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Pole vaulter breaks world record – for the 12th time
Pole vaulter breaks world record – for the 12th time

The Independent

time16-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Independent

Pole vaulter breaks world record – for the 12th time

Mondo Duplantis has set a new pole vault world record of 6.28m in Stockholm, Sweden, fulfilling a long-held dream. This marks the 12th time the 25-year-old has broken the world record, adding 1cm to his previous best. Duplantis said that breaking the record at Stadion, with his family present, felt like the Olympics. He won the Diamond League event, with Kurtis Marschall of Australia finishing second with a best of 5.90m. Duplantis described the achievement as a 'cloud nine feeling'.

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time
Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

CNN

time16-06-2025

  • Sport
  • CNN

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

Mondo Duplantis broke the pole vault world record for the 12th time in his career in front of a delighted home crowd in Stockholm, Sweden. Duplantis cleared 6.28 meters on his first attempt to surpass his previous record by a centimeter, immediately running over to the stands to celebrate. This was the first time that the 25-year-old had broken a world record in Sweden, saying afterwards that he felt 'full to the brim' with the 'special' achievement. 'I've got a lot of family here,' said Duplantis, who was raised in the United States but represents Sweden, his mother's native country. 'The first time I jumped in this stadium was when I was 11,' he added. 'It was rainy, cold, I jumped right under four meters. I still jumped quite high, actually, for how young I was.' Duplantis first broke the pole vault world record in 2020 and over the years has steadily raised his own history-making standards a centimeter at a time. At Sunday's Diamond League meet, he had victory wrapped up with a first-time clearance of six meters, then put the bar straight up to 6.28m – well clear of his own meet record of 6.16m. Despite grazing the bar on the way up, Duplantis safely cleared the record height and raced over to the stands to celebrate with his fiancée. The two-time Olympic gold medalist is now unbeaten since July 2023, winning the Stockholm meet by 38 centimeters more than Australia's Kurtis Marschall in second. 'It gets a little bit tougher as it gets higher,' said Duplantis about the prospect of clearing 6.30m in the future. 'I'm just a perfect day away from it, technically and physically and everything like that.'

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time
Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

CNN

time16-06-2025

  • Sport
  • CNN

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

Mondo Duplantis broke the pole vault world record for the 12th time in his career in front of a delighted home crowd in Stockholm, Sweden. Duplantis cleared 6.28 meters on his first attempt to surpass his previous record by a centimeter, immediately running over to the stands to celebrate. This was the first time that the 25-year-old had broken a world record in Sweden, saying afterwards that he felt 'full to the brim' with the 'special' achievement. 'I've got a lot of family here,' said Duplantis, who was raised in the United States but represents Sweden, his mother's native country. 'The first time I jumped in this stadium was when I was 11,' he added. 'It was rainy, cold, I jumped right under four meters. I still jumped quite high, actually, for how young I was.' Duplantis first broke the pole vault world record in 2020 and over the years has steadily raised his own history-making standards a centimeter at a time. At Sunday's Diamond League meet, he had victory wrapped up with a first-time clearance of six meters, then put the bar straight up to 6.28m – well clear of his own meet record of 6.16m. Despite grazing the bar on the way up, Duplantis safely cleared the record height and raced over to the stands to celebrate with his fiancée. The two-time Olympic gold medalist is now unbeaten since July 2023, winning the Stockholm meet by 38 centimeters more than Australia's Kurtis Marschall in second. 'It gets a little bit tougher as it gets higher,' said Duplantis about the prospect of clearing 6.30m in the future. 'I'm just a perfect day away from it, technically and physically and everything like that.'

‘Magical' Duplantis soars to pole vault world record in Stockholm
‘Magical' Duplantis soars to pole vault world record in Stockholm

