
2 2 3:50.07 Genzebe Dibaba   Ethiopia 17 July 2015 Monaco
3 3 3:50.30 Gudaf Tsegay   Ethiopia 20 April 2024 Xiamen
4 3:50.37 Kipyegon #2 10 August 2022 Monaco
4 5 3:50.46 Qu Yunxia   China 11 September 1993 Beijing
6 3:50.72 Kipyegon #3 16 September 2023 Eugene
5 7 3:50.98 Jiang Bo   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
8 3:51.07 Kipyegon #4 9 July 2021 Monaco
6 9 3:51.34 Lang Yinglai   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
10 3:51.41+ Kipyegon #5 21 July 2023 Monaco
7 11 3:51.92 Wang Junxia   China 11 September 1993 Beijing
8 12 3:51.95 Sifan Hassan   Netherlands 5 October 2019 Doha
9 13 3:52.47 Tatyana Kazankina   Soviet Union 13 August 1980 Zürich
14 3:52.59 Kipyegon #6 28 May 2022 Eugene
15 3:52.96 Kipyegon #7 18 July 2022 Eugene
16 3:53.11 Kipyegon #8 6 August 2021 Tokyo
10 17 3:53.22 Birke Haylom   Ethiopia 20 April 2024 Xiamen
18 3:53.23 Kipyegon #9 21 August 2021 Eugene
19 3:53.60 Hassan #2 9 July 2021 Monaco
20 3:53.63 Hassan #3 10 June 2021 Florence
11 21 3:53.91 Yin Lili   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
21 3:53.91 Kipyegon #10 10 June 2021 Florence
12 23 3:53.93 Diribe Welteji   Ethiopia 16 September 2023 Eugene
13 24 3:53.96 Paula Ivan   Romania 1 October 1988 Seoul
14 25 3:53.97 Lan Lixin   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
15 3:54.23 Olga Dvirna   Soviet Union 27 July 1982 Kyiv
16 3:54.50 Laura Muir   Great Britain 6 August 2021 Tokyo
17 3:54.52 Zhang Ling   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
18 3:54.87 Hirut Meshesha   Ethiopia 16 July 2023 Chorzów
19 3:54.99 Shelby Houlihan   United States 5 October 2019 Doha
20 3:55.07 Dong Yanmei   China 18 October 1997 Shanghai
21 3:55.30 Hassiba Boulmerka   Algeria 8 August 1992 Barcelona
22 3:55.33 Süreyya Ayhan   Turkey 5 September 2003 Brussels
23 3:55.68 Yuliya Chizhenko   Russia 8 July 2006 Saint-Denis
Freweyni Hailu   Ethiopia 16 September 2023 Eugene
25 3:55.87 Ciara Mageean   Ireland 8 September 2023 Brussels

Men (indoor)

  • Updated 11 February 2024.
Rank Time Athlete Nation Date Place Ref
1 3:30.60 Jakob Ingebrigtsen   Norway 17 February 2022 Liévin
2 3:31.04 Samuel Tefera   Ethiopia 16 February 2019 Birmingham
3 3:31.18 Hicham El Guerrouj   Morocco 2 February 1997 Stuttgart
4 3:31.25+ Yomif Kejelcha   Ethiopia 3 March 2019 Boston
5 3:31.76 Haile Gebrselassie   Ethiopia 1 February 1998 Stuttgart
6 3:32.11 Laban Rotich   Kenya 1 February 1998 Stuttgart
7 3:32.35 Ollie Hoare   Australia 13 February 2021 New York City
8 3:32.48 Neil Gourley   Great Britain 25 February 2023 Birmingham
9 3:32.86+ Josh Kerr   Great Britain 27 February 2022 Boston
10 3:32.97 Selemon Barega   Ethiopia 17 February 2021 Toruń
11 3:33.08 Daniel Komen   Kenya 13 February 2005 Karlsruhe
12 3:33.10 Deresse Mekonnen   Ethiopia 20 February 2010 Birmingham
13 3:33.17 Vénuste Niyongabo   Burundi 22 February 1998 Liévin
14 3:33.22+ Yared Nuguse   United States 11 February 2023 New York City
15 3:33.23 Augustine Choge   Kenya 19 February 2011 Birmingham
16 3:33.28 Adel Mechaal   Spain 25 February 2023 Birmingham
17 3:33.32 Andrés Manuel Díaz   Spain 24 February 1999 Piraeus
18 3:33.34+ Bernard Lagat   Kenya 11 February 2005 Fayetteville
19 3:33.36 Abel Kipsang   Kenya 20 March 2022 Belgrade
20 3:33.49 Andrew Coscoran   Ireland 25 February 2023 Birmingham
21 3:33.59 Teddese Lemi   Ethiopia 20 March 2022 Belgrade
22 3:33.66 Hobbs Kessler   United States 4 February 2024 Boston
23 3:33.76+ Edward Cheserek   Kenya 9 February 2018 Boston
24 3:33.86+ George Mills   Great Britain 11 February 2024 New York City
25 3:33.96 Haron Keitany   Kenya 8 February 2009 Ghent

