Track and field at the 2024 Paris Olympics: World-record watch, schedule and how to watch (2024)

From the sprints to the jumps to the throws to the road races, track and field events have long been the heartbeat of the Summer Olympics, and the 2024 Games in Paris won’t be any different.

Ranging from the 100-meter to the marathon, there are 16 running events (including two relays, the 20km race walk and the two mixed events). Adding in the four jumping events (pole vault, high jump, long jump and triple jump), the four throwing events (shot put, discus, hammer throw and javelin) and the heptathlon/decathlon, there will be a total of 48 athletics events at the 2024 Games.

Advertisement

That makes track and field by far the most contested sport at the Olympics.

With more to watch for than in any other sport, here’s what you’ll need to know.

Schedule (all times ET)

With so many events and many of those events involving multiple rounds of competition, here’s a list of the final rounds for each discipline. The full schedule of events is here.

DateEventTime (ET)

Aug. 1

M 20km race walk

1:30 a.m.

W 20km race walk

3:20 a.m.

Aug. 2

M 10,000-meter

3:20 p.m.

Aug. 3

M shot put

1:35 p.m.

W triple jump

2:20 p.m.

Mixed 4x400-meter relay

2:55 p.m.

W 100-meter

3:20 p.m.

M decathlon 1,500-meter (final event)

3:45 p.m.

Aug. 4

W high jump

1:50 p.m.

M hammer throw

2:30 p.m.

M 100-meter

3:50 p.m.

Aug. 5

M pole vault

1 p.m.

W discus throw

2:35 p.m.

W 5,000-meter

3:10 p.m.

W 800-meter

3:45 p.m.

Aug. 6

W hammer throw

1:55 p.m.

M long jump

2:15 p.m.

M 1,500-meter

2:50 p.m.

W 3,000-meter steeplechase

3:10 p.m.

W 200-meter

3:40 p.m.

Aug. 7

Marathon race walk mixed relay

1:30 a.m.

W pole vault

1 p.m.

M discus throw

2:25 p.m.

M 400-meter

3:20 p.m.

M 3,000-meter steeplechase

3:40 p.m.

Aug. 8

W long jump

2 p.m.

M javelin throw

2:25 p.m.

M 200-meter

2:30 p.m.

W 400-meter hurdles

3:25 p.m.

M 110-meter hurdles

3:45 p.m.

Aug. 9

W 4x100-meter relay

1:30 p.m.

W shot put

1:40 p.m.

M 4x100-meter relay

1:45 p.m.

W 400-meter

2 p.m.

M triple jump

2:10 p.m.

W heptathlon 800-meter (final event)

2:15 p.m.

W 10,000-meter

2:55 p.m.

M 400-meter hurdles

3:45 p.m.

Aug. 10

M marathon

2 a.m.

M high jump

1:10 p.m.

M 800-meter

1:25 p.m.

W javelin throw

1:40 p.m.

W 100-meter hurdles

1:45 p.m.

M 5,000-meter

2 p.m.

W 1,500-meter

2:25 p.m.

M 4x400-meter relay

3:12 p.m.

W 4x400-meter relay

3:22 p.m.

Aug. 11

W marathon

2 a.m.

World records in danger

Men’s pole vault: Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis has already established his case as pole vaulting’s GOAT, having broken and re-broken his own world record seven times. The former LSU standout most recently broke the mark in April at the Xiamen Diamond League meet, clearing 6.24 meters.

Women’s 200-meter: Could this be the year Florence Griffith-Joyner’s 36-year-old record goes down? Her time of 21.34 seconds hasn’t been touched, but Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson and America’s Gabby Thomas are serious contenders. Jackson ran 21.41, the second-fastest time in history, at the 2023 world championships, while Thomas ran a 21.78 in the semifinals of the U.S. trials in June en route to her victory.

