Triple jump#Men (absolute)

{{Short description|Track and field event}}

{{About|the athletics event|the jump with three revolutions in figure ice-skating and roller-skating|Figure skating jumps}}

{{Infobox athletics event

|event= Triple jump

|image= 240px

|caption= Former world record holder Willie Banks during the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea

|WRmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|GBR}} Jonathan Edwards {{T&Fcalc|18.29}} (1995)}}

|ORmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Kenny Harrison {{T&Fcalc|18.09}} (1996)}}

|CRmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|GBR}} Jonathan Edwards {{T&Fcalc|18.29}} (1995)}}

|WRwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|VEN}} Yulimar Rojas {{T&Fcalc|15.74}} {{athAbbr|i}} (2022)}}

|ORwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|VEN}} Yulimar Rojas {{T&Fcalc|15.67}} (2021)}}

|CRwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|UKR}} Inessa Kravets {{T&Fcalc|15.50}} (1995)}}

}}

File:Men's Triple Jump.webm – Gwangju 2015 – Men's Triple Jump Final, Dmitry Sorokin (RUS 17.29) wins gold.]]

The triple jump, sometimes referred to as the hop, step and jump or the hop, skip and jump, is a track and field event, similar to long jump. As a group, the two events are referred to as the "horizontal jumps". The competitor runs down the track and performs a hop, a bound and then a jump into the sand pit. The triple jump was inspired by accounts of lengthy jumps at the ancient Olympic Games and has been a modern Olympics event since the Games' inception in 1896.

According to World Athletics rules, "the hop shall be made so that an athlete lands first on the same foot

as that from which he has taken off; in the step he shall land on the

other foot, from which, subsequently, the jump is performed."{{cite web|url=http://www.iaaf.org/download/download?filename=7c4c7e46-8979-453d-a355-a736fdac2281.pdf&urlslug=Competition%20Rules%202012-13 |title=IAAF Competition Rules 2012-2013 |access-date=2013-08-18}}

The male world record holder is Jonathan Edwards of the United Kingdom, with a jump of {{T&Fcalc|18.29}}. The female world record holder is Yulimar Rojas of Venezuela, with a jump of {{T&Fcalc|15.74}}.

History

Historical sources on the ancient Olympic Games occasionally mention jumps of 15 metres or more. This led sports historians to conclude that these must have been a series of jumps, thus providing the basis for the triple jump.Rosenbaum, Mike (2012). An Illustrated History of the Triple Jump. Retrieved from http://trackandfield.about.com/od/triplejump/ss/illustriplejump.htm {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090206060003/http://trackandfield.about.com/od/triplejump/ss/illustriplejump.htm |date=2009-02-06 }}. However, there is no evidence for the triple jump being included in the ancient Olympic Games, and the recorded extraordinary distances may be due to the artistic license of the authors of victory poems, rather than attempts to report accurate results.Koski, Rissanen & Tahvanainen (2004). Antiikin urheilu. Olympian kentiltä Rooman areenoille. [The Sports of Antiquity. From the Fields of Olympia to Roman Arenas.] Jyväskylä: Atena Kustannus Oy. {{ISBN|951-796-341-6}}

The triple jump was a part of the inaugural modern Olympics in 1896 in Athens, although at the time it consisted of two hops on the same foot and then a jump.{{Cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.britannica.com/sports/triple-jump|title=Triple jump {{!}} athletics|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|access-date=2018-03-01}} The first modern Olympic champion, James Connolly, was a triple jumper. Early Olympics also included the standing triple jump, although this has since been removed from the Olympic program and is rarely performed in competition today. The women's triple jump was introduced into the Atlanta Olympics in 1996.{{cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1996/ATH/womens-triple-jump.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200417174449/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1996/ATH/womens-triple-jump.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2020-04-17 |title=Athletics at the 1996 Atlanta Summer Games: Women's Triple Jump|publisher=Sports-reference.com |access-date=2013-08-18}}

In Irish mythology the geal-ruith (triple jump) was an event contested in the ancient Irish Tailteann Games as early as 1829 BC.Adams, Patricia (2006-03-01). History of the Highland Games and Women in Scottish Athletics. ...contained in the Irish "Book of Leinster", which was written in the twelfth century AD...this book describes the Tailteann Games held at Telltown, County Meath from 1829 BC until at least 554 BC...included in these events...were the geal-ruith (triple jump). Clan MacTavish Genealogy and History, 1 March 2006. Retrieved from http://www.dunardry.net/ladies_lounge.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517052239/http://www.dunardry.net/ladies_lounge.html |date=2008-05-17 }}.

Technique

=Approach=

{{Globalize|section|US|date=August 2024}}

The approach is one of the most important parts of an athlete's jump. The athlete sprints down a runway to a takeoff mark, from which the triple jump is measured. The takeoff mark is commonly either a piece of wood or similar material embedded in the runway, or a rectangle painted on the runway surface. In modern championships, a strip of plasticine, tape, or modeling clay is attached to the far edge of the board to record athletes overstepping or "scratching" the mark, defined by the trailing edge of the board. These boards are placed at different places on the runway depending on how far the athlete can jump. Typically the boards are set 40 ft, 32 ft, and 24 ft from the pit. These are the most common boards seen at the high school and collegiate levels, but boards can be placed anywhere on the runway. There are three phases of the triple jump: the "hop" phase, the "bound" or "step" phase, and the "jump" phase. They all play an important role in the jump itself. These three phases are executed in one continuous sequence. The athlete has to maintain a good speed through each phase. They should also try to stay consistent to avoid fouls.{{Cite journal|last=Eissa|first=Abeer|date=2014-03-27|title=Biomechanical evaluation of the phases of the triple jump take-off in a top female athlete|journal=Journal of Human Kinetics|volume=40|pages=29–35|doi=10.2478/hukin-2014-0004|issn=1640-5544|pmc=4096103|pmid=25031670}}

{{Panorama

|image = File:Triple Jump,Idowu Phillips, Beijing 08.jpg

|height = 130

|alt =

|caption = Phases of Phillips Idowu jumping at the 2008 Summer Olympics

}}

=Hop=

The hop begins with the athlete jumping from the take-off board on one leg, which for descriptive purposes, will be the right leg. Precise placement of the foot on the take-off is important for the athlete to avoid a foul. The objective of the first phase is to hop out, with athletes focusing all momentum forward. The hop landing phase is very active, involving a powerful backward "pawing" action of the right leg, with the right take-off foot landing heel first on the runway.

