This gives me an opportunity to share a bit of research I did on a lazy Sunday afternoon this spring. Not intended to show anything, just an interesting look at 60m to 100m times in a particular 60m time range (one of those that you’re interested in).
The column on the left is a list of 60m times between 7.37 and 7.40 run by NCAA women indoors in the seasons of 2002-2008. The column on the right is the subsequent 100m time run by that same female during the outdoor season of that same year. E.g. the first 7.37 girl ended up running 11.53 that year, etc.
As you can see there is a large range of 100m performances stemming from very similar indoor performances. The level of wind is a huge variable, of course, that I didn’t go through the trouble to find. Whether the athlete focused on the 60 or 100 is another unknown variable.
7.37 11.53
7.37 11.33
7.37 11.50
7.37 11.11
7.37 11.49
7.37 11.44
7.37 11.29
7.37 11.30
7.37 11.57
7.37 11.15
7.37 11.28
7.37 11.51
7.37 11.47
7.37 11.54
7.38 11.40
7.38 11.53
7.38 11.25
7.38 11.35
7.39 11.37
7.39 11.44
7.39 11.36
7.39 11.43
7.39 11.56
7.40 11.24
7.40 11.44
7.40 11.38
7.40 11.60
7.40 11.58
7.40 11.43
If you omit the 2 fastest and 2 slowest 100m times, the avg is something like 7.38 and 11.42. Since the NCAA has a very liberal wind limit of 4.0, at the very least it’s safe to assume that a large percentage of the 100m times were run with some degree of tailwind.