Men’s shot put: Behind Duplantis, American Ryan Crouser has a case for the world’s most dominant athlete in track and field. He’s set the record twice, most recently at the Los Angeles Grand Prix in 2023, tossing 23.56 meters. Crouser has had marks of 22.84 and 22.80 meters in 2024. Fellow American Joe Kovacs has the best throw of the year with a 23.13-meter mark in May.

Men’s triple jump: Great Britain’s Jonathan Edwards’ world-record mark of 18.29 meters has stood since 1995, but a pair of young competitors have the record in sight. Cuban Jordan Díaz, who represents Spain internationally, jumped 18.18 meters in June to win the European championships with the third-best leap ever. In the U.S., Jamaican 19-year-old Jaydon Hibbert won the 2023 Bowerman Award (track’s Heisman) after repeatedly breaking the U20 world record for Arkansas, ending the season with an NCAA-record 17.87 meters at the SEC championships.

Advertisement

Women’s 400-meter hurdles: American star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has struggled with injuries, but when she is on, she’s the best the world has ever seen in the 400-meter hurdles. She broke her own record for the fourth time with a time of 50.65 seconds in June at the U.S. Olympic trials. She could beat it again in Paris, but she’ll have to hold off Netherlands’ Femke Bol, who became the second woman to run sub-51 when she ran 50.95 seconds to break her own European record on July 14.

Women’s 400 meters:Speaking of Bol, the Dutch star ran a 49.17 to win the 400-meter indoor world championship in March, breaking her own world indoor record in the process. The overall record of 47.60 was set by Marita Koch of East Germany in 1985.

Men’s 400-meter hurdles: Norwegian Karsten Warholm and American Rai Benjamin had a battle for the ages at the 2020 Olympics, which ended with Warholm breaking his old world record in the event with a time of 45.94. He bested Benjamin again at the 2023 world championships, but Benjamin posted a world-leading time of 46.46 at the U.S. Olympic trials in June to set the stage for a thrilling rematch.

Team USA stars to watch

There is no bigger American track name than Sha’Carri Richardson. After she was unable to compete at the 2020 Games due to a suspension, the U.S. star is ready to make a splash in Paris in the 100-meter. She defended her U.S. title with a win at the trials, running 10.71. Her PR of 10.65 ties Jackson for fifth-best ever.

In the men’s 100, Noah Lyles caught plenty of attention for tucking “Yu-Gi-Oh!” cards in his singlet before races at the trials, but even more attention for his dominant performances. He won both the 100 and the 200, tying his 100-meter PR of 9.83 and then breaking a 28-year-old trials record in the 200 with a time of 19.53, positioning himself as an Olympic favorite in both events.

Advertisement

In the relays, teenage sensation Quincy Wilson will become the youngest male competitor in U.S. Olympic track history. The 16-year-old finished sixth at the trials in the 400 with a time of 44.94, leaving him out of the running for the open 400 but earning a slot on the relay team.

While Americans love the mile, the international stage runs the 1,500-meter, and U.S. fans should be eager to catch Yared Nuguse and Cole Hocker mix it up with the world’s best. Nuguse was considered a contender to break up the dominant rivalry of Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Great Britain’s Josh Kerr, and then Hocker stunned Nuguse and the world by upsetting Nuguse at the Olympic trials.

Hocker’s winning time of 3:30.59 broke the trials record by 3.5 seconds and showed he has the world-class fitness to mix it up at Paris.

In the women’s 1,500, Nikki Hiltz will lead the American charge. Hiltz identifies as transgender and nonbinary and won the trials with a personal-best time of 3:55.33.

Grant Holloway will be seeking Olympic vengeance in the men’s 110-meter hurdles, as he owns the world’s fastest time in 2024 but finished as the runner-up in Tokyo. He’s run sub-13 seconds three times this year and was joined under 13 seconds by Freddie Crittenden and Daniel Roberts, the first time in trials history three hurdlers broke that time barrier.