Notes

Below is a list of other times equal or superior to 3:33.27 (top 25 performances)

Women (indoor)

  • Updated 11 February 2024.
Rank Time Athlete Nation Date Place Ref
1 3:53.09 Gudaf Tsegay   Ethiopia 9 February 2021 Liévin
2 3:55.17 Genzebe Dibaba   Ethiopia 1 February 2014 Karlsruhe
3 3:55.28 Freweyni Hailu   Ethiopia 6 February 2024 Toruń
4 3:55.47 Diribe Welteji   Ethiopia 6 February 2024 Toruń
5 3:56.47 Hirut Meshesha   Ethiopia 6 February 2024 Toruń
6 3:57.91 Abeba Aregawi   Sweden 6 February 2014 Stockholm
7 3:58.28 Yelena Soboleva   Russia 18 February 2006 Moscow
8 3:58.43 Birke Haylom   Ethiopia 4 February 2024 Boston
9 3:58.79 Tigist Girma   Ethiopia 6 February 2024 Toruń
10 3:59.58 Laura Muir   Great Britain 9 February 2021 Liévin
11 3:59.75 Gelete Burka   Ethiopia 9 March 2008 Valencia
12 3:59.79 Maryam Yusuf Jamal   Bahrain 9 March 2008 Valencia
13 3:59.87+ Konstanze Klosterhalfen   Germany 8 February 2020 New York City
14 3:59.98 Regina Jacobs   United States 1 February 2003 Boston
15 4:00.20+ Elle Purrier   United States 8 February 2020 New York City
16 4:00.27+ Doina Melinte   Romania 9 February 1990 East Rutherford
17 4:00.28 Dawit Seyaum   Ethiopia 28 February 2016 Boston
18 4:00.46 Sifan Hassan   Netherlands 19 February 2015 Stockholm
19 4:00.52+ Jemma Reekie   Great Britain 8 February 2020 New York City
20 4:00.72 Natalya Gorelova   Russia 27 February 2003 Moscow
21 4:00.8h Mary Decker   United States 8 February 1980 New York City
4:00.80+ Gabriela DeBues-Stafford   Canada 8 February 2020 New York City
23 4:00.97 Habitam Alemu   Ethiopia 10 February 2024 Liévin
24 4:01.17 Beatrice Chepkoech   Kenya 6 February 2024 Toruń
25 4:01.19+ Jessica Hull   Australia 11 February 2024 New York City

Notes

Below is a list of other times equal or superior to 3:59.79 (top 25 performances)

U20 records and U18 world bests

  • Updated 16 July 2023.
Age group Men Women
Time Athlete Nation Time Athlete Nation
U20 (records) 3:28.81 Ronald Kwemoi   Kenya 3:51.34 Lang Yinglai   China
U18 (world bests) 3:33.26 Cameron Myers   Australia 3:54.52 Zhang Ling   China

