Discus throw
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The discus throw (ⓘ), also known as disc throw, is a track and field event in which the participant athlete throws an oblate spheroid weight– called a discus– in an attempt to achieve a farther distance than other competitors. It is an ancient sport originated in ancient Greece, as demonstrated by the fifth-century-BC Myron statue Discobolus. Although not part of the current pentathlon, it was one of the events of the ancient Greek pentathlon, which can be dated back to at least 708BC, and it is part of the modern decathlon.
History

The sport of throwing the discus traces back to it being an event in the original Olympic Games of Ancient Greece. The discus as a sport was resurrected in Magdeburg, Germany, by gymnastics teacher Christian Georg Kohlrausch and his students in the 1870s. Organized men's competition was resumed in the late 19th century, and has been a part of the modern Summer Olympic Games since the first modern competition, the 1896 Summer Olympics. Images of discus throwers figured prominently in advertising for early modern Games, such as fundraising stamps for the 1896 Games, and the main posters for the 1920 and 1948 Summer Olympics. Today the sport of discus is a routine part of modern track-and-field meets at all levels, and retains a particularly iconic place in the Olympic Games.

The first modern athlete to throw the discus while rotating the whole body was František Janda-Suk from Bohemia (the present Czech Republic). Janda-Suk invented this technique when studying the position of the statue of Discobolus. After a year of developing the technique, he earned a silver medal in the 1900 Olympics.
Women's competition began in the first decades of the 20th century. Following competition at national and regional levels, it was added to the Olympic program for the 1928 games.
Regulations
The event consists of throwing a heavy disc, with the weight or size depending on the competitor. Men and women throw different sized discs, with varying sizes and weights depending on age. The weight of the discus is either governed by World Athletics for international or USA Track & Field for the United States.
In the United States, Henry Canine advocated for a lighter-weight discus in high school competition. His suggestion was adopted by the National High School Athletic Association in 1938.
| Age | Men | Women |
|---|---|---|
| High School | 1.6kg | 1kg |
| Collegiate | 2kg | 1kg |
| Professional | 2kg | 1kg |
| Master's (35–59) | 1.5kg | 1kg |
| Master's (60–74) | 1kg | 1kg |
| Master's (75+) | 1kg | 0.75kg |
| Age | Men | Women |
|---|---|---|
| ≤17 | 1.5kg | 1kg |
| 18–19 | 1.75kg | 1kg |
| 20–49 | 2kg | 1kg |
| 50–59 | 1.5kg | 1kg |
| 60–74 | 1kg | 1kg |
| 75+ | 1kg | 0.75kg |



The typical discus has sides made of plastic, wood, fiberglass, carbon fiber or metal with a metal rim and a metal core to attain the weight. The rim must be smooth, with no roughness or finger holds. A discus with more weight in the rim produces greater angular momentum for any given spin rate, and thus more stability, although it is more difficult to throw. However, a higher rim weight, if thrown correctly, can lead to a longer throw. In some competitions, a solid rubber discus is used (see in the United States).
To make a throw, the competitor starts in a circle of 2.50m (8ft2+1⁄4in) diameter, which is recessed in a concrete pad by 20 millimetres (0.79in). The thrower typically takes an initial stance facing away from the direction of the throw. They then spin anticlockwise (for right-handers) 1+1⁄2 times while staying within the circle to build momentum before releasing the discus. The discus must land within a 34.92º circular sector that is centered on the throwing circle. The rules of competition for discus are virtually identical to those of shot put, except that the circle is larger, a stop board is not used and there are no form rules concerning how the discus is to be thrown.
The basic motion is a fore-handed sidearm movement. The discus is spun off the index finger or the middle finger of the throwing hand. In flight the disc spins clockwise when viewed from above for a right-handed thrower, and anticlockwise for a left-handed thrower. As well as achieving maximum momentum in the discus on throwing, the discus' distance is also determined by the trajectory the thrower imparts, as well as the aerodynamic behavior of the discus. Generally, throws into a moderate headwind achieve the maximum distance. Also, a faster-spinning discus imparts greater gyroscopic stability. The technique of discus throwing is quite difficult to master and needs much experience to perfect; thus most top throwers are 30 years old or more.
The discus throw is sometimes contested indoors, but it is not included at the World Athletics Indoor Championships. World Athletics used to keep "world indoor best" discus records, but since 2023 they now combine both indoor and outdoor marks.


Phases
The discus technique can be broken down into phases. The purpose is to transfer from the back to the front of the throwing circle while turning through one and a half circles. The speed of delivery is high, and speed is built up during the throw (slow to fast). Correct technique involves the buildup of torque so that maximum force can be applied to the discus on delivery.

Initially, the thrower takes up their position in the throwing circle, distributing their body weight evenly over both feet, which are roughly shoulder width apart. They crouch in order to adopt a more efficient posture to start from whilst also isometrically preloading their muscles; this will allow them to start faster and achieve a more powerful throw. They then begin the wind-up, which sets the tone for the entire throw; the rhythm of the wind-up and throw is very important.
