The
4 × 400 meter relay or its imperial
4 × 440 yard relay equivalent has been held at the
NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships since its founding in 1965. The imperial distance was held until 1983, while the metric distance has been run since 1984. Hand timing was used until 1975 and in 1980, while in all other years
fully automatic timing was used. In 1986 and 1987, the 1⁄10-mile track that the races were run on was 25 inches (640 mm) per lap short, making the actual race distance less than 400 meters those years. Official relay splits were provided by Flash Results beginning in 2008.[1][2]
^The winning time was listed as 3:16.08 by GBR Athletics, but as 3:16.03 in contemporary reports.
^Simmons' and McCoy's splits reported as 48.3 and 47.5 respectively by the
Tallahassee Democrat
^Winning time listed as 3:08.56 by the USTFCCCA archive, but 3:08.55 by contemporary sources.
^Splits taken from Track and Field News' converted times minus 0.1 per split
^Mario Watts competed in the prelims. Listed as Watts, Davis, Bragner, Couts by the USTFCCCA
^Listed as Colquhoun, Francique, Parham, Tunon in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Szeglet, Sterling, Smith, Williamson in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book. Williamson's split was reported as 45.66 in the Waco Tribune-Herald.
^Listed as Brazell, Coley, Greensword, Willie in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Sazirue, Teter, Wariner, Williamson in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Carter, Dardar, Rogers, Willie in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
The
4 × 400 meter relay or its imperial
4 × 440 yard relay equivalent has been held at the
NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships since its founding in 1965. The imperial distance was held until 1983, while the metric distance has been run since 1984. Hand timing was used until 1975 and in 1980, while in all other years
fully automatic timing was used. In 1986 and 1987, the 1⁄10-mile track that the races were run on was 25 inches (640 mm) per lap short, making the actual race distance less than 400 meters those years. Official relay splits were provided by Flash Results beginning in 2008.[1][2]
^The winning time was listed as 3:16.08 by GBR Athletics, but as 3:16.03 in contemporary reports.
^Simmons' and McCoy's splits reported as 48.3 and 47.5 respectively by the
Tallahassee Democrat
^Winning time listed as 3:08.56 by the USTFCCCA archive, but 3:08.55 by contemporary sources.
^Splits taken from Track and Field News' converted times minus 0.1 per split
^Mario Watts competed in the prelims. Listed as Watts, Davis, Bragner, Couts by the USTFCCCA
^Listed as Colquhoun, Francique, Parham, Tunon in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Szeglet, Sterling, Smith, Williamson in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book. Williamson's split was reported as 45.66 in the Waco Tribune-Herald.
^Listed as Brazell, Coley, Greensword, Willie in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Sazirue, Teter, Wariner, Williamson in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book
^Listed as Carter, Dardar, Rogers, Willie in the 2013 NCAA Men's Indoor Championships statistics book