Tag: pole vault news

  • Mondo Duplantis units pole vault world file of 6.19m in Belgrade

    Olympic champion Mondo Duplantis broke his personal world pole vault file with a 6.19-meter clearance on the Belgrade Indoor Meeting.
    Duplantis set the file of 6.18 in February 2020 indoors in Glasgow.

    Mondo Duplantis lastly clears 6.19!! New Personal Best, World Lead and WORLD RECORD!!! šŸ”„šŸ”„šŸ”„ WHAT A FREAK šŸšŸ‡øšŸ‡Ŗ @mondohoss600 pic.twitter.com/k6QAR9qKv0

    ā€” M I A N N šŸŒø (@miannreyes) March 8, 2022

    ā€œIā€™ve tried 6.19 meters 50 times,ā€ the Swede mentioned.

    ā€œItā€™s been a long time coming. Iā€™ve never had a height that has given me that much trouble, so itā€™s a very good feeling. It was really hard-fought over these past two years. Iā€™m really happy.ā€ With all of his opponents completed, Duplantis opened his sequence with 5.61, 5.85 and 6.00 all on his first tries.

    At 6.19, he missed his first two makes an attempt. On his third and closing attempt, he nudged the bar barely along with his knees nevertheless it remained in place. He leaped up from the touchdown mat and punched the air in celebration.

    He will return to the identical Stark Arena within the Serbian capital this month for the world indoor championships beginning on March 18.

  • Young pole vaulter Devrajā€™s wrestle: Living in rented single room close to drain in Delhi, working as safety guard at night time

    Every morning pole vaulter Devraj wakes as much as the sight of an enormous stench-emanating drain flowing proper exterior his rented lodging. But from that exact same room, by means of the hazy Delhi skies, he additionally has a view of Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium ā€“ thought-about among the finest monitor and discipline services within the nation. The flowing drain and the long-lasting stadium, the 23-year-old says, is a continuing reminder of the struggles he has to face day-after-day to achieve nearer to his dream of turning into an elite vaulter.
    After coaching at varied academies throughout the nation, Devraj landed in Delhi in 2019 hoping to achieve entry to raised coaching services. But the pandemic and later the lacking pole vault pits at JLN turned out to be an enormous blow.
    With no monetary or ethical help from residence, Devraj has at all times needed to take up odd jobs to even guarantee he will get his meals. He is presently employed as a safety guard at one of many bungalows in Delhiā€™s posh Defence Colony. ā€œI told them that I will do only night shifts because I did not want my training to get disrupted,ā€ says the wiry athlete.
    A serious portion of his meagre earnings is spent on hire for the tiny single room lodging that he shares with a para jumper who additionally trains at JLN.
    Devraj used to hold his pole to the JLN Stadium on his cycle. (Pic: Andrew Amsan)
    ā€œThe room is so tiny that I canā€™t even keep my poles inside. I have to tie them up on the terrace. And what do I tell you about the stench?ā€¦ I sometimes weep myself to sleep thinking about my situation only to wake up to reality again,ā€ says Devraj.
    But even sleep is a luxurious that Devraj can solely seldom afford.
    Heā€™s saved awake all night time by tenants on the constructing the place he works as a guard. During winters he has to bear the biting chilly within the car parking zone which can also be his resting space. If sleep deprivation and harsh climate werenā€™t sufficient, Devrajā€™s life at work is made harder by undesirable guests. ā€œA lot of insects come in attracted by the light. It also gets so lonely here all by myself. I have no choice but to do this to keep my dreams afloat,ā€ he says with a smile.

    Devrajā€™s first tryst with pole vault occurred by probability. The then 15-year-old was browsing by means of channels on his black & white tv again residence in Bhilwara, Rajasthan, as he chanced upon a re-run of an occasion the place the legendary Sergey Bubka was competing. Bubka is an all-time nice with one Olympic gold and 6 World Championship (outside) medals. The teenagerā€™s eyes had been glued to the telly for the following hour or in order he noticed Bubka show his magic.
    Since his single room condominium just isn’t sufficiently big to suit the artificial pole, he has to retailer them on the terrace. (Pic: Andrew Amsan)
    ā€œIt was so fascinating. I couldnā€™t believe that someone could just use a pole and leap so high into the air. The very next day I went to my school physical trainer and asked him to teach me danda khud (stick jump). Thatā€™s what I initially called it,ā€ says Devraj.
    Devrajā€™s trainer had little clue about pole vault and as a substitute enrolled him into Wushu. ā€œUsme bahut maar khana padta hai .(In Wushu, you have to take a lot of blows). I did not like it at all.ā€

