Shuttle hurdle relay
Shuttle hurdle relay (SHR) is a type of a relay race in track and field in which participants jump (sprint) over hurdles. The shuttle hurdle relay is contested at the Drake Relays, Kansas Relays, Mt. SAC Relays, Penn Relays, Texas Relays, Akron Relays, Appalachian Conference Relay, Florida Relays (Gainesville), Knoxville Relay, Long Beach Relay, Santa Barbara Relay, Tennessee Relays (formerly: Dogwood Relays, Sea Ray Relays), Towson Relays, and Tri-State Relays. The SHR was also included at the 2019 IAAF World Relays and 2021 competition.[1]
High Hurdle Relay[edit]
Currently the SHR is referred to as the 4 x 60 Hurdles, 4 x 80 Hurdles, 4 x 100 Hurdles, and 4 x 110 Hurdles. In the past the term shuttle hurdle relay was more commonly used.
This events allow four hurdlers to run on the same relay team and has been held both outdoor and indoor. In a shuttle hurdle relay, each of four hurdlers on a team runs the opposite direction from the preceding runner.
The shuttle hurdle relay typically consists of: (a) four hurdlers per relay team – each runs one leg, (b) same sex, (c) each hurdler runs the same hurdle spacing and hurdle heights, (d) two lanes – one up, and one back (e) the first leg starts at the automatic timing line, hence this allows the anchor leg to finish at the "finish line", (f) hurdlers must stay in their own lane, (g) hurdlers are not allowed to touch the hurdles with their hands, (h) depending on the age-group there may be an "exchange zone" (Masters Track and Field does not use an exchange zone), (i) No batons are used for this particular relay, and (j) For Masters Track and Field the youngest person on the relay team dictates the age-bracket (for that particular relay team).
USATF Competition Rules list description for the Open and Masters shuttle hurdle relay competition.[2]
History[edit]
1910-1911: Official Handbook of the Girls' Branch of the Public Schools Athletic League states for the girls hurdle relay "the maximum distance for each runner not to exceed fifty yards; the maximum height for hurdles to be two feet".[3]
June 11, 1910 a girls hurdle relay was held at the Armory in Rochester, NY.[4]
1920: Inter-varsity: Cambridge versus Oxford: Dec 1920: Oxford beat Cambridge in the SHR. Winning time of 67 2/5 seconds.[5] December 1921 Oxford beat Cambridge in 69 4/5 seconds.[6] December 1922 Oxford beat Cambridge in 67 2/5 seconds.[7]
1924 and 1928 British Empire versus the USA in the SHR was held at Stamford Bridge, London. July 1924 USA beat British Empire in 61.6 seconds for the 480 yards hurdle relay.[8] 1928: USA beating British Empire in 62 seconds.[9] and.[10]
1926 the SHR was added to the Penn Relays events at the suggestion Lord Burghley (UK's Olympic hurdler).[11]
In April 1938, Oklahoma State set a (then) Kansas Relays meet record in 1:01.6. [12]
1973 a West German team placed 3rd at the Mt Sac Relays in 59.1.[13]
Masters Track and Field have included the SHR as a standard event at the USATF Masters Outdoor Championships.[14] The competition is eligible for Masters American Records and medals. The oldest athlete that has competed in a SHR is George Roudebush (age 93) when he competed in a 2018 M80 plus SHR race.[15]
The oldest female athlete that has competed in a SHR is Tami Graf (age 85) at the 2021 USATF Masters Outdoor Championships in Ames, Iowa.[16]
The "high hurdles" are also referred to "sprint hurdles" to separate them from the "long hurdles."