Focusing on rhythm can bring about the consistency to get in the right positions that many throwers lack. Executing a sound discus throw with solid technique requires perfect balance. This is due to the throw being a linear movement combined with a one and a half rotation and an implement at the end of one arm. Thus, a good discus thrower needs to maintain balance within the circle.
For a right handed thrower, the next stage is to move the weight over the left foot. From this position the right foot is raised, and the athlete 'runs' across the circle. There are various techniques for this stage where the leg swings out to a small or great extent. Some athletes turn on their left heel (e.g. Ilke Wyludda), but turning on the ball of the foot is far more common.
The aim is to land in the 'power position'; the right foot should be in the center and the heel should not touch the ground at any point. The left foot should land very quickly after the right. Weight should be mostly over the back foot with as much torque as possible in the body so the right arm is high and far back. This is very hard to achieve.
The critical stage is the delivery of the discus. From the 'power position' the hips drive through hard, and will be facing the direction of the throw on delivery. Athletes employ various techniques to control the end-point and recover from the throw, such as fixing feet (to pretty much stop dead), or an active reverse spinning onto the left foot (e.g. Virgilijus Alekna).
Sports scientist Richard Ganslen researched the Aerodynamics of the Discus, reporting the discus will stall at an angle of 29°.
Culture
The discus throw has been the subject of a number of well-known ancient Greek statues and Roman copies such as the Discobolus and Discophoros. The discus throw also appears repeatedly in ancient Greek mythology, featured as a means of manslaughter in the cases of Hyacinth, Crocus, Phocus, and Acrisius, and as a named event in the funeral games of Patroclus.
Discus throwers have been selected as a main motif in numerous collectors' coins. One of the recent samples is the €10 Greek Discus commemorative coin, minted in 2003 to commemorate the 2004 Summer Olympics. On the obverse of the coin a modern athlete is seen in the foreground in a half-turned position, while in the background an ancient discus thrower has been captured in a lively bending motion, with the discus high above his head, creating a vivid representation of the sport.
Area records
- Updated 21 May 2026.
| Area | Men | Women | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mark | Season | Athlete | Mark | Season | Athlete | |
| World | 75.56m(247ft10in) | 2025 | Mykolas Alekna(LTU) | 76.80m(251ft11in) | 1988 | Gabriele Reinsch(GDR) |
| Area records | ||||||
| Africa (records) | 70.32m(230ft8in) | 2002 | Frantz Kruger(RSA) | 64.96m(213ft1in) | 2023 | Chioma Onyekwere(NGR) |
| Asia (records) | 69.32m(227ft5in) | 2008 | Ehsan Haddadi(IRI) | 71.68m(235ft2in) | 1992 | Xiao Yanling(CHN) |
| Europe (records) | 75.56m(247ft10in) | 2025 | Mykolas Alekna(LTU) | 76.80m(251ft11in) | 1988 | Gabriele Reinsch(GDR) |
| North, Central America and Caribbean (records) | 72.45m(237ft8in) | 2026 | Sam Mattis(USA) | 73.52m(241ft2in) | 2025 | Valarie Sion(USA) |
| Oceania (records) | 74.78m(245ft4in) | 2025 | Matthew Denny(AUS) | 69.64m(228ft5in) | 2017 | Dani Stevens(AUS) |
| South America (records) | 70.29m(230ft7in) | 2020 | Mauricio Ortega(COL) | 65.34m(214ft4in) | 2019 | Andressa de Morais(BRA) |
All-time top 25
| Tables show data for two definitions of "Top 25" - the top 25 discus throw marks and the top 25 athletes: |
| - denotes top performance for athletes in the top 25 discus throw marks |
| - denotes lesser performances, still in the top 25 discus throw marks, by repeat athletes |
| - denotes top performance (only) for other top 25 athletes who fall outside the top 25 discus throw marks |
Men
- Correct as of June 2026.