How to watch

TV:NBC, USA, E!, Telemundo and Universo

Streaming:Peacock, NBCOlympics.com, NBC.com, the NBC app and the NBC Olympics app

In addition to the medal events listed above, there will be morning sessions Aug. 2-9 beginning at 4 a.m. ET featuring preliminary rounds airing live on E! or USA. Check here for full day-by-day TV and streaming info. Medal events will be heavily featured in NBC’s tape-delayed prime-time coverage.

Stars not in action

The most notable name in track who won’t be competing in Paris this summer is Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson-Herah, the two-time defending Olympic champion in the 100 and 200. She withdrew from the Jamaican Olympic Trials and later revealed she was dealing with an Achilles injury.

Advertisement

Thompson-Herah’s 100-meter time of 10.51 in 2021 made her the second-fastest woman in history behind Griffith-Joyner.

From the U.S., 800-meter star Athing Mu will miss out on her chance to defend her Olympic gold medal after she fell around the 200-meter mark in the semifinals of the Olympic trials and couldn’t catch back up to the leaders. The 22-year-old’s coach argued Mu was clipped from behind, but their protest was denied.

Mu is the American record holder in the event and became the first American, male or female, to win Olympic gold in the 800 since Dave Wottle in 1972.

Venezuelan fans will feel a similar sting with the absence of Yulimar Rojas, one of the greatest jumpers in world history. She’s nicknamed “la reina del triple salto” (queen of the triple jump) for good reason: She broke a 25-year-old record in the event at the 2021 Olympics and then broke her own record a couple years later, leaping 15.74 meters.

In April, she suffered an Achilles injury during a training session and subsequently announced she would miss the Olympics.

In memoriam

Kelvin Kiptum had all the makings of the next GOAT in the marathon. The 24-year-old broke the world record in the fabled event in his third career marathon, running 2:00:35 to take 34 seconds off the previous record, setting up a showcase for the ages with compatriot Eliud Kipchoge, who previously held the world record and is also recognized as the greatest marathoner ever after becoming the first man to run sub-2 hours in a controlled race environment.

Then tragedy struck, as Kiptum died in a car accident in February.

Kipchoge will lead the Kenyan team as he looks to become the first person to win three Olympic gold medals in the marathon, but the event will certainly carry an air of sadness as fans miss out on what could have been a generational passing of the torch.

Required reading

  • Is women’s track the next sport ready to boom? Alexis Ohanian is betting on it
  • For Kara Winger, four-time Olympian in javelin, there’s peace in missing Paris
  • Athing Mu, Nia Akins and the brutal line between Olympic dreams and agony

(Photo of Noah Lyles and Sha’Carri Richardson: Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images)

Track and field at the 2024 Paris Olympics: World-record watch, schedule and how to watch (1)Track and field at the 2024 Paris Olympics: World-record watch, schedule and how to watch (2)

Mark Puleo is a News Staff Editor at The Athletic. Before joining The Athletic, Mark covered breaking weather news as a digital journalist and front page digital editor with AccuWeather. He is a graduate of Penn State University and its John Curley Center for Sports Journalism. Follow Mark on Twitter @ByMarkPuleo

Track and field at the 2024 Paris Olympics: World-record watch, schedule and how to watch (2024)

FAQs

Where can I watch the Olympics 2024 schedule? ›

Over a billion people around the world are expected to tune in. Here's everything to know about the ceremony, which, if all goes to plan, will go down in Olympic history. Stream every moment and every medal of the 2024 Paris Olympics on Peacock, starting with the opening ceremony Friday at 12 p.m. ET.

How to watch the Olympics schedule? ›

The 2024 Paris Olympic Games will air on NBC, USA Network and will be available to stream on Peacock and NBCOlympics.com.