Arab News

time16-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Arab News

‘Magical' Duplantis soars to pole vault world record in Stockholm

STOCKHOLM: Swedish double Olympic pole vault champion Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis increased his own world record again on Sunday, clearing 6.28 meters to the delight of the home crowd at the Stockholm Diamond League meet. For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport With victory in the event already guaranteed, Duplantis broke the world record for the 12th time as he sailed over the bar at the first attempt to improve on his 6.27m effort at Clermont-Ferrand in February. The 25-year-old ripped off his shirt in celebration and raced down the track in front of jubilant spectators at the Olympic stadium built for the 1912 Games. 'It's a magical feeling, it's hard to explain,' said Duplantis, who had not before broken the record in Sweden. 'I wanted this so bad. I wanted to do this in front of everybody here in Stockholm. 'It felt like really something special in the crowd today and I knew that everybody really wanted to see it too. 'It'll be one of the greatest memories for me, I think, in my career.' Duplantis notched up his 37th victory in 41 Diamond League outings, finishing well ahead of Australia's Kurtis Marschall who managed a best of 5.90m. The US-born Duplantis was in a class of his own in another punishing display of vaulting of the highest order, three days after a stellar display in Oslo. 'I kept saying it was the only thing I was missing in the accolades, to break a record in Sweden,' he said. 'I've checked off pretty much everything now.' Duplantis is the heavy favorite for a third successive world championship gold in Tokyo later this year. He is also a three-time indoor world champion. He first broke the world record in 2020 when he surpassed the 6.16m mark set by Frenchman Renaud Lavillenie. Duplantis intends to push the bar even higher after his Stockholm exploits. 'I'm going to jump higher. There's not much between me and 6.30, technically. It's just a few centimeters. I'm just a perfect day away from it,' he said. Hometown runner Andreas Almgren fed off the raucous atmosphere to set a new European record of 12min 44.27sec to win the men's 5,000m. Olympic champion Rai Benjamin edged out Alison dos Santos to win the men's 400m hurdles, with Karsten Warlhom a distant third. Warholm triumphed in the rarely-run 300km hurdles on his home track in Oslo on Thursday, but Benjamin produced a world-leading time of 46.54sec over 400m. 'I think on Thursday I got a little too excited but I felt good today even though I was tired,' said Benjamin. Julien Alfred won the women's 100m in 10.75sec, the second fastest time of the year. It was only the Olympic gold medalist's second race of the season following her victory in Oslo. Britain's Dina Asher-Smith took second (10.93) ahead of Ivorian Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (11.00). Two-time Olympic bronze medallist Femke Bol won the women's 400m hurdles in a season's best time of 52.11sec. She finished ahead of American Dalilah Muhammad (52.91) and Panama's Gianna Woodruff (53.99). 'I am not in my best shape yet so to take the victory is especially good,' said Bol. 'A race is never the same as training and it is only my third race of the season... but I am starting to feel the hurdles better every race and getting into race shape. 'It is such a high level at the moment in the hurdles so I am very excited going forward toward the world championships.'

Athletics: Armand Duplantis soars to new pole vault world record with 6.28m jump
Athletics: Armand Duplantis soars to new pole vault world record with 6.28m jump

RNZ News

time15-06-2025

  • Sport
  • RNZ News

Athletics: Armand Duplantis soars to new pole vault world record with 6.28m jump

Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis. Photo: FREDRIK SANDBERG / AFP Sweden's Armand Duplantis soared 6.28 metres to break the world pole vault record at the Diamond League event in Stockholm on Sunday, the 12th time he has set a new world-best mark. The American-born double Olympic champion improved on his previous record, set in February, by one centimetre on his first attempt, making the most of the perfect conditions to delight the home crowd. Having promised fans ahead of the competition that he would try to break the record, Duplantis encouraged the crowd to get behind him from the moment his name was announced at the Swedish capital's Olympic stadium and they responded by wildly clapping and cheering his every attempt as he cruised through the competition. Kurtis Marschall did his best to challenge the hometown favourite, but the Australian could only manage a best effort of 5.90 before making three unsuccessful attempts to clear the six-metre mark. That left the field clear for Duplantis as the bar was raised to 6.28 for his world record attempt, and once again, the 25-year-old made it look easy. He powered through his run-up before planting his pole and soaring to another world record as the stadium, built for the 1912 Olympics, exploded in jubilation. Duplantis sprinted from the landing mat, tearing off his singlet to celebrate his first world record set on Swedish soil with his partner and family. "This was one of my biggest goals and dreams, to set a world record here at Stadion. It's like the Olympics and Stadion, they're the same level for me. I really wanted to do it, I had my whole family here, from both sides, it's magic, it's magic," he said. "Every time I broke the world record, I felt it in my first jump that 'this could be the day', but today it felt a little tougher. It didn't feel that natural from the beginning, it didn't feel great in my legs, but I only needed one (try)," an emotional Duplantis added. Despite the confident impression he gave as he sailed over the bar, Duplantis said he was not convinced he had cleared it until his back hit the mat. "I almost couldn't believe it, it felt like the very first time I broke the record. For me, I'm still a little hazy in my mind, it feels unreal, I'm just so happy, it's a cloud nine feeling. It's hard to explain, it's hard to compare, it felt a bit like the Olympics," he said. - Reuters

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