=Step=

The hop landing also marks the beginning of the step phase, where the athlete utilizes the backward momentum of the right leg to immediately execute a powerful jump forward and upwards, the left leg assisting the take-off with a hip flexion thrust similar to a bounding motion. This leads to the step-phase mid-air position, with the right take-off leg trailing flexed at the knee, and the left leg now leading flexed at the hip and knee. The jumper then holds this position for as long as possible, before extending the knee of the leading left leg and then immediately beginning a powerful backward motion of the whole left leg, again landing on the runway with a powerful backward pawing action. The takeoff leg should be fully extended with the drive leg thigh just below parallel to the ground. The takeoff leg stays extended behind the body with the heel held high. The drive leg extends with a flexed ankle and snaps downward for a quick transition into the jump phase. The athlete tries to take the farthest step they can while maintaining balance and control, using techniques such as pulling their leg up as high as possible.

=Jump=

The step landing forms the take-off of the final phase (the jump), where the athlete utilizes the backward force from the left leg to take off again. The jump phase is very similar to the long jump although most athletes have lost too much speed by this time to manage a full hitch kick, and mostly used is a hang or sail technique.

When landing in the sand-filled pit, the jumper should aim to avoid sitting back on landing or placing either hand behind the feet. The sandpit usually begins 13m from the take-off board for male international competition or 11m from the board for international female and club-level male competition. Each phase of the triple jump should get progressively higher, and there should be a regular rhythm to the three landings.

=Foul=

A "foul", also known as a "scratch", or missed jump, occurs when a jumper oversteps the takeoff mark, misses the pit entirely, does not use the correct foot sequence throughout the phases, or does not perform the attempt in the allotted amount of time (usually about 90 seconds). When a jumper "scratches", the seated official will raise a red flag, and the jumper who was "on deck", or up next, prepares to jump.

It shall not be considered a foul if an athlete while jumping, should touch or scrape the ground with his/her "sleeping leg". Also called a "scrape foul", "sleeping leg" touch violations were ruled as fouls before the mid-1980s. The IAAF changed the rules following outrage at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow when Soviet field officials in the men's triple jump final ruled as foul eight of the twelve jumps made by two leading competitors (from Brazil and Australia) thus helping two Soviet jumpers win the gold and silver medals.

Records

  • {{As of|2022|March}}[http://www.iaaf.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/triple-jump/outdoor/men Men's Outdoor Triple Jump Records]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-01-25.[http://www.iaaf.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/triple-jump/outdoor/women Women's Outdoor Triple Jump Records]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-01-25.

class="wikitable"
rowspan=2| Area

!colspan=2| Men's

!colspan=2| Women's

Mark

! Athlete

! Mark

! Athlete

World{{T&Fcalc|18.29}}{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}{{T&Fcalc|15.74}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}
colspan=5|Continental records
Africa{{T&Fcalc|18.07}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}{{T&Fcalc|15.39}}{{flagathlete|Françoise Mbango Etone|CMR}}
Asia{{T&Fcalc|17.59}}{{flagathlete|Yanxi Li|CHN}}{{T&Fcalc|15.25}}{{flagathlete|Olga Rypakova|KAZ}}
Europe{{T&Fcalc|18.29}}{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}{{T&Fcalc|15.50}}{{flagathlete|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}
North, Central America
and Caribbean
{{T&Fcalc|18.21}}{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}{{T&Fcalc|15.29}}{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|CUB}}
Oceania{{T&Fcalc|17.46}}{{flagathlete|Ken Lorraway|AUS}}{{T&Fcalc|14.04}}{{flagathlete|Nicole Mladenis|AUS}}
South America{{T&Fcalc|17.90}}{{flagathlete|Jadel Gregório|BRA}}{{T&Fcalc|15.74}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

Note: results cannot count towards records if they are wind-assisted (>2.0 m/s).

All-time top 25

{{See also|Triple jump world record progression}}

style="wikitable"

|Outdoor tables show data for two definitions of "Top 25" - the top 25 triple jump marks and the top 25 athletes:

style="background: #f6F5CE" |- denotes top performance for athletes in the top 25 triple jump marks
- denotes lesser performances, still in the top 25 triple jump marks, by repeat athletes
style="background: #CCFFCC" |- denotes top performance (only) for other top 25 athletes who fall outside the top 25 triple jump marks

  • {{As of|2024|August}}.[http://www.iaaf.org/records/toplists/jumps/triple-jump/outdoor/men/senior Triple Jump - men - senior - outdoor]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-01-25.[http://www.iaaf.org/records/toplists/jumps/triple-jump/outdoor/women/senior Triple Jump - women - senior - outdoor]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2021-08-01.[http://www.iaaf.org/records/toplists/jumps/triple-jump/indoor/men/senior Triple Jump - men - senior - indoor]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-01-25.[http://www.iaaf.org/records/toplists/jumps/triple-jump/indoor/women/senior Triple Jump - women - senior - indoor]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2021-08-01.

= Men (outdoor) =

class="wikitable sortable"

! {{abbr|Ath.#|Athlete rank}} !! {{abbr|Perf.#|Performance rank}} !! Mark !! Wind (m/s) !! Athlete !! Nation !! Date !! Place !! class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|1

align="center"|1{{T&Fcalc|18.29}}align="center" |+1.3Jonathan Edwards{{GBR2}}7 August 1995Gothenburg
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|2

align="center"|2{{T&Fcalc|18.21}}align="center" |+0.2Christian Taylor{{USA}}27 August 2015Beijing{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Results|url=http://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/4875/AT-TJ-M-f----.RS6.pdf|work=IAAF|date=27 August 2015|access-date=27 August 2015}}
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

|align="center"|3

|align="center"|3

|{{T&Fcalc|18.18}}

|align="center"|−0.3

|Jordan Díaz

|{{ESP}}

|11 June 2024

|Rome

|{{Cite web |title=European Athletics Championships {{!}} Results {{!}} World Athletics |url=https://worldathletics.org/competition/calendar-results/results/7158244?eventId=10229618&gender=M |access-date=2024-06-11 |website=worldathletics.org}}

align="center" |4{{T&Fcalc|18.16}}align="center" |+1.3Edwards #27 August 1995Gothenburg
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center" |4

align="center" |5{{T&Fcalc|18.14}}align="center" |+0.4Will Claye{{USA}}29 June 2019Long Beach{{cite news|title=Claye moves to third on world all-time triple jump list with 18.14m|url=https://www.iaaf.org/news/report/will-claye-1814-jim-bush-long-beach-2019|publisher=IAAF|author=John Mulkeen|date=30 June 2019|access-date=17 July 2019}}
align="center" |6{{T&Fcalc|18.11}}align="center" |+0.8Taylor #227 May 2017Eugene
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center" |5

align="center" |7{{T&Fcalc|18.09}}align="center" |−0.4Kenny Harrison{{USA}}27 July 1996Atlanta
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center" |6

align="center" |8{{T&Fcalc|18.08}}align="center" |±0.0Pedro Pichardo{{CUB}}28 May 2015Havana{{cite news|title=Pichardo triple jumps 18.08m in Havana|url=http://www.iaaf.org/news/report/pichardo-triple-jump-1808m|publisher=IAAF|author1=Javier Clavelo Robinson|author2=Phil Minshull|date=29 May 2015|access-date=30 May 2015}}
rowspan="3" |rowspan="3" align="center" |9rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|18.06}}align="center" |+0.8Pichardo #2rowspan="3" |15 May 2015Doha
align="center" |+1.1Taylor #39 July 2015Lausanne
align="center" |+0.4Claye #224 August 2019Paris
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|7

align="center" |12{{T&Fcalc|18.04}}align="center" |+0.3Teddy Tamgho{{FRA}}18 August 2013Moscow
rowspan="9" |rowspan="2" align="center" |12rowspan="2" | {{T&Fcalc|18.04}}align="center" |+0.8Taylor #4rowspan="9" |15 May 2015Doha
align="center"|−0.6

|Pichardo #3

|11 June 2024

|Rome

|

align="center" |15{{T&Fcalc|18.01}}align="center" |+0.4Edwards #39 July 1998Oslo
align="center" |16{{T&Fcalc|18.00}}align="center" |+1.3Edwards #427 August 1995London
rowspan="2" align="center" |17rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.99}}align="center" |+0.5Edwards #523 August 1998Budapest
align="center" | +1.8Pichardo #49 July 2015Lausanne
rowspan="3" align="center" |19rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|17.98}}align="center" |+1.8Edwards #618 July 1995Salamanca
align="center" |+1.2Tamgho #212 June 2010New York City
align="center" |±0.0Pichardo #55 August 2021Tokyo
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|8

align="center" |22{{T&Fcalc|17.97}}align="center" |+1.5Willie Banks{{USA}}16 June 1985Indianapolis
rowspan="4" |rowspan=2 align="center"|23rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.96}}align="center" |+0.1Taylor #5rowspan="4" |4 September 2011Deagu
align="center" |−0.4Pichardo #64 June 2015Rome
rowspan=2 align="center"|25rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.95}}align="center" |+0.6Pichardo #74 May 2018Doha
align="center" |+0.3Pichardo #823 July 2022Eugene{{cite web|title=Men's Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7137279/AT-TJ-M-f----.RS6.pdf|work=World Athletics|date=23 July 2022|access-date=24 July 2022}}
bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| rowspan="2" align="center" |9

| rowspan="19" |

| rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.92}}

| align="center" | +1.6

Khristo Markov{{flag|Bulgaria|1971}}

|31 August 1987

|Rome

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+1.9

James Beckford{{JAM}}

|20 May 1995

|Odessa

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center rowspan=2|11

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.90}}

|align=center|+1.0

Vladimir Inozemtsev{{URS}}

|20 June 1990

|Bratislava

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+0.4

Jadel Gregório{{BRA}}

|20 May 2007

|Belém

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|13

|{{T&Fcalc|17.89}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

align=center|±0.0João Carlos de Oliveira{{BRA}}

|15 October 1975

|Mexico City

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan="2" align="center" |14

| rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.87}}

align=center|+1.7Mike Conley{{USA}}

|27 June 1987

|San Jose

|

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

|align="center" | +1.3

|Jaydon Hibbert

|{{JAM}}

|13 May 2023

|Baton Rouge

|{{Cite web |title=Wilson clocks 49.13 for 400m, Hibbert breaks world U20 triple jump record with 17.87m {{!}} REPORT {{!}} World Athletics |url=https://worldathletics.org/news/report/britton-wilson-4913-jaydon-hibbert-u20-triple-jump-record-1787 |access-date=2023-05-14 |website=worldathletics.org}}

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| align="center" |16

|{{T&Fcalc|17.86}}

align="center" |+1.3Charles Simpkins{{USA}}

|2 September 1985

|Kobe

|

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| align="center" |17

|{{T&Fcalc|17.85}}

align="center" |±0.0Yoelbi Quesada{{CUB}}

|8 August 1997

|Athens

|

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| align="center" |18

|{{T&Fcalc|17.82}}

align="center" |+0.2Hugues Fabrice Zango{{BUR}}

|6 July 2021

|Székesfehérvár

|

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| rowspan="2" align="center" |19

| rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|17.81}}

| align="center" | +1.0

Marian Oprea{{ROU}}

|5 July 2005

|Lausanne

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+0.1

Phillips Idowu{{GBR2}}

|29 July 2009

|Barcelona

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|21

|{{T&Fcalc|17.79}}

|align=center|+1.4

Christian Olsson{{SWE}}

|22 August 2004

|Athens

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center rowspan=2|22

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.78}}

|align=center|+1.0

Nikolay Musiyenko{{URS}}

|7 June 1986

|Leningrad

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+0.8

Melvin Lister{{USA}}

|17 July 2004

|Havana

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|24

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}}

|align=center|+1.0

Aleksandr Kovalenko{{URS}}

|18 July 1987

|Bryansk

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan="3" align="center" |25

| rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|17.75}}

|align=center|+0.3

Oleg Protsenko{{URS}}

|10 June 1990

|Moscow

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+1.0

Leonid Voloshin{{URS}}

|26 August 1991

|Tokyo

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align=center|+0.9

|Andy Díaz

|{{ITA}}

|2 June 2023

|Florence

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Result|url=https://static.sportresult.com/sports/at/data/2023/rome/ATHMTRPLJUMPDIAMOND---FNL-000100--_C73H2_1.0.PDF|work=sportresult.com|date=2 June 2023|access-date=9 June 2023|archive-date=9 September 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230909071053/https://static.sportresult.com/sports/at/data/2023/rome/ATHMTRPLJUMPDIAMOND---FNL-000100--_C73H2_1.0.PDF|url-status=dead}}

==Ancillary marks==

Jumps made en route to final marks that would be top 25 performances:{{cite web|title=All-time men's best triple jump {{!}} ancillary jumps – en route to final marks|url=http://www.alltime-athletics.com/mtripok.htm#2|website=alltime-athletics.com|access-date=28 August 2022}}

  • Jonathan Edwards also jumped 18.16 (+1.3) in Gothenburg, Sweden on 7 August 1995.
  • Christian Taylor also jumped 18.02 (+0.8) in Lausanne, Switzerland on 9 July 2015.
  • Kenny Harrison also jumped 17.99 (−0.1) in Atlanta, Georgia on 27 July 1996.
  • Jordan Díaz also jumped 17.96 (−0.3) in Rome, Italy on 11 June 2024.