Olympic medalists

Men

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Edwin Flack
  Australia
Arthur Blake
  United States
Albin Lermusiaux
  France
1900 Paris
details
Charles Bennett
  Great Britain
Henri Deloge
  France
John Bray
  United States
1904 St. Louis
details
Jim Lightbody
  United States
Frank Verner
  United States
Lacey Hearn
  United States
1908 London
details
Mel Sheppard
  United States
Harold Wilson
  Great Britain
Norman Hallows
  Great Britain
1912 Stockholm
details
Arnold Jackson
  Great Britain
Abel Kiviat
  United States
Norman Taber
  United States
1920 Antwerp
details
Albert Hill
  Great Britain
Philip Baker
  Great Britain
Lawrence Shields
  United States
1924 Paris
details
Paavo Nurmi
  Finland
Willy Schärer
  Switzerland
H. B. Stallard
  Great Britain
1928 Amsterdam
details
Harri Larva
  Finland
Jules Ladoumègue
  France
Eino Purje
  Finland
1932 Los Angeles
details
Luigi Beccali
  Italy
Jerry Cornes
  Great Britain
Phil Edwards
  Canada
1936 Berlin
details
Jack Lovelock
  New Zealand
Glenn Cunningham
  United States
Luigi Beccali
  Italy
1948 London
details
Henry Eriksson
  Sweden
Lennart Strand
  Sweden
Willem Slijkhuis
  Netherlands
1952 Helsinki
details
Josy Barthel
  Luxembourg
Bob McMillen
  United States
Werner Lueg
  Germany
1956 Melbourne
details
Ron Delany
  Ireland
Klaus Richtzenhain
  United Team of Germany
John Landy
  Australia
1960 Rome
details
Herb Elliott
  Australia
Michel Jazy
  France
István Rózsavölgyi
  Hungary
1964 Tokyo
details
Peter Snell
  New Zealand
Josef Odložil
  Czechoslovakia
John Davies
  New Zealand
1968 Mexico City
details
Kipchoge Keino
  Kenya
Jim Ryun
  United States
Bodo Tümmler
  West Germany
1972 Munich
details
Pekka Vasala
  Finland
Kipchoge Keino
  Kenya
Rod Dixon
  New Zealand
1976 Montreal
details
John Walker
  New Zealand
Ivo Van Damme
  Belgium
Paul-Heinz Wellmann
  West Germany
1980 Moscow
details
Sebastian Coe
  Great Britain
Jürgen Straub
  East Germany
Steve Ovett
  Great Britain
1984 Los Angeles
details
Sebastian Coe
  Great Britain
Steve Cram
  Great Britain
José Manuel Abascal
  Spain
1988 Seoul
details
Peter Rono
  Kenya
Peter Elliott
  Great Britain
Jens-Peter Herold
  East Germany
1992 Barcelona
details
Fermín Cacho
  Spain
Rachid El Basir
  Morocco
Mohamed Suleiman
  Qatar
1996 Atlanta
details
Noureddine Morceli
  Algeria
Fermín Cacho
  Spain
Stephen Kipkorir
  Kenya
2000 Sydney
details
Noah Ngeny
  Kenya
Hicham El Guerrouj
  Morocco
Bernard Lagat
  Kenya
2004 Athens
details
Hicham El Guerrouj
  Morocco
Bernard Lagat
  Kenya
Rui Silva
  Portugal
2008 Beijing
details
Asbel Kiprop
  Kenya
Nick Willis
  New Zealand
Mehdi Baala
  France
2012 London
details
Taoufik Makhloufi
  Algeria
Leonel Manzano
  United States
Abdalaati Iguider
  Morocco
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Matthew Centrowitz Jr.
  United States
Taoufik Makhloufi
  Algeria
Nick Willis
  New Zealand
2020 Tokyo
details
Jakob Ingebrigtsen
  Norway
Timothy Cheruiyot
  Kenya
Josh Kerr
  Great Britain
2024 Paris
details

Women

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1972 Munich
details
Lyudmila Bragina
  Soviet Union
Gunhild Hoffmeister
  East Germany
Paola Pigni
  Italy
1976 Montreal
details
Tatyana Kazankina
  Soviet Union
Gunhild Hoffmeister
  East Germany
Ulrike Klapezynski
  East Germany
1980 Moscow
details
Tatyana Kazankina
  Soviet Union
Christiane Wartenberg
  East Germany
Nadiya Olizarenko
  Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles
details
Gabriella Dorio
  Italy
Doina Melinte
  Romania
Maricica Puică
  Romania
1988 Seoul
details
Paula Ivan
  Romania
Laimutė Baikauskaitė
  Soviet Union
Tetyana Samolenko
  Soviet Union
1992 Barcelona
details
Hassiba Boulmerka
  Algeria
Lyudmila Rogachova
  Unified Team
Qu Yunxia
  China
1996 Atlanta
details
Svetlana Masterkova
  Russia
Gabriela Szabo
  Romania
Theresia Kiesl
  Austria
2000 Sydney
details
Nouria Mérah-Benida
  Algeria
Violeta Szekely
  Romania
Gabriela Szabo
  Romania
2004 Athens
details
Kelly Holmes
  Great Britain
Tatyana Tomashova
  Russia
Maria Cioncan
  Romania
2008 Beijing
details
Nancy Langat
  Kenya
Iryna Lishchynska
  Ukraine
Nataliya Tobias
  Ukraine
2012 London
details
Maryam Yusuf Jamal
  Bahrain
Tatyana Tomashova
  Russia
Abeba Aregawi
  Ethiopia
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Faith Kipyegon
  Kenya
Genzebe Dibaba
  Ethiopia
Jennifer Simpson
  United States
2020 Tokyo
details
Faith Kipyegon
  Kenya
Laura Muir
  Great Britain
Sifan Hassan
  Netherlands
2024 Paris
details

