Women's 100 meter second-class athlete standard

The standard for women's 100m second-class athletes is 12.8 seconds, and the ammeter is 13.04 seconds.

The women's 100 meter race is one of the most competitive events in track and field, and it is a sprint event combining speed with ability, strength with skill. 1928, Amsterdam Olympic Games in the Netherlands was listed as an official event, which was called the women's trapeze competition.

Sprint is a kind of track and field events, which belongs to track events. The sprint is divided into five parts, namely 50m, 60m,100m, 200m, 400m, 400m and 400m. In the process of sprinting, athletes must finish a section at the fastest speed in the shortest time.

American woman Jones participated in the Swedish IAAF Grand Prix in Stockholm. She won the 100 meter championship with a score of10.68, becoming the "fastest" after 1988, second only to Koina's10.69 and Jones'/kloc-0.65.

Women's 100 meter competition rules:

In track and field competitions, the ranking of all runners depends on the order in which their trunk (excluding head, neck, arms, legs, hands or feet) reaches the finish line and ends along the vertical plane, and the first runner ranks first. In any competition, if the athletes enter the next competition according to the results, the results are equal.

Then the referee of the finish shooting should consider the actual performance of the athlete11000 seconds. If the result is still the same, the athletes concerned should enter the next competition. If the actual conditions do not allow, we should draw lots to decide who will enter the next game. In the final, the first place has the same score, and the referee has the right to decide whether to play again. If there is an unconditional rematch, tie for first place. As for other rankings, the results are the same and will be processed in parallel.