| Ath.# | Perf.# | Mark | Athlete | Nation | Date | Place | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 75.56m(247ft10in) | Mykolas Alekna | Lithuania | 13 April 2025 | Ramona | |
| 2 | 74.89m(245ft8in) | M. Alekna #2 | 13 April 2025 | Ramona | |||
| 2 | 3 | 74.78m(245ft4in) | Matthew Denny | Australia | 13 April 2025 | Ramona | |
| 4 | 74.35m(243ft11in) | M. Alekna #3 | 14 April 2024 | Ramona | |||
| 5 | 74.25m(243ft7in) | Denny #2 | 10 April 2025 | Ramona | |||
| 3 | 6 | 74.08m(243ft0in) | Jürgen Schult | East Germany | 6 June 1986 | Neubrandenburg | |
| 7 | 74.04m(242ft10in) | Denny #3 | 9 April 2026 | Ramona | |||
| 4 | 8 | 74.00m(242ft9in) | Steven Richter | Germany | 9 April 2026 | Ramona | |
| 5 | 9 | 73.88m(242ft4in) | Virgilijus Alekna | Lithuania | 3 August 2000 | Kaunas | |
| 10 | 73.58m(241ft4in) | Denny #4 | 11 April 2026 | Ramona | |||
| 6 | 11 | 73.38m(240ft8in) | Gerd Kanter | Estonia | 4 September 2006 | Helsingborg | |
| 7 | 12 | 72.61m(238ft2in) | Kristjan Čeh | Slovenia | 9 April 2026 | Ramona | |
| 13 | 72.47m(237ft9in) | Richter #2 | 11 April 2026 | Ramona | |||
| 8 | 14 | 72.45m(237ft8in) | Sam Mattis | United States | 9 April 2026 | Ramona | |
| 15 | 72.36m(237ft4in) | Čeh #2 | 31 May 2025 | Slovenska Bistrica | |||
| 16 | 72.34m(237ft4in) | Čeh #3 | 24 May 2025 | Zagreb | |||
| 17 | 72.26m(237ft0in) | Čeh #4 | 29 March 2026 | Ramona | |||
| 18 | 72.15m(236ft8in) | M. Alekna #4 | 2 August 2025 | Palanga | |||
| 19 | 72.12m(236ft7in) | M. Alekna #5 | 30 May 2025 | College Station | |||
| 20 | 72.11m(236ft6in) | Čeh #5 | 25 May 2025 | Ptuj | |||
| 21 | 72.07m(236ft5in) | Denny #5 | 6 April 2025 | Ramona | |||
| 22 | 72.02m(236ft3in) | Kanter #2 | 3 May 2007 | Salinas | |||
| 9 | 23 | 72.01m(236ft3in) | Ralford Mullings | Jamaica | 16 August 2025 | Ramona | |
| 24 | 71.88m(235ft9in) | Kanter #3 | 8 May 2008 | Salinas | |||
| 10 | 24 | 71.88m(235ft9in) | Lawrence Okoye | Great Britain | 11 April 2026 | Ramona | |
| 11 | 71.86m(235ft9in) | Yuriy Dumchev | Soviet Union | 29 May 1983 | Moscow | ||
| Daniel Ståhl | Sweden | 29 June 2019 | Bottnaryd | ||||
| 13 | 71.84m(235ft8in) | Piotr Małachowski | Poland | 8 June 2013 | Hengelo | ||
| 14 | 71.70m(235ft2in) | Róbert Fazekas | Hungary | 14 July 2002 | Szombathely | ||
| 15 | 71.50m(234ft6in) | Lars Riedel | Germany | 3 May 1997 | Wiesbaden | ||
| 16 | 71.48m(234ft6in) | Alex Rose | Samoa | 11 May 2024 | Allendale | ||
| 17 | 71.32m(233ft11in) | Ben Plucknett | United States | 4 June 1983 | Eugene | ||
| 18 | 71.26m(233ft9in) | John Powell | United States | 9 June 1984 | San Jose | ||
| Rickard Bruch | Sweden | 15 November 1984 | Malmö | ||||
| Imrich Bugár | Czechoslovakia | 25 May 1985 | San Jose | ||||
| 21 | 71.22m(233ft7in) | Ruben Rolvink | Netherlands | 31 May 2026 | Ramona | ||
| 22 | 71.18m(233ft6in) | Art Burns | United States | 19 July 1983 | San Jose | ||
| 23 | 71.16m(233ft5in) | Wolfgang Schmidt | East Germany | 9 August 1978 | Berlin | ||
| 24 | 71.14m(233ft4in) | Anthony Washington | United States | 22 May 1996 | Salinas | ||
| 25 | 71.06m(233ft1in) | Luis Delís | Cuba | 21 May 1983 | Havana |
Notable series
- Matthew Denny had throws of 71.03, 73.46, 74.25, 72.93, 71.14 and 73.56 at the Oklahoma Throws Series in Ramona on 10 April 2025, becoming the second man to produce six throws above 70 meters in a single competition. He achieved a series average of 72.72 m, which is the best in history.
- Mykolas Alekna had throws of 72.21, 70.32, 72.89, 70.51, 74.35 and 70.50 at the Oklahoma Throws Series in Ramona on 14 April 2024, becoming the first man to produce three throws above 72 meters (and six throws above 70 meters) in a single competition.
- Kristjan Čeh had throws of 71.86, 71.70 and 71.19 in Jõhvi on 16 June 2023 becoming the first man to have three throws above 71 metres in a single competition.
- At the 2019 Diamond League Meeting in Doha, Qatar, Daniel Ståhl became the first man to produce six throws beyond 69.50 in a single competition.
Annulled marks
- Ben Plucknett also threw a world record of 72.34 in Stockholm on 7 July 1981. This performance was annulled due to doping offences.
Non-legal marks
- Rickard Bruch also threw 72.18 at an exhibition meeting in Piteå on 23 July 1974.
- John Powell also threw 72.08 in Klagshamn on 11 September 1987, but the throw was made onto a sloping/downhill sector.
Women
- Correct as of April 2026.
| Ath.# | Perf.# | Mark | Athlete | Nation | Date | Place | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 76.80m(251ft11in) | Gabriele Reinsch | East Germany | 9 July 1988 | Neubrandenburg | |
| 2 | 2 | 74.56m(244ft7in) | Zdeňka Šilhavá | Czechoslovakia | 26 August 1984 | Nitra | |
| Ilke Wyludda | East Germany | 23 July 1989 | Neubrandenburg | ||||
| 4 | 74.44m(244ft2in) | Reinsch #2 | 13 September 1988 | Berlin | |||
| 5 | 74.40m(244ft1in) | Wyludda #2 | 13 September 1988 | Berlin | |||
| 4 | 6 | 74.08m(243ft0in) | Diana Gansky | East Germany | 20 June 1987 | Karl-Marx-Stadt | |
| 7 | 73.90m(242ft5in) | Gansky #2 | 27 June 1987 | Prague | |||
| 5 | 8 | 73.84m(242ft3in) | Daniela Costian | Romania | 30 April 1988 | Bucharest | |
| 9 | 73.78m(242ft0in) | Costian #2 | 24 April 1988 | Bucharest | |||
| 6 | 10 | 73.52m(241ft2in) | Valarie Allman | United States | 12 April 2025 | Ramona | |
| 11 | 73.42m(240ft10in) | Reinsch #3 | 12 June 1988 | Karl-Marx-Stadt | |||
| 7 | 12 | 73.36m(240ft8in) | Irina Meszynski | East Germany | 17 August 1984 | Prague | |
| 13 | 73.32m(240ft6in) | Gansky #2 | 11 June 1987 | Neubrandenburg | |||
| 8 | 14 | 73.28m(240ft5in) | Galina Savinkova | Soviet Union | 8 September 1984 | Donetsk | |
| 15 | 73.26m(240ft4in) | Savinkova #2 | 22 May 1983 | Leselidze | |||
| Gansky #3 | 6 June 1986 | Neubrandenburg | |||||
| 17 | 73.24m(240ft3in) | Gansky #4 | 29 May 1987 | Leipzig | |||
| 9 | 18 | 73.22m(240ft2in) | Tsvetanka Khristova | Bulgaria | 19 April 1987 | Kazanlak | |
| 19 | 73.16m(240ft0in) | Wyludda #3 | 13 September 1988 | Berlin | |||
| 10 | 20 | 73.10m(239ft9in) | Gisela Beyer | East Germany | 20 July 1984 | Berlin | |
| 20 | 73.10m(239ft9in) | Allman #2 | 11 April 2026 | Ramona | |||
| 11 | 22 | 73.09m(239ft9in) | Yaime Pérez | Cuba | 13 April 2024 | Ramona | |
| 23 | 73.04m(239ft7in) | Gansky #5 | 6 June 1987 | Potsdam | |||
| Wyludda #4 | 5 August 1989 | Gateshead | |||||
| 25 | 72.96m(239ft4in) | Savinkova #3 | 23 June 1985 | Erfurt | |||
| 12 | 72.92m(239ft2in) | Martina Hellmann | East Germany | 20 August 1987 | Potsdam | ||
| 13 | 72.14m(236ft8in) | Galina Murashova | Soviet Union | 17 August 1984 | Prague | ||
| 14 | 71.80m(235ft6in) | Mariya Vergova | Bulgaria | 13 July 1980 | Sofia | ||
| 15 | 71.68m(235ft2in) | Xiao Yanling | China | 14 March 1992 | Beijing | ||
| 16 | 71.58m(234ft10in) | Ellina Zvereva | Soviet Union | 12 June 1988 | Leningrad | ||
| 17 | 71.50m(234ft6in) | Evelin Jahl | East Germany | 10 May 1980 | Potsdam | ||
| 18 | 71.41m(234ft3in) | Sandra Perković | Croatia | 18 July 2017 | Bellinzona | ||
| 19 | 71.30m(233ft11in) | Larisa Korotkevich | Russia | 29 May 1992 | Sochi | ||
| 20 | 71.22m(233ft7in) | Ria Stalman | Netherlands | 15 July 1984 | Walnut | ||
| 21 | 70.99m(232ft10in) | Jorinde van Klinken | Netherlands | 11 April 2026 | Ramona | ||
| 22 | 70.88m(232ft6in) | Hilda Ramos | Cuba | 8 May 1992 | Havana | ||
| 23 | 70.80m(232ft3in) | Larisa Mikhalchenko | Soviet Union | 18 June 1988 | Kharkiv | ||
| 24 | 70.72m(232ft0in) | Laulauga Tausaga | United States | 12 April 2025 | Ramona | ||
| 25 | 70.68m(231ft10in) | Maritza Martén | Cuba | 18 July 1992 | Seville |
Annulled marks
- Daniela Costian of Romania threw a best of 73.48 in Bucharest on 30 April 1988. This performance was annulled due to doping offences.
- Darya Pishchalnikova of Russia threw a best of 70.69 in Cheboksary on 5 July 2012. This performance was annulled due to doping offences.
Non-legal marks
- Martina Hellmann also threw 78.14 at an unofficial meeting in Berlin on 6 September 1988.
- Ilke Wyludda also threw 75.36 at an unofficial meeting in Berlin on 6 September 1988.
Olympic medalists
Men
Women
World Championships medalists
Men
Women
World leading marks
| Year | Mark | Athlete | Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men Year Mark Athlete Place 1968 68.40m(224ft4in) Jay Silvester(USA) Reno 1969 68.06m(223ft3in) Rickard Bruch(SWE) Malmö 1970 67.14m(220ft3in) Rickard Bruch(SWE) Malmö 1971 70.38m(230ft10in) Jay Silvester(USA) Lancaster 1972 68.40m(224ft4in) Rickard Bruch(SWE) Stockholm 1973 67.58m(221ft8in) Rickard Bruch(SWE) Skellefteå 1974 68.16m(223ft7in) Rickard Bruch(SWE) Helsingborg 1975 69.08m(226ft7in) John Powell(USA) Long Beach 1976 70.86m(232ft5in) Mac Wilkins(USA) San Jose 1977 69.20m(227ft0in) Mac Wilkins(USA) Westwood 1978 71.16m(233ft5in) Wolfgang Schmidt(GDR) Berlin 1979 70.66m(231ft9in) Mac Wilkins(USA) Walnut 1980 70.98m(232ft10in) Mac Wilkins(USA) Erfurt 1981 69.98m(229ft7in) John Powell(USA) Modesto 1982 70.58m(231ft6in) Luis Delís(CUB) Salinas 1983 71.86m(235ft9in) Yuriy Dumchev(RUS) Moskva 1984 71.26m(233ft9in) John Powell(USA) San Jose Ricky Bruch(SWE) Malmö 1985 71.26m(233ft9in) Imrich Bugár(TCH) San Jose 1986 74.08m(243ft0in) Jürgen Schult(GDR) Neubrandenburg 1987 69.52m(228ft1in) Jürgen Schult(GDR) Neubrandenburg 1988 70.46m(231ft2in) Jürgen Schult(GDR) Berlin 1989 70.92m(232ft8in) Wolfgang Schmidt(FRG) Norden 1990 68.94m(226ft2in) Romas Ubartas(LTU) Smalininkai 1991 69.36m(227ft6in) Mike Buncic(USA) Fresno 1992 69.04m(226ft6in) Jürgen Schult(GER) Halle 1993 68.42m(224ft5in) Lars Riedel(GER) Jena 1994 68.58m(225ft0in) Attila Horváth(HUN) Budapest 1995 69.08m(226ft7in) Lars Riedel(GER) Bellinzona Monaco 1996 71.14m(233ft4in) Anthony Washington(USA) Salinas 1997 71.50m(234ft6in) Lars Riedel(GER) Wiesbaden 1998 69.91m(229ft4in) John Godina(USA) Salinas 1999 69.18m(226ft11in) Lars Riedel(GER) Jena 2000 73.88m(242ft4in) Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) Kaunas 2001 70.99m(232ft10in) Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) Stellenbosch 2002 71.70m(235ft2in) Róbert Fazekas(HUN) Szombathely 2003 70.78m(232ft2in) Róbert Fazekas(HUN) Budapest 2004 70.97m(232ft10in) Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) Rethimno 2005 70.67m(231ft10in) Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) Madrid 2006 73.38m(240ft8in) Gerd Kanter(EST) Helsingborg 2007 72.02m(236ft3in) Gerd Kanter(EST) Salinas 2008 71.88m(235ft9in) Gerd Kanter(EST) Salinas 2009 71.64m(235ft0in) Gerd Kanter(EST) Kohila 2010 71.45m(234ft4in) Gerd Kanter(EST) Chula Vista 2011 69.50m(228ft0in) Zoltán Kővágó(HUN) Budapest 2012 70.66m(231ft9in) Robert Harting(GER) Turnov 2013 71.84m(235ft8in) Piotr Małachowski(POL) Hengelo 2014 69.28m(227ft3in) Piotr Małachowski(POL) Halle 2015 68.29m(224ft0in) Piotr Małachowski(POL) Cetniewo 2016 68.72m(225ft5in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Sollentuna 2017 71.29m(233ft10in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Sollentuna 2018 69.72m(228ft8in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Eskilstuna 2019 71.86m(235ft9in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Bottnaryd 2020 71.37m(234ft1in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Sollentuna 2021 71.40m(234ft3in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Bottnaryd 2022 71.47m(234ft5in) Daniel Ståhl(SWE) Uppsala 2023 71.86m(235ft9in) Kristjan Čeh(SLO) Jöhvi 2024 74.35m(243ft11in) Mykolas Alekna(LIT) Ramona 2025 75.56m(247ft10in) Mykolas Alekna(LIT) Ramona 2026 74.04m(242ft10in) Matthew Denny(AUS) Ramona | Women Year Mark Athlete Place 1968 62.54m(205ft2in) Liesel Westermann(FRG) Werdohl 1969 63.96m(209ft10in) Liesel Westermann(FRG) Hamburg 1970 63.66m(208ft10in) Karin Illgen(GDR) Leipzig 1971 64.88m(212ft10in) Faina Melnik(URS) Munich 1972 67.32m(220ft10in) Argentina Menis(ROU) Constanța 1973 69.48m(227ft11in) Faina Melnik(URS) Edinburgh 1974 69.90m(229ft3in) Faina Melnik(URS) Prague 1975 70.20m(230ft3in) Faina Melnik(URS) Zürich 1976 70.50m(231ft3in) Faina Melnik(URS) Sochi 1977 68.92m(226ft1in) Sabine Engel(GDR) Karl-Marx-Stadt 1978 70.72m(232ft0in) Evelin Jahl(GDR) Dresden 1979 69.82m(229ft0in) Evelin Jahl(GDR) Leipzig 1980 71.80m(235ft6in) Mariya Petkova(BUL) Sofia 1981 71.46m(234ft5in) Evelin Jahl(GDR) Berlin 1982 71.40m(234ft3in) Irina Meszynski(GDR) Karl-Marx-Stadt 1983 73.26m(240ft4in) Galina Savinkova(URS) Leselidze 1984 74.56m(244ft7in) Zdeňka Šilhavá(TCH) Nitra 1985 72.96m(239ft4in) Galina Savinkova(URS) Erfurt 1986 73.26m(240ft4in) Diana Gansky(GDR) Neubrandenburg 1987 74.08m(243ft0in) Diana Gansky(GDR) Karl-Marx-Stadt 1988 76.80m(251ft11in) Gabriele Reinsch(GDR) Neubrandenburg 1989 74.56m(244ft7in) Ilke Wyludda(GDR) Neubrandenburg 1990 71.10m(233ft3in) Ilke Wyludda(GDR) Tel Aviv 1991 71.02m(233ft0in) Tsvetanka Khristova(BUL) Tokyo 1992 71.68m(235ft2in) Xiao Yanling(CHN) Beijing 1993 68.14m(223ft6in) Larisa Korotkevich(RUS) Vénissieux 1994 68.58m(225ft0in) Daniela Costian(AUS) Auckland 1995 69.68m(228ft7in) Mette Bergmann(NOR) Florø 1996 69.66m(228ft6in) Ilke Wyludda(GER) Atlanta 1997 70.00m(229ft7in) Xiao Yanling(CHN) Shanghai 1998 68.91m(226ft0in) Franka Dietzsch(GER) Stendal 1999 70.02m(229ft8in) Natalya Sadova(RUS) Thessaloníki 2000 68.70m(225ft4in) Nicoleta Grasu(ROU) Bucharest 2001 68.57m(224ft11in) Natalya Sadova(RUS) Edmonton 2002 67.73m(222ft2in) Natalya Sadova(RUS) Tula 2003 69.38m(227ft7in) Natalya Sadova(RUS) Halle 2004 69.14m(226ft10in) Irina Yatchenko(BLR) Minsk 2005 66.81m(219ft2in) Vera Cechlová(CZE) Madrid 2006 68.51m(224ft9in) Franka Dietzsch(GER) Schönebeck 2007 68.06m(223ft3in) Franka Dietzsch(GER) Halle 2008 66.51m(218ft2in) Nicoleta Grasu(ROU) Istanbul 2009 66.40m(217ft10in) Li Yanfeng(CHN) Jinan 2010 67.78m(222ft4in) Nadine Müller(GER) Wiesbaden 2011 67.98m(223ft0in) Li Yanfeng(CHN) Schönebeck 2012 69.11m(226ft8in) Sandra Perković(CRO) London 2013 68.96m(226ft2in) Sandra Perković(CRO) Lausanne 2014 71.08m(233ft2in) Sandra Perković(CRO) Zürich 2015 70.65m(231ft9in) Denia Caballero(CUB) Bilbao 2016 70.88m(232ft6in) Sandra Perković(CRO) Shanghai 2017 71.41m(234ft3in) Sandra Perković(CRO) Barcelona 2018 71.38m(234ft2in) Sandra Perković(CRO) Doha 2019 69.39m(227ft7in) Yaime Pérez(CUB) Sotteville 2020 70.15m(230ft1in) Valarie Allman(USA) Rathdrum 2021 71.16m(233ft5in) Valarie Allman(USA) Berlin 2022 71.46m(234ft5in) Valarie Allman(USA) San Diego 2023 70.47m(231ft2in) Valarie Allman(USA) Berlin 2024 73.09m(239ft9in) Yaime Pérez(CUB) Ramona 2025 73.52m(241ft2in) Valarie Allman(USA) Ramona 2026 73.10m(239ft9in) Valarie Allman(USA) Ramona | ||
| 1968 | 68.40m(224ft4in) | Jay Silvester(USA) | Reno |
| 1969 | 68.06m(223ft3in) | Rickard Bruch(SWE) | Malmö |
| 1970 | 67.14m(220ft3in) | Rickard Bruch(SWE) | Malmö |
| 1971 | 70.38m(230ft10in) | Jay Silvester(USA) | Lancaster |
| 1972 | 68.40m(224ft4in) | Rickard Bruch(SWE) | Stockholm |
| 1973 | 67.58m(221ft8in) | Rickard Bruch(SWE) | Skellefteå |
| 1974 | 68.16m(223ft7in) | Rickard Bruch(SWE) | Helsingborg |
| 1975 | 69.08m(226ft7in) | John Powell(USA) | Long Beach |
| 1976 | 70.86m(232ft5in) | Mac Wilkins(USA) | San Jose |
| 1977 | 69.20m(227ft0in) | Mac Wilkins(USA) | Westwood |