World Championships medalists

Men

Championships Gold Silver Bronze
1983 Helsinki
details
  Steve Cram (GBR)   Steve Scott (USA)   Saïd Aouita (MAR)
1987 Rome
details
  Abdi Bile (SOM)   José Luis González (ESP)   Jim Spivey (USA)
1991 Tokyo
details
  Noureddine Morceli (ALG)   Wilfred Kirochi (KEN)   Hauke Fuhlbrügge (GER)
1993 Stuttgart
details
  Noureddine Morceli (ALG)   Fermín Cacho (ESP)   Abdi Bile (SOM)
1995 Gothenburg
details
  Noureddine Morceli (ALG)   Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Vénuste Niyongabo (BDI)
1997 Athens
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Fermín Cacho (ESP)   Reyes Estévez (ESP)
1999 Seville
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Noah Ngeny (KEN)   Reyes Estévez (ESP)
2001 Edmonton
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Bernard Lagat (KEN)   Driss Maazouzi (FRA)
2003 Saint-Denis
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Mehdi Baala (FRA)   Ivan Heshko (UKR)
2005 Helsinki
details
  Rashid Ramzi (BHR)   Adil Kaouch (MAR)   Rui Silva (POR)
2007 Osaka
details
  Bernard Lagat (USA)   Rashid Ramzi (BHR)   Shedrack Kibet Korir (KEN)
2009 Berlin
details
  Yusuf Saad Kamel (BHR)   Deresse Mekonnen (ETH)   Bernard Lagat (USA)
2011 Daegu
details
  Asbel Kiprop (KEN)   Silas Kiplagat (KEN)   Matthew Centrowitz (USA)
2013 Moscow
details
  Asbel Kiprop (KEN)   Matthew Centrowitz (USA)   Johan Cronje (RSA)
2015 Beijing
details
  Asbel Kiprop (KEN)   Elijah Manangoi (KEN)   Abdalaati Iguider (MAR)
2017 London
details
  Elijah Manangoi (KEN)   Timothy Cheruiyot (KEN)   Filip Ingebrigtsen (NOR)
2019 Doha
details
  Timothy Cheruiyot (KEN)   Taoufik Makhloufi (ALG)   Marcin Lewandowski (POL)
2022 Eugene
details
  Jake Wightman (GBR)   Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)   Mohamed Katir (ESP)
2023 Budapest
details
  Josh Kerr (GBR)   Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)   Narve Gilje Nordås (NOR)

Medalists by country

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Kenya (KEN) 5 6 1 12
2   Morocco (MAR) 4 2 2 8
3   Algeria (ALG) 3 1 0 4
4   Great Britain (GBR) 3 0 0 3
5   Bahrain (BHR) 2 1 0 3
6   United States (USA) 1 2 3 6
7   Somalia (SOM) 1 0 1 2
9   Spain (ESP) 0 3 3 6
10   Norway (NOR) 0 2 2 4
11   France (FRA) 0 1 1 2
12   Ethiopia (ETH) 0 1 0 1
13   Burundi (BDI) 0 0 1 1
  Germany (GER) 0 0 1 1
  Poland (POL) 0 0 1 1
  Portugal (POR) 0 0 1 1
  South Africa (RSA) 0 0 1 1
  Ukraine (UKR) 0 0 1 1