The Shuttle hurdle relay was also included at former relays such as the California Relays, Compton Relays, West Coast Relays,[17] the 1996 Alabama Relays,[18] and the Golden Valley Conference Relays [19] Additional relays include the 1993 European Relays in Portsmouth, England,[20] and July 5, 1981 TAC Relay Championship in Greenvale, NY.[21]
Including a SHR outside of the US and the United Kingdom has been infrequent. August 2007 BAUHAUS-galan (formerly GN Galan) meet in Stockholm, Sweden included the 480 Yard Shuttle Hurdle Relay. USA 53.36 in 1st, Sweden 57.03 in 2nd, and Finland 57.26 in 3rd. The event was well received.[22]
Mile intermediate hurdle relay[edit]
In the past, a rarely run 4 x 440 yard shuttle hurdle relay was included at some competitions. A height of 36” tall hurdles is used. April 29, 1972 Olivett College (John McGlashen, Charles VanderRoest, Bruce Ritter, and Ron Hobday) beat Cedarville in 3:58.4 for the mile intermediate hurdle at the Tri-State Relays, held at Defiance College.[23] Cedarville College (Cole, Alexander, Perkins, and Gruber) placing second took six seconds off their own school record.[24]
April 1973, Edinboro State at the Akron Invitational Relays, Akron, Ohio broke the record for this event.[25] On April 6, 1974 Occidental College broke the 1973 record in the 4 x 440 yard shuttle hurdle relay in a meet against Whittier College and Pomona-Pitzer.[26] April 17, 1974 Stanford broke Occidental College’s record while defeating Skyline College.[27] March 15, 1975 Occidental College gained the record back.[28] April 24, 1976 Mt Sac College broke the record at the Mt. SAC Relays,[29] and on April 23, 1977 Pasadena broke the record at the Mt. SAC Relays.[30] By 1984, Long Beach City College (Jose Davis, Tyrone McCullough, Nelson Rodriguez, and Oswaldo Zea) held the community college 1600 meter intermediate hurdle relay in 3:31.06.[31]
All-time top 20[edit]
Men - 4 × 110m[edit]
Updated November 2020
y = adjusted from the slightly shorter distance of 4 x 120 yards by adding 0.13 seconds
Women - 4 × 100m[edit]
Mixed[edit]
Updated August 2021
See also[edit]
Reference: The Hurdler's Bible[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ World Athletics, June 13, 2021. [1]
- ^ USATF. [2] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ Spalding's Athletic Library, Girl Athletics 1910-1911. [3] Retrieved Nov. 22, 2020
- ^ Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, New York, June 12, 1910. [4] ] Retrieved Nov. 22, 2020
- ^ The Guardian, London newspaper Dec 4, 1920). [5] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ Guardian, England, Dec. 3, 1921 [6] Retrieved Nov. 17, 2020
- ^ Guardian, England, Dec. 2, 1922 [7] Retrieved Nov. 17, 2020
- ^ Guardian, England, July 21, 1924. [8] Retrieved Nov. 17, 2020
- ^ LA84: The Greatest Gathering of Track and Field Olympians. By John Lucas [9] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ The Observer, London newspaper Aug 12, 1928. [10] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ Sports Illustrated [11] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ Detroit Free Press, Apr 24, 1938. [12] Retrieved Aug 25, 2021
- ^ San Francisco Examiner, Apr 29, 1973. [13] Retrieved Jun 1, 2022
- ^ Archive: masterstrack.com. [14] Retrieved Oct. 26, 2020
- ^ Track & Field Records. [15] Retrieved Oct. 14, 2020
- ^ Finish Timing Meet Results, July 2021. [16] Retrieved Sept 16, 2021
- ^ LA84. Track and Field Meet Results c1964. [17] Retrieved Oct. 26, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter March 27, 1996 [18] Retrieved Nov 29, 2020
- ^ Oak Leaf newspaper, Mar 18, 1965. [19] Retrieved Dec 27, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter June 17, 1993. [20] Retrieved November 4, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter, July 16, 1981. [21] Retrieved Dec 31, 2020
- ^ Woodhurdles website. [22] Retrieved Dec 30, 2020
- ^ Battle Creek Enquirer, Michigan, April 30, 1972. [23] Retrieved Dec 17, 2020
- ^ Xenia Daily Gazette, Ohio May 1, 1972. [24] Retrieved Dec 17, 2020
- ^ San Bernardino County Sun, San Bernardino, CA, April 7, 1974. [25] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Times Standard, Eureka, CA, April 7, 1974. [26] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ The Times, San Mateo, CA, April 18, 1974 [27] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Sacramento Bee, Sacramento, CA. [28] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Pomona Progress, April 25, 1976. [29] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Progress Bulletin, Pomona, CA. [30] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA, February 24, 1991 [31] Retrieved Oct. 17, 2020
- ^ Track and Field News. [32] Retrieved November 6, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter, May 29, 1981. [33] Retrieved November 13, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter, May 29, 1981. [34] Retrieved November 13, 2020
- ^ Track and Field News. [35] Retrieved November 4, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter June 17, 1993. [36] Retrieved November 4, 2020
- ^ Track Newsletter June 17, 1993. [37] Retrieved November 4, 2020
- ^ "2016 Drake Relays Results" (PDF). godrakebulldogs.com. 30 April 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
- ^ "2016 Drake Relays Results" (PDF). godrakebulldogs.com. 30 April 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "2016 Drake Relays Results" (PDF). godrakebulldogs.com. 30 April 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Final Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Heats Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Heats Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Final Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Heats Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed 4×110m Shuttle Hurdle Relay Heats Results" (PDF). World Athletics. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Mixed Shuttle Hurdle Relay Results". World Athletics. 1 May 2021. Retrieved 7 Aug 2021.
External links[edit]
Track and Field News and USATF websites include current shuttle hurdle relay American Records for the following:
- Open Men's SHR Record
- Open Women's SHR Record
- College Men's SHR Record
- College Women's SHR Record
- Jr College Men's SHR Record
- Jr College Women's SHR Record - - -
- HS Boys SHR Record
- HS Girls SHR Record
- Masters Track and Field SHR Records
Additional External Links: