Pole vault

Duplantis breaks pole vault world record to win gold

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Duplantis breaks pole vault world record to win gold

CHAMPION. Armand Duplantis (middle) continues his pole vault dominance and bests EJ Obiena (right) and Chris Nilsen (left) for the gold in the 2022 World Athletics Championships.

Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters

Swede pole vault star Armand Duplantis takes home another gold as American Chris Nilsen and Filipino EJ Obiena complete the podium in the World Athletics Championships

OREGON, USA – Sweden’s Armand Duplantis broke his own pole vault world record with a jump of 6.21 meters on Sunday, July 24 (Monday, July 25, Philippine time) on the way to winning his first gold medal at the World Athletics Championships.

The Olympic champion cleared 6m to make sure of the title, before he set his sights on his own record of 6.20m set at the World Indoor Championships in Belgrade earlier this year and improved upon it by a centimeter with his second attempt.

The world title completes the 22-year-old’s collection, making him the first pole vaulter to have won gold at the Olympics, World Championships, World Indoor Championships, World Junior Championships, World Youth Championships, and European Championships.

“Actually, I did not think about the record that much today,” Duplantis said. “Usually, it is always somewhere in the back of my mind but today I was really focused on the win and I really wanted to win the gold so badly. It was the medal I was missing.”

“So when I was on this height, it was like everything came together and it happened from there. I love jumping in Eugene and it was amazing here.”

Duplantis took two attempts at 5.87m before clearing 6m and 6.06m with ease to edge Dmitri Markov’s Championships mark of 6.05m set in Edmonton in 2001.

He then had the bar raised to 6.21m, falling short on his first attempt but soaring to the world record on the second.

It was the third time this year that Duplantis has set a world record and his fifth record-setting jump overall after breaking Frenchman Renaud Lavillenie’s 6.16m world mark with a clearance of 6.17m in February 2020.

American Chris Nilsen jumped 5.94m to take silver on countback ahead of the Philippines’ Ernest John Obiena, who won his nation’s first World Championships medal.

“This was something I really wanted but I do not know if I was expecting it,” Obiena said. “I definitely did not expect that I would jump that high. And I would not think that it would actually take that high to win a medal.”

Must Read

EJ Obiena resets Asian record to claim historic bronze in World Athletics Championships

EJ Obiena resets Asian record to claim historic bronze in World Athletics Championships

– Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!