==Assisted marks==

Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second is not counted for record purposes. Below is a list of wind-assisted jumps (equal or superior to 17.75 m). Only the best-assisted mark that is superior to the legal best is shown:

  • Jonathan Edwards jumped 18.43 (+2.4) in Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France on 25 June 1995.
  • Willie Banks jumped 18.20 (+5.2) in Indianapolis, Indiana on 16 July 1988.
  • Mike Conley jumped 18.17 (+2.1) in Barcelona, Spain on 3 August 1992.
  • Yoelbi Quesada jumped 17.97 (+7.5) in Madrid, Spain on 20 June 1995.
  • Charles Simpkins jumped 17.93 (+5.2) in Indianapolis, Indiana on 16 July 1988.
  • Jordan Díaz jumped 17.93 (+2.5) in Nerja, Spain on 26 June 2022.
  • Christian Olsson jumped 17.92 (+3.4) in Gateshead, United Kingdom on 13 June 2003.
  • Denis Kapustin jumped 17.86 (+5.7) in Seville, Spain on 5 June 1994.
  • Nelson Évora jumped 17.82 (+2.5) in Seixal, Portugal on 26 June 2009.
  • Keith Connor jumped 17.81 (+4.6) in Brisbane, Australia on 9 October 1982.
  • Kenta Bell jumped 17.76 (+2.2) {{AthAbbr|A}} in El Paso, Texas on 10 April 2004.
  • Gennadiy Valyukevich jumped 17.75 (+3.0) in Uzhhorod, Soviet Union on 27 April 1986
  • Brian Wellman jumped 17.75 (+7.1) in Madrid, Spain on 20 June 1995.

==Annulled marks==

  • Lazaro Betancourt jumped 17.78 (+0.6) in Havana, Cuba on 15 June 1986. This performance was annulled after he failed a drug test.

= Women (outdoor) =

class="wikitable sortable"

! {{abbr|Ath.#|Athlete rank}} !! {{abbr|Perf.#|Performance rank}} !! Mark !! Wind (m/s) !! Athlete !! Nation !! Date !! Place !! class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|1

align="center"|1{{T&Fcalc|15.67}}align="center" |+0.7Yulimar Rojas{{VEN}}1 August 2021Tokyo
align="center"|2{{T&Fcalc|15.52}}align="center" |+0.6Rojas #226 August 2021Lausanne
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|2

align="center"|3{{T&Fcalc|15.50}}align="center" |+0.9Inessa Kravets{{UKR}}10 August 1995Gothenburg
rowspan=4|align="center"|4{{T&Fcalc|15.48}}align="center" |+0.3Rojas #3rowspan=4|9 September 2021Zürich
align="center"|5{{T&Fcalc|15.47}}align="center" |+1.9Rojas #418 July 2022Eugene{{cite web|title=Women's Triple Jump Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7137279/AT-TJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf|work=World Athletics|date=18 July 2022|access-date=20 July 2022}}
align="center"|6{{T&Fcalc|15.43}}align="center" |+0.7Rojas #522 May 2021Andújar
align="center"|7{{T&Fcalc|15.41}}align="center" |+1.5Rojas #66 September 2019Andújar
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|3

align="center"|8{{T&Fcalc|15.39}}align="center" |+0.5Françoise Mbango Etone{{CMR}}17 August 2008Beijing
align="center"|9{{T&Fcalc|15.37}}align="center" |−0.6Rojas #7rowspan="2" |5 October 2019Doha
|align="center"|10

|{{T&Fcalc|15.35}}

|align="center"| +1.2

|Rojas #8

|16 September 2023

|Eugene

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Result|url=https://livecache.sportresult.com/node/binaryData/ATH_PROD/EUGENE2023/PDF_ATHWTRPLJUMPDIAMOND---FNL-000100--_C73H2.PDF?h=vaWx6QMBw3sxIPFQnX6KcModLMM=|work=sportresult.com|date=16 September 2023|access-date=19 September 2023}}{{dead link|date=August 2024}}

bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center" |4

align="center" |11{{T&Fcalc|15.34}}align="center" |−0.5Tatyana Lebedeva{{RUS}}4 July 2005Heraklion
rowspan="3" |rowspan="2" align="center" |12rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|15.33}}align="center" |−0.1Kravets #2rowspan="3" |31 July 1996Atlanta
align="center" |+1.2Lebedeva #26 July 2004Lausanne
align="center"|14{{T&Fcalc|15.32}}align="center" |+0.5Lebedeva #39 September 2000Yokohama
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|5

align="center"|14{{T&Fcalc|15.32}}align="center" |+0.9Hrysopiyi Devetzi{{GRE}}21 August 2004Athens
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|6

align="center"|16{{T&Fcalc|15.31}}align="center" |±0.0Caterine Ibargüen{{COL}}18 July 2014Monaco
rowspan="2" |

|align="center"|16

|{{T&Fcalc|15.31}}

|align="center"|−0.2

|Rojas #9

| rowspan="2" |

|26 August 2022

|Lausanne

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Results|url=https://static.sportresult.com/sports/at/data/2022/lausanne/re1840040.pdf|work=sportresult.com|date=26 August 2022|access-date=9 September 2022|archive-date=9 September 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220909111915/https://static.sportresult.com/sports/at/data/2022/lausanne/re1840040.pdf|url-status=dead}}

align="center" |18{{T&Fcalc|15.30}}align="center" |+0.5Mbango Etone #223 August 2004Athens
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|7

align="center"|19{{T&Fcalc|15.29}}align="center" |+0.3Yamilé Aldama{{CUB}}11 July 2003Rome
align="center"|20{{T&Fcalc|15.28}}align="center" |+0.3Aldama #22 August 2004Linz
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|8

align="center"|20{{T&Fcalc|15.28}}align="center" |+0.9Yargelis Savigne{{CUB}}31 August 2007Osaka
rowspan="4" |

|align="center"|20

|{{T&Fcalc|15.28}}

| align="center" |−0.2

Rojas #10

| rowspan="4" |

8 September 2022Zürich{{cite news|title=Duplantis and Rojas retain Diamond League titles with dominant performances in Zurich|url=https://worldathletics.org/news/report/diamond-league-final-zurich-weltklasse-duplantis-rojas|publisher=World Athletics|author1=Jess Whittington|author2=Jon Mulkeen|date=8 September 2022|access-date=16 September 2022}}
align="center" |23{{T&Fcalc|15.27}}align="center" |+1.2Aldama #38 August 2003London
rowspan=2 align="center"|24rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|15.25}}align="center" |−0.8Lebedeva #410 August 2001Edmonton
align="center" |−0.1Devetzi #223 August 2004Athens
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|9

align="center"|24{{T&Fcalc|15.25}}align="center" |+1.7Olga Rypakova{{KAZ}}4 September 2010Split
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|rowspan=2 align=center|10