Women

Championships Gold Silver Bronze
1983 Helsinki
details
  Mary Decker (USA)   Zamira Zaytseva (URS)   Yekaterina Podkopayeva (URS)
1987 Rome
details
  Tetyana Samolenko (URS)   Hildegard Körner (GDR)   Doina Melinte (ROU)
1991 Tokyo
details
  Hassiba Boulmerka (ALG)   Tetyana Dorovskikh (URS)   Lyudmila Rogachova (URS)
1993 Stuttgart
details
  Liu Dong (CHN)   Sonia O'Sullivan (IRL)   Hassiba Boulmerka (ALG)
1995 Gothenburg
details
  Hassiba Boulmerka (ALG)   Kelly Holmes (GBR)   Carla Sacramento (POR)
1997 Athens
details
  Carla Sacramento (POR)   Regina Jacobs (USA)   Anita Weyermann (SUI)
1999 Seville
details
  Svetlana Masterkova (RUS)   Regina Jacobs (USA)   Kutre Dulecha (ETH)
2001 Edmonton
details
  Gabriela Szabo (ROU)   Violeta Szekely (ROU)   Natalya Gorelova (RUS)
2003 Saint-Denis
details
  Tatyana Tomashova (RUS)   Süreyya Ayhan (TUR)   Hayley Tullett (GBR)
2005 Helsinki
details
  Tatyana Tomashova (RUS)   Olga Yegorova (RUS)   Bouchra Ghezielle (FRA)
2007 Osaka
details
  Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR)   Iryna Lishchynska (UKR)   Daniela Yordanova (BUL)
2009 Berlin
details
  Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR)   Lisa Dobriskey (GBR)   Shannon Rowbury (USA)
2011 Daegu
details
  Jennifer Simpson (USA)   Hannah England (GBR)   Natalia Rodríguez (ESP)
2013 Moscow
details
  Abeba Aregawi (SWE)   Jennifer Simpson (USA)   Hellen Obiri (KEN)
2015 Beijing
details
  Genzebe Dibaba (ETH)   Faith Kipyegon (KEN)   Sifan Hassan (NED)
2017 London
details
  Faith Kipyegon (KEN)   Jennifer Simpson (USA)   Caster Semenya (RSA)
2019 Doha
details
  Sifan Hassan (NED)   Faith Kipyegon (KEN)   Gudaf Tsegay (ETH)
2022 Eugene
details
  Faith Kipyegon (KEN)   Gudaf Tsegay (ETH)   Laura Muir (GBR)
2023 Budapest
details
  Faith Kipyegon (KEN)   Diribe Welteji (ETH)   Sifan Hassan (NED)

Medalists by country

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Kenya (KEN) 3 2 1 6
2   Russia (RUS) 3 1 1 5
3   United States (USA) 2 4 1 7
4   Algeria (ALG) 2 0 1 3
5   Bahrain (BHR) 2 0 0 2
7   Ethiopia (ETH) 1 2 2 5
  Soviet Union (URS) 1 2 2 5
9   Romania (ROU) 1 1 1 3
10   Netherlands (NED) 1 0 2 3
11   Portugal (POR) 1 0 1 2
12   China (CHN) 1 0 0 1
  Sweden (SWE) 1 0 0 1
14   Great Britain (GBR) 0 3 2 5
15   East Germany (GDR) 0 1 0 1
  Ireland (IRL) 0 1 0 1
  Ukraine (UKR) 0 1 0 1
  Turkey (TUR) 0 1 0 1
19   Bulgaria (BUL) 0 0 1 1
  France (FRA) 0 0 1 1
  Spain (ESP) 0 0 1 1
   Switzerland (SUI) 0 0 1 1

