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  2. Krishnam Raju Gadiraju - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krishnam_Raju_Gadiraju

    On 19 October 2017, with a time of 53.86 seconds, Gadiraju broke the world record for the fastest time to complete two Rubik's cubes simultaneously underwater. [7] One year later, he solved a Gear Cube in a world record time of 3.79 seconds and a Rubik's Magic blindfolded in 2.99 seconds, also a world record.

  3. Lars Andersen (archer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lars_Andersen_(archer)

    Lars Andersen (born 8 November 1964) is a Danish painter and archer.Claiming to hold a world record for speed, [1] he is able to shoot 10 arrows in 4.9 seconds, [2] or 3 arrows in 0.6 seconds.

  4. Alastair Galpin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alastair_Galpin

    Alastair Galpin has broken over 85 world records for feats including having the most snails on the face (eight in 10 seconds [2]) and the most rubber-bands stretched over the face (62 in one minute). He also holds the most stamps licked (57 in one minute), [ 3 ] loudest clap, and the fastest time to peel and eat three kiwifruit.

  5. 55.433 Seconds! Jeffrey Hoogland Just Smashed the 1 ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/55-433-seconds-jeffrey-hoogland...

    The Dutch cyclist beat Francois Pervis’ 2013 record, which was the longest standing track world record. 55.433 Seconds! Jeffrey Hoogland Just Smashed the 1-Kilometer Track Bike Time Trial World ...

  6. Ivory Crockett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory_Crockett

    In 1974, he ran the fastest 100-yard dash with manual timing of 9.0 seconds, a record he still holds. [3] This was deemed at the time by the Los Angeles Times as "Immortality in 9 Seconds Flat", [ 4 ] and he was quickly tagged with the title the world's fastest man by Track and Field News [ 5 ] who put him on their June 1974 cover.

  7. Kenichi Ito (athlete) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenichi_Ito_(athlete)

    Kenichi Ito (Japanese: いとう けんいち, Hepburn: Itō Ken'ichi, real name: 伊藤 健一; born 8 May 1982) is a Japanese athlete from Tokyo.He holds the Guinness World Record for running 100 meters on all four limbs, setting a best time of 15.71 seconds in the Komazawa Olympic Park in Tokyo, 6 November 2015, shaving 0.15 seconds off the previous record of 15.86 seconds by Katsumi ...

  8. Kelvin Kiptum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelvin_Kiptum

    He followed it up four months later with the second-fastest marathon in history at 2:01:25, 16 seconds outside the world record, at the 2023 London Marathon (WMM). [9] At the 2023 Chicago Marathon six months later in October 2023, he broke the world record by 34 seconds with a time of 2:00:35, a mark ratified on 6 February 2024—five days ...

  9. Usain Bolt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usain_Bolt

    Bolt also holds the second fastest time of 9.63 seconds, [88] the current Olympic record, [90] and set two previous world records in the event. Bolt's personal best of 19.19 s in the 200 metres is the world record.