| rowspan="17" |

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|15.20}}

|align=center|±0.0

Šárka Kašpárková{{CZE}}4 August 1997Athens

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|−0.3

Tereza Marinova{{BUL}}24 September 2000Sydney

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|12

{{T&Fcalc|15.18}}align=center|+0.3Iva Prandzheva{{BUL}}10 August 1995Gothenburg

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|rowspan=2 align=center|13

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|15.16}}

|align=center|+0.1

Rodica Mateescu{{ROU}}4 August 1997Athens

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+0.7

Trecia Smith{{JAM}}2 August 2004Linz

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|15

|{{T&Fcalc|15.15}}

align=center|+1.5Ashia Hansen{{GBR2}}13 September 1997Fukuoka

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|16

{{T&Fcalc|15.14}}align=center|+1.9Nadezhda Alekhina{{RUS}}26 July 2009Cheboksary

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|rowspan=2 align=center|17

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|15.09}}

|align=center|+0.5

Anna Biryukova{{RUS}}29 August 1993Stuttgart

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|−0.5

Inna Lasovskaya{{RUS}}31 May 1997Valencia

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|19

{{T&Fcalc|15.07}}align=center|−0.6Paraskevi Tsiamita{{GRE}}22 August 1999Seville

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|20

{{T&Fcalc|15.04}}align=center|+1.7Ekaterina Koneva{{RUS}}30 May 2015Eugene

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan="3" align="center" |21

| rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|15.03}}

|align=center|+1.9

Magdelín Martínez{{ITA}}26 June 2004Rome

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+1.1

Marija Šestak{{SLO}}17 August 2008Beijing

|

bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| align="center" |±0.0

Shanieka Ricketts{{JAM}}16 September 2023Eugene{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Result|url=https://livecache.sportresult.com/node/binaryData/ATH_PROD/EUGENE2023/PDF_ATHWTRPLJUMPDIAMOND---FNL-000100--_C73H2.PDF?h=vaWx6QMBw3sxIPFQnX6KcModLMM=|work=sportresult.com|date=16 September 2023|access-date=19 September 2023}}{{dead link|date=August 2024}}
bgcolor="#CCFFCC"

| rowspan="3" align="center" |24

| rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|15.02}}

| align="center" | +0.9

|Anna Pyatykh

{{RUS}}

|9 August 2006

|Gothenburg

|

bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|+1.9

Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk{{UKR}}19 August 2022Munich{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://results.mun.mev.atos.net/ECM2022/resECM2022/pdf/ECM2022/ATH/ECM2022_ATH_C73P_ATHWTRPLJUMP----------FNL---------.pdf|work=European Athletics|date=19 August 2022|access-date=16 September 2022|archive-date=20 September 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220920170643/https://results.mun.mev.atos.net/ECM2022/resECM2022/pdf/ECM2022/ATH/ECM2022_ATH_C73P_ATHWTRPLJUMP----------FNL---------.pdf|url-status=dead}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

|align=center|−0.4

Thea LaFond{{DMA}}3 August 2024Saint-Denis{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Result|url=https://olympics.com/OG2024/pdf/OG2024/ATH/OG2024_ATH_C73H2_ATHWTRPLJUMP----------FNL-000100--.pdf|website=olympics.com|date=3 August 2024|access-date=6 August 2024}}

==Ancillary marks==

Jumps made en route to final marks that would be top 25 performances:{{cite web|title=All-time women's best triple jump {{!}} ancillary jumps – en route to final marks|url=http://www.alltime-athletics.com/wtripleok.htm#2|website=alltime-athletics.com|access-date=28 August 2022}}

  • Yulimar Rojas also jumped 15.42 (+1.2) in Lausanne, Switzerland on 26 August 2021; 15.41 (+1.1) in Tokyo, Japan on 1 August 2021; 15.39 (+0.5) in Eugene, Oregon on 18 July 2022; 15.31 (+0.2) in Andújar, Spain on 22 May 2021; 15.27 (−0.4) in Zürich, Switzerland on 9 September 2021; 15.25 (+0.1) in Tokyo on 1 August 2021.
  • Françoise Mbango Etone also jumped 15.30 (+0.5) in Athens, Greece on 23 August 2004.
  • Tatyana Lebedeva also jumped 15.28 (−0.3) in Iráklio, Greece on 4 July 2004.

==Assisted marks==

Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second is not counted for record purposes. Below is a list of wind-assisted jumps (equal or superior to 15.02 m). Only the best-assisted mark that is superior to the legal best is shown:

= Men (indoor) =

class="wikitable"
Rank

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

!Ref

1

|{{T&Fcalc|18.07}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}

|16 January 2021

|Aubière

|

2

|{{T&Fcalc|17.92}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Teddy Tamgho|FRA}}

|6 March 2011

|Paris

|

rowspan=2|3

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.83}} || align=left|{{flagathlete|Aliecer Urrutia|CUB}}

|1 March 1997

|Sindelfingen

|

{{flagathlete|Christian Olsson|SWE}}

|7 March 2004

|Budapest

|

5

|{{T&Fcalc|17.80}}

|{{flagathlete|Andy Díaz|ITA}}

|21 March 2025

|Nanjing

|{{cite web|title=Men's Triple Jump Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7136586/AT-TJ-M-f----.RS6.pdf|website=World Athletics|access-date=22 March 2025}}

6

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Leonid Voloshin|RUS}}

|6 February 1994

|Grenoble

|

7

|{{T&Fcalc|17.76}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|27 February 1987

|New York City

|

8

|{{T&Fcalc|17.75}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Phillips Idowu|GBR}}

|9 March 2008

|Valencia

|

9

|{{T&Fcalc|17.74}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Marian Oprea|ROU}}

|18 February 2006

|Bucharest

|

rowspan=2|10

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.73}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Walter Davis|USA}}

|12 March 2006

|Moscow

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Fabrizio Donato|ITA}}

|6 March 2011

|Paris

|

12

|{{T&Fcalc|17.72}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Brian Wellman|BER}}

|12 March 1995

|Barcelona

|

rowspan="2" |13

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.70}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Will Claye|USA}}

|11 March 2012

|Istanbul

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Daniele Greco|ITA}}

|2 March 2013

|Gothenburg

|

15

|{{T&Fcalc|17.69}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yoandri Betanzos|CUB}}

|14 March 2010

|Doha

|

16

|{{T&Fcalc|17.67}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Oleg Protsenko|URS}}

|15 January 1987

|Osaka

|

rowspan="2"|17

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.64}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|15 February 1988

|Birmingham

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Lázaro Martínez|CUB}}

|18 March 2022

|Belgrade

|

19

|{{T&Fcalc|17.63}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|11 March 2012

|Istanbul

|

rowspan="2"|20

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|17.62}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yoelbi Quesada|CUB}}

|12 March 1995

|Barcelona

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Yoel García|CUB}}

|1 March 1997

|Sindelfingen

|

22

|{{T&Fcalc|17.60}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|POR}}

|3 March 2023

|Istanbul

|{{Cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://www.watchathletics.com/page/3695/european-athletics-indoor-championships-2023-men-s-triple-jump-results|website=watchathletics.com|date=3 March 2023|access-date=3 March 2023}}

rowspan="2" |23

|{{T&Fcalc|17.59}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Pierre Camara|FRA}}

|13 March 1993

|Toronto

|

{{T&Fcalc|17.59}} {{AthAbbr}}

|{{flagathlete|Jordan Díaz|ESP}}

|19 February 2023

|Madrid

|

25

|{{T&Fcalc|17.56}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Jadel Gregório|BRA}}

|12 March 2006

|Moscow

|

= Women (indoor) =

File:Yulimar Rojas Belgrade 2022.jpg landing the women's world record triple jump at the 2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Belgrade on 20 March 2022]]

class="wikitable"
Rank

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

!Ref

1

|{{T&Fcalc|15.74}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|20 March 2022

|Belgrade

|{{Cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7138985/AT-TJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf|publisher=World Athletics|date=20 March 2022|access-date=20 March 2022}}