European Championships medalists

Men

Women

World Indoor Championships medalists

Men

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1985 Paris[A]   Michael Hillardt (AUS)   José Luis González (ESP)   Joseph Chesire (KEN)
1987 Indianapolis
details
  Marcus O'Sullivan (IRL)   José Manuel Abascal (ESP)   Han Kulker (NED)
1989 Budapest
details
  Marcus O'Sullivan (IRL)   Hauke Fuhlbrügge (GDR)   Jeff Atkinson (USA)
1991 Seville
details
  Noureddine Morceli (ALG)   Fermín Cacho (ESP)   Mário Silva (POR)
1993 Toronto
details
  Marcus O'Sullivan (IRL)   David Strang (GBR)   Branko Zorko (CRO)
1995 Barcelona
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Mateo Cañellas (ESP)   Erik Nedeau (USA)
1997 Paris
details
  Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR)   Rüdiger Stenzel (GER)   William Tanui (KEN)
1999 Maebashi
details
  Haile Gebrselassie (ETH)   Laban Rotich (KEN)   Andrés Manuel Díaz (ESP)
2001 Lisbon
details
  Rui Silva (POR)   Reyes Estévez (ESP)   Noah Ngeny (KEN)
2003 Birmingham
details
  Driss Maazouzi (FRA)   Bernard Lagat (KEN)   Abdelkader Hachlaf (MAR)
2004 Budapest
details
  Paul Korir (KEN)   Ivan Heshko (UKR)   Laban Rotich (KEN)
2006 Moscow
details
  Ivan Heshko (UKR)   Daniel Kipchirchir Komen (KEN)   Elkanah Angwenyi (KEN)
2008 Valencia
details
  Deresse Mekonnen (ETH)   Daniel Kipchirchir Komen (KEN)   Juan Carlos Higuero (ESP)
2010 Doha
details
  Deresse Mekonnen (ETH)   Abdalaati Iguider (MAR)   Haron Keitany (KEN)
2012 Istanbul
details
  Abdalaati Iguider (MAR)   İlham Tanui Özbilen (TUR)   Mekonnen Gebremedhin (ETH)
2014 Sopot
details
  Ayanleh Souleiman (DJI)   Aman Wote (ETH)   Abdalaati Iguider (MAR)
2016 Portland
details
  Matthew Centrowitz Jr. (USA)   Jakub Holuša (CZE)   Nick Willis (NZL)
2018 Birmingham
details
  Samuel Tefera (ETH)   Marcin Lewandowski (POL)   Abdalaati Iguider (MAR)
2022 Belgrade
details
  Samuel Tefera (ETH)   Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)   Abel Kipsang (KEN)
2024 Glasgow
details
  Geordie Beamish (NZL)   Cole Hocker (USA)   Hobbs Kessler (USA)

Women

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1985 Paris[A]   Elly van Hulst (NED)   Fița Lovin (ROU)   Brit McRoberts (CAN)
1987 Indianapolis
details
  Doina Melinte (ROU)   Tatyana Samolenko (URS)   Svetlana Kitova (URS)
1989 Budapest
details
  Doina Melinte (ROU)   Svetlana Kitova (URS)   Yvonne Mai (GDR)
1991 Seville
details
  Lyudmila Rogachova (URS)   Ivana Kubešová (TCH)   Tudorita Chidu (ROU)
1993 Toronto
details
  Yekaterina Podkopayeva (RUS)   Violeta Beclea (ROU)   Sandra Gasser (SUI)
1995 Barcelona
details
  Regina Jacobs (USA)   Carla Sacramento (POR)   Maite Zúñiga (ESP)
1997 Paris
details
  Yekaterina Podkopayeva (RUS)   Patricia Djaté-Taillard (FRA)   Lidia Chojecka (POL)
1999 Maebashi
details
  Gabriela Szabo (ROU)   Violeta Beclea-Szekely (ROU)   Lidia Chojecka (POL)
2001 Lisbon
details
  Hasna Benhassi (MAR)   Violeta Beclea-Szekely (ROU)   Natalya Gorelova (RUS)
2003 Birmingham
details
  Regina Jacobs (USA)   Kelly Holmes (GBR)   Yekaterina Rozenberg (RUS)
2004 Budapest
details
  Kutre Dulecha (ETH)   Carmen Douma-Hussar (CAN)   Gulnara Galkina (RUS)
2006 Moscow
details
  Yuliya Fomenko (RUS)   Yelena Soboleva (RUS)   Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR)
2008 Valencia
details
  Gelete Burka (ETH)   Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR)   Daniela Yordanova (BUL)
2010 Doha
details
  Kalkidan Gezahegne (ETH)   Natalia Rodríguez (ESP)   Gelete Burka (ETH)
2012 Istanbul
details
  Genzebe Dibaba (ETH)   Mariem Alaoui Selsouli (MAR)   Hind Dehiba (FRA)
2014 Sopot
details
  Abeba Aregawi (SWE)   Axumawit Embaye (ETH)   Nicole Sifuentes (CAN)
2016 Portland
details
  Sifan Hassan (NED)   Dawit Seyaum (ETH)   Gudaf Tsegay (ETH)
2018 Birmingham
details
  Genzebe Dibaba (ETH)   Laura Muir (GBR)   Sifan Hassan (NED)
2022 Belgrade
details
  Gudaf Tsegay (ETH)   Axumawit Embaye (ETH)   Hirut Meshesha (ETH)
2024 Glasgow
details
  Freweyni Hailu (ETH)   Nikki Hiltz (USA)   Emily Mackay (USA)
  • A Known as the World Indoor Games