| 1978 | 71.16m(233ft5in) | Wolfgang Schmidt(GDR) | Berlin |
| 1979 | 70.66m(231ft9in) | Mac Wilkins(USA) | Walnut |
| 1980 | 70.98m(232ft10in) | Mac Wilkins(USA) | Erfurt |
| 1981 | 69.98m(229ft7in) | John Powell(USA) | Modesto |
| 1982 | 70.58m(231ft6in) | Luis Delís(CUB) | Salinas |
| 1983 | 71.86m(235ft9in) | Yuriy Dumchev(RUS) | Moskva |
| 1984 | 71.26m(233ft9in) | John Powell(USA) | San Jose |
| Ricky Bruch(SWE) | Malmö | ||
| 1985 | 71.26m(233ft9in) | Imrich Bugár(TCH) | San Jose |
| 1986 | 74.08m(243ft0in) | Jürgen Schult(GDR) | Neubrandenburg |
| 1987 | 69.52m(228ft1in) | Jürgen Schult(GDR) | Neubrandenburg |
| 1988 | 70.46m(231ft2in) | Jürgen Schult(GDR) | Berlin |
| 1989 | 70.92m(232ft8in) | Wolfgang Schmidt(FRG) | Norden |
| 1990 | 68.94m(226ft2in) | Romas Ubartas(LTU) | Smalininkai |
| 1991 | 69.36m(227ft6in) | Mike Buncic(USA) | Fresno |
| 1992 | 69.04m(226ft6in) | Jürgen Schult(GER) | Halle |
| 1993 | 68.42m(224ft5in) | Lars Riedel(GER) | Jena |
| 1994 | 68.58m(225ft0in) | Attila Horváth(HUN) | Budapest |
| 1995 | 69.08m(226ft7in) | Lars Riedel(GER) | Bellinzona |
| Monaco | |||
| 1996 | 71.14m(233ft4in) | Anthony Washington(USA) | Salinas |
| 1997 | 71.50m(234ft6in) | Lars Riedel(GER) | Wiesbaden |
| 1998 | 69.91m(229ft4in) | John Godina(USA) | Salinas |
| 1999 | 69.18m(226ft11in) | Lars Riedel(GER) | Jena |
| 2000 | 73.88m(242ft4in) | Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) | Kaunas |
| 2001 | 70.99m(232ft10in) | Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) | Stellenbosch |
| 2002 | 71.70m(235ft2in) | Róbert Fazekas(HUN) | Szombathely |
| 2003 | 70.78m(232ft2in) | Róbert Fazekas(HUN) | Budapest |
| 2004 | 70.97m(232ft10in) | Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) | Rethimno |
| 2005 | 70.67m(231ft10in) | Virgilijus Alekna(LTU) | Madrid |
| 2006 | 73.38m(240ft8in) | Gerd Kanter(EST) | Helsingborg |
| 2007 | 72.02m(236ft3in) | Gerd Kanter(EST) | Salinas |
| 2008 | 71.88m(235ft9in) | Gerd Kanter(EST) | Salinas |
| 2009 | 71.64m(235ft0in) | Gerd Kanter(EST) | Kohila |
| 2010 | 71.45m(234ft4in) | Gerd Kanter(EST) | Chula Vista |
| 2011 | 69.50m(228ft0in) | Zoltán Kővágó(HUN) | Budapest |
| 2012 | 70.66m(231ft9in) | Robert Harting(GER) | Turnov |
| 2013 | 71.84m(235ft8in) | Piotr Małachowski(POL) | Hengelo |
| 2014 | 69.28m(227ft3in) | Piotr Małachowski(POL) | Halle |
| 2015 | 68.29m(224ft0in) | Piotr Małachowski(POL) | Cetniewo |
| 2016 | 68.72m(225ft5in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Sollentuna |
| 2017 | 71.29m(233ft10in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Sollentuna |
| 2018 | 69.72m(228ft8in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Eskilstuna |
| 2019 | 71.86m(235ft9in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Bottnaryd |
| 2020 | 71.37m(234ft1in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Sollentuna |
| 2021 | 71.40m(234ft3in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Bottnaryd |
| 2022 | 71.47m(234ft5in) | Daniel Ståhl(SWE) | Uppsala |
| 2023 | 71.86m(235ft9in) | Kristjan Čeh(SLO) | Jöhvi |
| 2024 | 74.35m(243ft11in) | Mykolas Alekna(LIT) | Ramona |
| 2025 | 75.56m(247ft10in) | Mykolas Alekna(LIT) | Ramona |
| 2026 | 74.04m(242ft10in) | Matthew Denny(AUS) | Ramona |
| Year | Mark | Athlete | Place |
| 1968 | 62.54m(205ft2in) | Liesel Westermann(FRG) | Werdohl |
| 1969 | 63.96m(209ft10in) | Liesel Westermann(FRG) | Hamburg |
| 1970 | 63.66m(208ft10in) | Karin Illgen(GDR) | Leipzig |
| 1971 | 64.88m(212ft10in) | Faina Melnik(URS) | Munich |
| 1972 | 67.32m(220ft10in) | Argentina Menis(ROU) | Constanța |
