Sprinter Breaks 32-Year Record in Florida 150m Race
Jamaica's Kishane Thompson just ran the fastest 150 meters ever recorded on a circular track, beating a mark that stood since 1994. The Paris Olympic silver medalist clocked 14.92 seconds at Florida's Miramar Invitational, shaving precious hundredths off a record many thought untouchable.
Jamaica's Kishane Thompson just ran the fastest 150 meters ever recorded on a circular track, shattering a 32-year-old barrier that seemed destined to stand forever.
The Olympic silver medalist blazed through the distance in 14.92 seconds at the Miramar Invitational in Florida on April 4. He beat the previous best of 14.97 seconds set by Great Britain's Linford Christie way back in 1994.
Thompson didn't just edge past the old mark. He demolished it by five hundredths of a second, a massive margin in sprinting where races are often decided by thousandths.
Zimbabwe's Tapiwanashe Makarawu also broke Christie's longtime standard, finishing second with 14.96 seconds. Jamaica's Adrian Kerr rounded out the top three at 15.21 seconds.
The women's 150m race brought even more Jamaican dominance. Tia Clayton led an all-Jamaican podium, winning in 16.87 seconds ahead of Briana Williams (16.92) and Tina Clayton (17.00).
Jamaica swept through the meet's sprint events like a tropical storm. In the 100m races, Ackeem Blake won the men's event in 9.84 seconds, while Lavanya Williams took the women's race in 10.99.
Why This Inspires
Thompson's achievement shows what happens when athletes dare to chase marks that others have given up on. For 32 years, Christie's time seemed unreachable, a relic from track and field's golden era that modern runners could only admire from afar.
But Thompson saw possibility where others saw impossibility. His breakthrough reminds us that records exist to be broken, no matter how long they've stood.
The 150m isn't an official world record event since it's not part of major championships. Still, Thompson's time represents the fastest any human has covered that distance on a circular track, and that's worth celebrating.
His performance also highlights Jamaica's continued excellence in sprinting, a legacy built by legends like Usain Bolt and carried forward by a new generation hungry for their own piece of history.
Thompson proved that with enough talent, training, and determination, even the most stubborn barriers eventually fall.
Based on reporting by Google News - World Record
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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