Season's bests

Women

Year Time Athlete Place
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970 4:12.2   Karin Burneleit (GDR) Berlin
1971 4:09.6   Karin Burneleit (GDR) Helsinki
1972 4:01.4   Lyudmila Bragina (URS) Munich
1973 4:04.6   Karin Krebs (GDR) Potsdam
1974 4:02.25   Gunhild Hoffmeister (GDR) Rome
1975 4:06.0   Nina Morgunova (URS) Moscow
1976 3:56.0   Tatyana Kazankina (URS) Podolsk
1977 4:02.65   Natalia Mărășescu (ROU) Bucharest
1978 3:59.01   Giana Romanova (URS) Prague
1979 3:57.4   Totka Petrova (BUL) Athens
1980 3:52.47   Tatyana Kazankina (URS) Zürich
1981 3:57.78   Olga Dvirna (URS) Budapest
1982 3:54.23   Olga Dvirna (URS) Kyiv
1983 3:57.12   Mary Slaney (USA) Stockholm
1984 3:56.63   Nadezhda Ralldugina (URS) Prague
1985 3:57.24   Mary Slaney (USA) Brussels
1986 3:56.7   Doina Melinte (ROU) Bucharest
1987 3:58.56   Tatyana Dorovskikh (URS) Rome
1988 3:53.96   Paula Ivan (ROU) Seoul
1989 3:59.23   Paula Ivan (ROU) Nice
1990 3:58.69   Doina Melinte (ROU) Villeneuve-d'Ascq
1991 3:59.16   Natalya Artyomova (RUS) Zürich
1992 3:55.30   Hassiba Boulmerka (ALG) Barcelona
1993 3:50.46   Qu Yunxia (CHN) Beijing
1994 3:59.10   Sonia O'Sullivan (IRL) Nice
1995 3:58.85   Sonia O'Sullivan (IRL) Monaco
1996 3:56.77   Svetlana Masterkova (RUS) Zürich
1997 3:50.98   Jiang Bo (CHN) Shanghai
1998 3:56.97   Gabriela Szabo (ROU) Monaco
1999 3:59.31   Violeta Szekely (ROU) Zürich
2000 3:57.40   Suzy Favor-Hamilton (USA) Oslo
2001 3:59.35   Violeta Szekely (ROU) Monaco
2002 3:57.75   Süreyya Ayhan (TUR) Brussels
2003 3:55.33   Süreyya Ayhan (TUR) Brussels
2004 3:57.90   Kelly Holmes (GBR) Athens
2005 3:56.79   Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR) Rieti
2006 3:55.68   Yuliya Fomenko (RUS) Saint-Denis
2007 3:58.75   Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR) Osaka
2008 3:59.75 i   Gelete Burka (ETH) Valencia
2009 3:56.55   Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BHR) Rome
2010 3:57.65   Anna Alminova (RUS) Saint-Denis
2011 4:00.06   Morgan Uceny (USA) Brussels
2012 3:56.54   Abeba Aregawi (ETH) Rome
2013 3:56.60   Abeba Aregawi (SWE) Doha
2014 3:55.17 i   Genzebe Dibaba (ETH) Karlsruhe
2015 3:50.07   Genzebe Dibaba (ETH) Monaco
2016 3:55.22   Laura Muir (GBR) Saint-Denis
2017 3:56.14   Sifan Hassan (NED) Hengelo
2018 3:56.68   Genzebe Dibaba (ETH) Chorzów
2019 3:51.95   Sifan Hassan (NED) Doha
2020 3:57.40   Laura Muir (GBR) Berlin
2021 3:51.07   Faith Kipyegon (KEN) Monaco
2022 3:50.37   Faith Kipyegon (KEN) Monaco
2023 3:49.11   Faith Kipyegon (KEN) Florence

  • "i" indicates performance on 200m indoor track

Other sports

1,500 metres is also an event in swimming, speed skating, and wheelchair racing. The world records for the distance in swimming for men are 14:31.02 (swum in a 50-metre pool) by Sun Yang, 14:08.06 (swum in a 25-metre pool) by Gregorio Paltrinieri; and by women 15:25.48 (swum in a 50-metre pool) by Katie Ledecky, and 15:19.71 (swum in a 25-metre pool) by Mireia Belmonte García.

The world records for the distance in speed skating are 1:40.17 by Kjeld Nuis and 1:49.83 by Miho Takagi.

The records for wheelchair racing vary by disability classification:

Notes and references

External links