2

|{{T&Fcalc|15.36}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|6 March 2004

|Budapest

|

3

|{{T&Fcalc|15.16}} || align=left|{{flagathlete|Ashia Hansen|GBR}}

|28 February 1998

|Valencia

|

4

|{{T&Fcalc|15.14}} ||align=left|{{flagathlete|Olga Rypakova|KAZ}}

|13 March 2010

|Doha

|

5

|{{T&Fcalc|15.12}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Jasmine Moore|USA}}

|11 March 2023

|Albuquerque

|{{Cite web |title=Alfred, Garland and Wilson threaten world records at NCAA Indoor Championships {{!}} REPORT {{!}} World Athletics |url=https://www.worldathletics.org/news/report/ncaa-indoor-championships-alfred-garland-wilson-records |access-date=2023-03-12 |website=www.worldathletics.org}}

6

|{{T&Fcalc|15.08}} || align="left" |{{flagathlete|Marija Šestak|SLO}}

|13 February 2008

|Athens

|

7

|{{T&Fcalc|15.05}} || align="left" |{{flagathlete|Yargelis Savigne|CUB}}

|8 March 2008

|Valencia

|

8

|{{T&Fcalc|15.03}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Yolanda Chen|RUS}}

|11 March 1995

|Barcelona

|

rowspan=2|9

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|15.01}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Inna Lasovskaya|RUS}}

|8 March 1997

|Paris

|

align="left" |{{flagathlete|Thea LaFond|DMA}}

|3 March 2024

|Glasgow

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7180312/AT-TJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf|work=World Athletics|date=3 March 2024|access-date=3 March 2024}}

rowspan="3" |11

| rowspan="3" |{{T&Fcalc|14.94}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Iva Prandzheva|BUL}}

|7 March 1999

|Maebashi

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Cristina Nicolau|ROU}}

|5 February 2000

|Bucharest

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Oksana Udmurtova|RUS}}

|20 February 2008

|Tartu

|

rowspan="2" |14

| rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|14.93}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Anna Pyatykh|RUS}}

|11 March 2006

|Moscow

|

{{flagathlete|Leyanis Pérez Hernández|CUB}}

|22 March 2025

|Nanjing

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7136586/AT-TJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf|website=World Athletics|date=22 March 2025|access-date=28 March 2025}}

rowspan=2|16

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|14.91}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Rodica Mateescu|ROU}}

|28 February 1997

|Bucharest

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Tereza Marinova|BUL}}

|11 March 2001

|Lisbon

|

18

|{{T&Fcalc|14.90}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|SUD}}

|6 March 2004

|Budapest

|{{cite web|title=Triple Jump Final Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7180312/AT-TJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf|work=World Athletics|date=3 March 2024|access-date=3 March 2024}}

rowspan="3" |19

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|14.88}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Françoise Mbango Etone|CMR}}

|15 March 2003

|Birmingham

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Olha Saladukha|UKR}}

|3 March 2013

|Gothenburg

|

{{T&Fcalc|14.88}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Charisma Taylor|BAH}}

|11 March 2023

|Albuquerque

|

22

|{{T&Fcalc|14.87}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Šárka Kašpárková|CZE}}

|7 March 1999

|Maebashi

|

rowspan="2" |23

| rowspan="2" |{{T&Fcalc|14.84}}

| align="left" |{{flagathlete|Chrysopigi Devetzi|GRE}}

|4 March 2013

|Athens

|

align=left|{{flagathlete|Trecia Smith|JAM}}

|11 March 2006

|Moscow

|

25

|{{T&Fcalc|14.83}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yelena Lebedenko|RUS}}

|1 February 2001

|Samara

|

Olympic medalists

=Men=

{{Olympic medalists in men's triple jump}}

=Women=

{{Olympic medalists in women's triple jump}}

World Championships medalists

=Men=

{{World Championships in Athletics medalists in men's triple jump}}

=Women=

{{World Championships in Athletics medalists in women's triple jump}}

World Indoor Championships medalists

=Men=

{{MedalistTable}}
1985 Paris{{ref label|WIG|A}}
{{DetailsLink|1985 IAAF World Indoor Games – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Khristo Markov|BUL|1971}}

|{{flagathlete|Lázaro Betancourt|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Lázaro Balcindes|CUB}}

1987 Indianapolis
{{DetailsLink|1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Oleg Protsenko|URS}}

|{{flagathlete|Frank Rutherford|BAH}}

1989 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|1989 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Jorge Reyna|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Juan Miguel López|CUB}}

1991 Seville
{{DetailsLink|1991 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Igor Lapshin|URS}}

|{{flagathlete|Leonid Voloshin|URS}}

|{{flagathlete|Tord Henriksson|SWE}}

1993 Toronto
{{DetailsLink|1993 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Pierre Camara|FRA}}

|{{flagathlete|Māris Bružiks|LAT}}

|{{flagathlete|Brian Wellman|BER}}

1995 Barcelona
{{DetailsLink|1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Brian Wellman|BER}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoelbi Quesada|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Serge Hélan|FRA}}

1997 Paris
{{DetailsLink|1997 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoel García|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Aliecer Urrutia|CUB}}

|{{nowrap|{{flagathlete|Aleksandr Aseledchenko|RUS}}}}

1999 Maebashi
{{DetailsLink|1999 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Charles Friedek|GER}}

|{{flagathlete|LaMark Carter|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Zsolt Czingler|HUN}}

2001 Lisbon
{{DetailsLink|2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Paolo Camossi|ITA}}

|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Andrew Murphy|AUS}}

2003 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Christian Olsson|SWE}}

|{{flagathlete|Walter Davis|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoelbi Quesada|CUB}}

2004 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Christian Olsson|SWE}}

|{{flagathlete|Jadel Gregório|BRA}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoandri Betanzos|CUB}}

2006 Moscow
{{DetailsLink|2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Walter Davis|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Jadel Gregório|BRA}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoandri Betanzos|CUB}}