    Devraj determined it was time to take issues into his personal fingers. He seemed for a sturdy bamboo stick and constructed a touchdown pit with discarded mattresses and started coaching within the village fields. ā€œI developed my own technique and somehow managed to make it to the district meet with a few years of training and bagged a silver. That was my first-ever medal. No one had fibre poles at that meet. It was more like a village games competition,ā€ he says.
    But Devrajā€™s aspirations had been larger, and for that, he knew he must transfer to the town. The teenager took a mortgage from his dad and mom and moved out to Jaipur after ending faculty. Devrajā€™s farmer household have by no means been supportive of his sporting endeavours. ā€œThey feel I am wasting time and money,ā€ he says.
    Devraj had briefly adopted his dad and momā€™ course and took up a job in a material manufacturing facility within the city. ā€œI worked one week at the factory as a helper. The sound of the machines was deafening and my ears would ring even after I went home. That one week made me realise that it wasnā€™t a job but a death sentence to my dreams. So I borrowed the money and left home for good,ā€ remembers Devraj whereas holding again his tears.When Devraj reached Delhi he felt life would lastly change for good however his coaching received disrupted because of the covid induced lockdowns which pressured the stadiums to close their doorways. When coaching resumed at JLN the vaulter was hit by one other roadblock, lacking pole vault equipment. Itā€™s been eight months since there was no pole vault equipment at Sports Authority of Indiaā€™s JLN stadium that has pressured a number of budding vaulters to stop the game.
    The view from Devrajā€™s shared balcony. (Pic: Andrew Amsan)
    But for Devraj quitting wasnā€™t an possibility. The subsequent nearest stadium with a vault equipment was throughout the border in Faridabad about 50 kilometres from his home.
    ā€œIt takes one and half hours, one way, to reach the sports complex in Faridabad. Ideally, I should be training six days a week but since I canā€™t afford the metro fair so I go three times a week,ā€ he says. A tough calculation exhibits Devraj must spend 30 per cent of his paltry wage on journey alone if he goes to Faridabad usually.
    ā€œWith my current salary, I canā€™t even afford shoes. All the shoes that I have are discarded footwear from other athletes. (Devraj points to the torn patch on his sole). I have just one proper meal a day and going to train so far means cutting down even on that,ā€ says the dejected teen.

  • Missing pole vault equipment at JLN forcing budding athletes to think about quitting sport

    The nationā€™s premier athletics venue, Sports Authority of Indiaā€™s (SAI) Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, has been with out a everlasting pole vault equipment for over six months. This has compelled athletes to coach within the lengthy bounce pit, the makeshift association answerable for a number of twisted ankles and knees. Just a few of the Capitalā€™s pole vaulters are considering quitting the game, others are coping with a sudden drop in efficiency.
    Devraj, a 2019 Delhi state medallist, couldnā€™t land a single authorized bounce finally monthā€™s Open Nationals in Warangal. ā€œI could do 4.80m earlier but now I canā€™t even make a proper jump. With great difficulty, I have been able to procure poles but what will I do without a pit? I am considering selling them off,ā€ says Devraj.
    The SAI, in a press release to The Indian Express, stated that the pole vault self-discipline was ā€œmovedā€ to Bangalore in December the place the NCOE (National Centre of Excellence) will operate. ā€œPole vault equipment integral to Pole vault NCOE (National Centre of Excellence) have moved to a new location in Dec 2020 and all facilities wrt pole vault are available at Bangalore,ā€ the assertion learn.

    Vaulters compelled to apply on the bounce pit in JLN pic.twitter.com/WBMItBTIdj
    ā€” Express Sports (@IExpressSports) October 6, 2021
    Stadium authorities have locked up the prevailing ā€œunfitā€ pits within the storeroom. For the latest under-23 National Championships, the Indian Army got here to the rescue making certain the pole vault occasion wasnā€™t scrapped as was the case on the Delhi state meet organised a number of weeks again on the similar venue.
    ā€œThe Rajputana Rifles lent us the pole vault pits. They brought it in their Army trucks and took it back after the event,ā€ says an official.
    SAI additional said that ā€œthe issue of new pitsā€ for competitions is being ā€œdeliberatedā€. That signifies that the ordeal of pole vaulters on the stadium is unlikely to finish quickly.

    ā€œWe donā€™t have a pit for over six months now. I am tired of running after stadium officials. What hurts me more than the absence of the pit is the condescending tone in which certain administrators talk to us. Do you want to know why India doesnā€™t win as many medals as it should? Itā€™s because of administrators like these,ā€ a dejected Delhi state medallist stated.
    On Monday, a bunch of annoyed pole vaulters reached administrator Satyadev Prasadā€™s workplace in search of an replace on the matter, solely to be instructed that ā€œhe couldnā€™t do much.ā€ Prasad refused to touch upon the difficulty.
    Athletes say that transferring the power to Bangalore wouldnā€™t assist them.

    ā€œI have just started. How can you expect me to leave my home and go to Bangalore? I am not even part of the NCOE. What will Delhiā€™s young vaulters do? You canā€™t expect everyone to move to a new city,ā€ says 17-year-old Rahul (identify modified).
    Rahul got here to JLN with excessive hopes. Back in his college, utilizing a bamboo stick as a pole and haystacks as a pit, he managed to cross the 3m mark. He thought that at JLN he would be capable of attempt his hand at an precise pit for the primary time, however was left dejected. ā€œI cannot believe that the countryā€™s best stadium does not have a pole vault pit. I still canā€™t,ā€ says Rahul.
    Those who’re presently coaching within the lengthy bounce pit concern accidents. ā€œOur knees hurt and a few days back my ankle got twisted. But what can we do? Our performances have gone down as well. If things donā€™t change, I will have to quit,ā€ says a younger vaulter on situation of anonymity.