| 1973 | 69.48m(227ft11in) | Faina Melnik(URS) | Edinburgh |
| 1974 | 69.90m(229ft3in) | Faina Melnik(URS) | Prague |
| 1975 | 70.20m(230ft3in) | Faina Melnik(URS) | Zürich |
| 1976 | 70.50m(231ft3in) | Faina Melnik(URS) | Sochi |
| 1977 | 68.92m(226ft1in) | Sabine Engel(GDR) | Karl-Marx-Stadt |
| 1978 | 70.72m(232ft0in) | Evelin Jahl(GDR) | Dresden |
| 1979 | 69.82m(229ft0in) | Evelin Jahl(GDR) | Leipzig |
| 1980 | 71.80m(235ft6in) | Mariya Petkova(BUL) | Sofia |
| 1981 | 71.46m(234ft5in) | Evelin Jahl(GDR) | Berlin |
| 1982 | 71.40m(234ft3in) | Irina Meszynski(GDR) | Karl-Marx-Stadt |
| 1983 | 73.26m(240ft4in) | Galina Savinkova(URS) | Leselidze |
| 1984 | 74.56m(244ft7in) | Zdeňka Šilhavá(TCH) | Nitra |
| 1985 | 72.96m(239ft4in) | Galina Savinkova(URS) | Erfurt |
| 1986 | 73.26m(240ft4in) | Diana Gansky(GDR) | Neubrandenburg |
| 1987 | 74.08m(243ft0in) | Diana Gansky(GDR) | Karl-Marx-Stadt |
| 1988 | 76.80m(251ft11in) | Gabriele Reinsch(GDR) | Neubrandenburg |
| 1989 | 74.56m(244ft7in) | Ilke Wyludda(GDR) | Neubrandenburg |
| 1990 | 71.10m(233ft3in) | Ilke Wyludda(GDR) | Tel Aviv |
| 1991 | 71.02m(233ft0in) | Tsvetanka Khristova(BUL) | Tokyo |
| 1992 | 71.68m(235ft2in) | Xiao Yanling(CHN) | Beijing |
| 1993 | 68.14m(223ft6in) | Larisa Korotkevich(RUS) | Vénissieux |
| 1994 | 68.58m(225ft0in) | Daniela Costian(AUS) | Auckland |
| 1995 | 69.68m(228ft7in) | Mette Bergmann(NOR) | Florø |
| 1996 | 69.66m(228ft6in) | Ilke Wyludda(GER) | Atlanta |
| 1997 | 70.00m(229ft7in) | Xiao Yanling(CHN) | Shanghai |
| 1998 | 68.91m(226ft0in) | Franka Dietzsch(GER) | Stendal |
| 1999 | 70.02m(229ft8in) | Natalya Sadova(RUS) | Thessaloníki |
| 2000 | 68.70m(225ft4in) | Nicoleta Grasu(ROU) | Bucharest |
| 2001 | 68.57m(224ft11in) | Natalya Sadova(RUS) | Edmonton |
| 2002 | 67.73m(222ft2in) | Natalya Sadova(RUS) | Tula |
| 2003 | 69.38m(227ft7in) | Natalya Sadova(RUS) | Halle |
| 2004 | 69.14m(226ft10in) | Irina Yatchenko(BLR) | Minsk |
| 2005 | 66.81m(219ft2in) | Vera Cechlová(CZE) | Madrid |
| 2006 | 68.51m(224ft9in) | Franka Dietzsch(GER) | Schönebeck |
| 2007 | 68.06m(223ft3in) | Franka Dietzsch(GER) | Halle |
| 2008 | 66.51m(218ft2in) | Nicoleta Grasu(ROU) | Istanbul |
| 2009 | 66.40m(217ft10in) | Li Yanfeng(CHN) | Jinan |
| 2010 | 67.78m(222ft4in) | Nadine Müller(GER) | Wiesbaden |
| 2011 | 67.98m(223ft0in) | Li Yanfeng(CHN) | Schönebeck |
| 2012 | 69.11m(226ft8in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | London |
| 2013 | 68.96m(226ft2in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | Lausanne |
| 2014 | 71.08m(233ft2in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | Zürich |
| 2015 | 70.65m(231ft9in) | Denia Caballero(CUB) | Bilbao |
| 2016 | 70.88m(232ft6in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | Shanghai |
| 2017 | 71.41m(234ft3in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | Barcelona |
| 2018 | 71.38m(234ft2in) | Sandra Perković(CRO) | Doha |
| 2019 | 69.39m(227ft7in) | Yaime Pérez(CUB) | Sotteville |
| 2020 | 70.15m(230ft1in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | Rathdrum |
| 2021 | 71.16m(233ft5in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | Berlin |
| 2022 | 71.46m(234ft5in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | San Diego |
| 2023 | 70.47m(231ft2in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | Berlin |
| 2024 | 73.09m(239ft9in) | Yaime Pérez(CUB) | Ramona |
| 2025 | 73.52m(241ft2in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | Ramona |
| 2026 | 73.10m(239ft9in) | Valarie Allman(USA) | Ramona |