2008 Valencia
{{DetailsLink|2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Phillips Idowu|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Arnie David Giralt|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Nelson Évora|POR}}

2010 Doha
{{DetailsLink|2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Teddy Tamgho|FRA}}

|{{flagathlete|Yoandri Betanzos|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Arnie David Giralt|CUB}}

2012 Istanbul
{{DetailsLink|2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Will Claye|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Lyukman Adams|RUS}}

2014 Sopot
{{DetailsLink|2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Lyukman Adams|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Ernesto Revé|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|CUB}}

2016 Portland
{{DetailsLink|2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Dong Bin|CHN}}

|{{flagathlete|Max Heß|GER}}

|{{flagathlete|Benjamin Compaoré|FRA}}

2018 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Will Claye|USA}}

|{{flagathlete|Almir dos Santos|BRA}}

|{{flagathlete|Nelson Évora|POR}}

2022 Belgrade
{{DetailsLink|2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Lázaro Martínez|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|POR}}

|{{flagathlete|Donald Scott|USA}}

2024 Glasgow
{{DetailsLink|2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}

|{{flagathlete|Yasser Triki|ALG}}

|{{flagathlete|Tiago Pereira|POR}}

2025 Nanjing{{ref label|medal reallocation|B}}
{{DetailsLink|2025 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Andy Díaz|ITA}}

|{{flagathlete|Zhu Yaming|CHN}}

|{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}

  • {{note label|WIG|A}} Known as the World Indoor Games
  • {{note label|medal reallocation|B}} The original bronze medalist (Almir dos Santos of Brazil) was disqualified for wearing non-regulation shoes.

=Women=

{{MedalistTable}}
1993 Toronto
{{DetailsLink|1993 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}

|{{flagathlete|Yolanda Chen|RUS|1991}}

|{{flagathlete|Inna Lasovskaya|RUS|1991}}

1995 Barcelona
{{DetailsLink|1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yolanda Chen|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Iva Prandzheva|BUL}}

|{{flagathlete|Ren Ruiping|CHN}}

1997 Paris
{{DetailsLink|1997 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Inna Lasovskaya|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Ashia Hansen|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Šárka Kašpárková|CZE}}

1999 Maebashi
{{DetailsLink|1999 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Ashia Hansen|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Iva Prandzheva|BUL}}

|{{flagathlete|Šárka Kašpárková|CZE}}

2001 Lisbon
{{DetailsLink|2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Tereza Marinova|BUL}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Tiombe Hurd|USA}}

2003 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Ashia Hansen|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Françoise Mbango Etone|CMR}}

|{{flagathlete|Kéné Ndoye|SEN}}

2004 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|SUD}}

|{{flagathlete|Hrysopiyi Devetzi|GRE}}

2006 Moscow
{{DetailsLink|2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Anna Pyatykh|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|SUD}}

2008 Valencia
{{DetailsLink|2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yargelis Savigne|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Hrysopiyi Devetzi|GRE}}

|{{flagathlete|Marija Šestak|SLO}}

2010 Doha
{{DetailsLink|2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Olga Rypakova|KAZ}}

|{{flagathlete|Yargelis Savigne|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Anna Pyatykh|RUS}}

2012 Istanbul
{{DetailsLink|2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|GBR}}

|{{flagathlete|Olga Rypakova|KAZ}}

|{{flagathlete|Mabel Gay|CUB}}

2014 Sopot
{{DetailsLink|2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Ekaterina Koneva|RUS}}

|{{flagathlete|Olha Saladukha|UKR}}

|{{flagathlete|Kimberly Williams|JAM}}

2016 Portland
{{DetailsLink|2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|{{flagathlete|Kristin Gierisch|GER}}

|{{flagathlete|Paraskevi Papachristou|GRE}}

2018 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|{{flagathlete|Kimberly Williams|JAM}}

|{{flagathlete|Ana Peleteiro|ESP}}

2022 Belgrade
{{DetailsLink|2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|{{flagathlete|Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk|UKR}}

|{{flagathlete|Kimberly Williams|JAM}}

2024 Glasgow
{{DetailsLink|2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump}}

|{{flagathlete|Thea Lafond|DMA}}

|{{flagathlete|Leyanis Pérez|CUB}}

|{{flagathlete|Ana Peleteiro|ESP}}

Season's bests

{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:85%; display:inline-table;"

|+Men

!Year!!Mark!!Athlete!!Place

1967

|{{T&Fcalc|16.92}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Aleksandr Zolotarev|URS}}

|Chorzów

1968

|{{T&Fcalc|17.39}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Viktor Saneyev|URS}}

|Mexico City

1969

|{{T&Fcalc|16.94}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Viktor Saneyev|URS}}

|Athens

1970

|{{T&Fcalc|17.34}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Viktor Saneyev|URS}}

|Sokhumi

1971

|{{T&Fcalc|17.40}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pérez|CUB}}

|Cali

1972

|{{T&Fcalc|17.44}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Viktor Saneyev|URS}}

|Sokhumi

1973

|{{T&Fcalc|17.20}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Mikhail Bariban|URS}}

|Moscow

1974

|{{T&Fcalc|17.23}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Viktor Saneyev|URS}}

|Rome

1975

|{{T&Fcalc|17.89}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|João Carlos de Oliveira|BRA}}

|Mexico City

1976

|{{T&Fcalc|17.38}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|João Carlos de Oliveira|BRA}}

|Rio de Janeiro

1977

|{{T&Fcalc|17.19}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Ron Livers|USA}}

|Sochi

1978

|{{T&Fcalc|17.44}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|João Carlos de Oliveira|BRA}}

|Bratislava

1979

|{{T&Fcalc|17.27}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|João Carlos de Oliveira|BRA}}

|San Juan

1980

|{{T&Fcalc|17.35}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jaak Uudmäe|URS}}

|Moscow

1981

|{{T&Fcalc|17.56}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Willie Banks|USA}}

|Sacramento

1982

|{{T&Fcalc|17.57}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Keith Connor|GBR}}

| Provo

1983

|{{T&Fcalc|17.55}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Vasiliy Grishchenkov|URS}}

|Moscow

1984

|{{T&Fcalc|17.46}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Oleg Protsenko|URS}}

|Moscow

1985

|{{T&Fcalc|17.97}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Willie Banks|USA}}

|Indianapolis

1986

|{{T&Fcalc|17.80}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Khristo Markov|BUL|1971}}

|Budapest

1987

|{{T&Fcalc|17.92}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Khristo Markov|BUL|1971}}

|Rome

1988

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Khristo Markov|BUL|1971}}

|Sofia

1989

|{{T&Fcalc|17.65}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|Budapest

1990

|{{T&Fcalc|17.93}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Kenny Harrison|USA}}

|Stockholm

1991

|{{T&Fcalc|17.78}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Kenny Harrison|USA}}

|Tokyo

1992

|{{T&Fcalc|17.72}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|Zürich

1993

|{{T&Fcalc|17.86}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}

|Stuttgart

1994

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Leonid Voloshin|RUS}}

|Grenoble

1995

|{{T&Fcalc|18.29}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|Gothenburg