Who broadcasts the Olympics in 2024? ›

The opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games will air live on NBC and stream live on Peacock on July 26. Live coverage begins at 12 p.m. ET with primetime starting at 7:30 p.m. ET. This year's ceremony will break from tradition as the parade of nations will take place on Paris' River Seine.

Can you watch the Olympics on Peacock? ›

It's also possible to watch the Olympics on any smart TV streaming platform that has the Peacock and NBC apps, including Android TV, Apple TV, Google Chromecast, Fire TV and Roku. The apps are also available on Samsung and Vizio TVs and Xbox.

How to watch the Olympics 2024 for free? ›

If you've cut those cable cords, you can still watch the events live from Paris using several streaming services. Watch the 2024 Olympics for free with trials from Fubo or DIRECTV Stream. You can also tune in on Peacock, Sling and Max.

Is the Olympic Channel free? ›

Peacock. Peacock is the exclusive streamer of NBC, so you can watch all of the 2024 Paris Olympic games and the opening ceremony on the service. The streamer is $7.99 per month (or $79.99 per year) for the ad-supported Premium package or $13.99 month (or $139.99 annually) for the ad-free Premium Plus plan.

What sports are being removed from the Olympics 2024? ›

With breaking, sport climbing, skateboarding, and surfing all earning roster spots in the 2024 Paris Games, their promotion sadly means that multiple sports are getting the boot. Come July, three sports will be absent from the City of Light, including karate, softball and the heavy hitter, baseball.

What time do the 2024 Olympics start? ›

What TV channels carry the Olympics? ›

As mentioned, NBC will be the main TV network for Olympics coverage, and will have all the major events, including the opening and closing ceremonies, swimming finals, track and field, gymnastics finals and more.

Is Olympics on Hulu? ›

The 2024 Olympics Opening Ceremony will air live on NBC. You can stream on Peacock, DirecTV Stream, Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, and FuboTV.

What time is the Olympics Opening Ceremony on Peacock? ›

NBC and Peacock will have live coverage of the Opening Ceremony on Friday, July 26, beginning at Noon Eastern. Telemundo will also provide Spanish-language coverage beginning at 1 p.m. ET. Primetime coverage of the Opening Ceremony will begin at 7:30 p.m. ET/PT on NBC and Peacock.

Where will 2024 olympics schedule? ›

See full schedule of events at 2024 Paris Summer Games. The opening ceremonies of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris are quickly approaching and attention will soon turn back to one of the Summer Games' most memorable settings: the pool. For those interested in watching Olympic swimming events begin on July 27 this year.

What are the 5 new sports for the 2024 Olympics? ›

2024 Paris Olympics new sports, explained: Breakdancing to debut at Games, Climbing among returning events
  • Breakdancing (Breaking) After captivating the hip-hop world for the past few decades, breakdancing (referred to as "Breaking" by the IOC) will make its Olympic debut in Paris. ...
  • Sport Climbing. ...
  • Skateboarding. ...
  • Surfing.
18 hours ago

Where will Olympics be aired? ›

All events of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games are available to watch live in the U.S., whether through one of the cable networks, NBC or Peacock, which will stream every event of every sport live. There will be live coverage of the Paris action daily from 4 a.m. ET to 6 p.m. ET.

Which cities will be hosting the Summer Olympic Games in 2024 2028 and 2032? ›

Future Summer Olympic Sites
  • 2026: Milano-Cortina (Italy)
  • 2028: Los Angeles.
  • 2030: French Alps.
  • 2032: Brisbane, Australia.
  • 2034: Salt Lake City.
3 hours ago

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Nicola Considine CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 6072

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nicola Considine CPA

Birthday: 1993-02-26

Address: 3809 Clinton Inlet, East Aleisha, UT 46318-2392

Phone: +2681424145499

Job: Government Technician

Hobby: Calligraphy, Lego building, Worldbuilding, Shooting, Bird watching, Shopping, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Nicola Considine CPA, I am a determined, witty, powerful, brainy, open, smiling, proud person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.