1996

|{{T&Fcalc|18.09}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Kenny Harrison|USA}}

|Atlanta

1997

|{{T&Fcalc|17.85}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yoelbi Quesada|CUB}}

|Athens

1998

|{{T&Fcalc|18.01}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|Oslo

1999

|{{T&Fcalc|17.59}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Charles Friedek|GER}}

|Seville

2000

|{{T&Fcalc|17.71}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|Sydney

2001

|{{T&Fcalc|17.92}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|Edmonton

2002

|{{T&Fcalc|17.86}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jonathan Edwards|GBR}}

|Manchester

2003

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Olsson|SWE}}

|Haina

2004

|{{T&Fcalc|17.83}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Olsson|SWE}}

|Budapest

2005

|{{T&Fcalc|17.81}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Marian Oprea|ROM}}

|Lausanne

2006

|{{T&Fcalc|17.74}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Marian Oprea|ROM}}

|Bucharest

2007

|{{T&Fcalc|17.90}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jadel Gregório|BRA}}

|Belém

2008

|{{T&Fcalc|17.75}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Phillips Idowu|GBR}}

|Valencia

2009

|{{T&Fcalc|17.73}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Phillips Idowu|GBR}}

|Berlin

2010

|{{T&Fcalc|17.98}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Teddy Tamgho|FRA}}

|New York City

2011

|{{T&Fcalc|17.96}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|Daegu

2012

|{{T&Fcalc|17.81}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|London

2013

|{{T&Fcalc|18.04}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Teddy Tamgho|FRA}}

|Moscow

2014

|{{T&Fcalc|17.76}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|CUB}}

|Havana

2015

|{{T&Fcalc|18.21}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|Beijing

2016

|{{T&Fcalc|17.86}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|Rio de Janeiro

2017

|{{T&Fcalc|18.11}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Christian Taylor|USA}}

|Eugene

2018

|{{T&Fcalc|17.95}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|POR}}

|Doha

2019

|{{T&Fcalc|18.14}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Will Claye|USA}}

|Long Beach

2020

|{{T&Fcalc|17.77}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}

|Paris

2021

|{{T&Fcalc|18.07}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Hugues Fabrice Zango|BUR}}

|Aubière

2022

|{{T&Fcalc|17.95}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Pedro Pichardo|POR}}

|Eugene

2023

|{{T&Fcalc|17.87}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jaydon Hibbert|JAM}}

|Baton Rouge

2024

|{{T&Fcalc|18.18}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Jordan Díaz|ESP}}

|Rome

{{col-2}}

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:85%; display:inline-table;"

|+Women

!Year!!Mark!!Athlete!!Place

1986

|{{T&Fcalc|13.68}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Esmeralda de Jesus Garcia|BRA}}

|Indianapolis

1987

|{{T&Fcalc|14.04}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Li Huirong|CHN}}

|Hamamatsu

1988

|{{T&Fcalc|14.16}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Li Huirong|CHN}}

|Shijiazhuang

1989

|{{T&Fcalc|14.52}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Galina Chistyakova|URS}}

|Stockholm

1990

|{{T&Fcalc|14.54}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Li Huirong|CHN}}

|Sapporo

1991

|{{T&Fcalc|14.95}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Inessa Kravets|URS}}

|Moscow

1992

|{{T&Fcalc|14.62}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Galina Chistyakova|RUS}}

|Villeneuve-d'Ascq

1993

|{{T&Fcalc|15.09}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Anna Biryukova|RUS}}

|Stuttgart

1994

|{{T&Fcalc|14.98}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Sofiya Bozhanova|BUL}}

|Stara Zagora

1995

|{{T&Fcalc|15.50}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}

|Gothenburg

1996

|{{T&Fcalc|15.33}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}

|Sacramento

1997

|{{T&Fcalc|15.20}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Šárka Kašpárková|CZE}}

|Athens

1998

|{{T&Fcalc|15.16}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Ashia Hansen|GBR}}

|Maebashi

1999

|{{T&Fcalc|15.07}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Paraskevi Tsiamita|GRE}}

|Seville

2000

|{{T&Fcalc|15.32}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Yokohama

2001

|{{T&Fcalc|15.25}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Edmonton

2002

|{{T&Fcalc|14.95}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Françoise Mbango Etone|CMR}}

|Radès

2003

|{{T&Fcalc|15.29}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yamilé Aldama|CUB}}

|Rome

2004

|{{T&Fcalc|15.36}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Budapest

rowspan=2|2005

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|15.11}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Saint-Denis

align=left|{{flagathlete|Trecia Smith|JAM}}

|Helsinki

2006

|{{T&Fcalc|15.23}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Athens

2007

|{{T&Fcalc|15.28}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yargelis Savigne|CUB}}

|Osaka

2008

|{{T&Fcalc|15.39}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Françoise Mbango Etone|CMR}}

|Beijing

2009

|{{T&Fcalc|15.14}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Nadezhda Alekhina|RUS}}

|Cheboksary

2010

|{{T&Fcalc|15.25}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Olga Rypakova|KAZ}}

|Split

rowspan=2|2011

|{{T&Fcalc|14.99}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yargelis Savigne|CUB}}

|Saint-Denis

{{T&Fcalc|14.99}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Caterine Ibargüen|COL}}

|Bogotá

2012

|{{T&Fcalc|14.99}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Olha Saladuha|UKR}}

|Helsinki

2013

|{{T&Fcalc|14.88}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Olha Saladuha|UKR}}

|Gothenburg

2014

|{{T&Fcalc|15.31}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Caterine Ibargüen|COL}}

|Monaco

2015

|{{T&Fcalc|15.04}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Ekaterina Koneva|RUS}}

|Eugene

2016

|{{T&Fcalc|15.17}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Caterine Ibargüen|COL}}

|Rio de Janeiro

2017

|{{T&Fcalc|14.96}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Andújar

2018

|{{T&Fcalc|14.96}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Caterine Ibargüen|COL}}

|Rabat

2019

|{{T&Fcalc|15.11}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Lima

2020

|{{T&Fcalc|15.43}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Madrid

2021

|{{T&Fcalc|15.67}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Tokyo

2022

|{{T&Fcalc|15.74}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Belgrade

2023

|{{T&Fcalc|15.35}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}

|Eugene

2024

|{{T&Fcalc|15.02}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Thea LaFond|DMA}}

|Saint-Denis

{{col-end}}

See also

  • {{portal-inline|Sport of athletics}}

References

{{Reflist}}