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World's New Manufacturing Machine, 2nd consecutive win

  15.08.2024 в 14:49   2  

World's New Manufacturing Machine, 2nd consecutive win
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Swedish man who surpassed himself at the Olympics Sweden's Armand Duplantis clears the bar during the men's pole vault final at the Paris Olympics at the Stade de France on the 6th. Duplantis, the champion of the 2021 Tokyo Games, cleared 6.25m, breaking his own world record set in April by 1cm and becoming the first athlete in 68 years to win back-to-back titles in the men's pole vault.

Duplantis wins gold in pole vault 6m25, sets 9th world record, alone records 6m Fighting with herself “A scene I’ve drawn thousands of times has become reality”

It was a given that he would win two consecutive Olympic gold medals. The focus was on whether he could break the world record he had already broken eight times at the Olympics. The

men's pole vault finals of the Paris Olympics were held at the Stade de France in Paris, France on the 6th. Armand Duplantis (25, Sweden), the '21st century human bird' who secured the gold medal early by clearing 6m in just four jumps, challenged the world record of 6.25m. Duplantis failed his first and second attempts, but he easily cleared the bar on his third attempt, breaking the world record (6.24m) he had set in April.

Duplantis set his ninth personal world record and joined the ranks of the 'Greatest of All Time' in men's pole vaulting. Over the past 40 years, the men's pole vault world record has been broken 25 times, with Duplantis alone accounting for more than a third of those nine times. This is the first time a men's pole vault world record has been set on the high-stakes Olympic stage. Duplantis, the gold medalist at the 2021 Tokyo Games, became the first athlete in 68 years to win back-to-back Olympic gold medals since Bob Richards (USA) won in Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956. Sergei Bubka (Ukraine), known as the "original human bird," only won once at the Olympics, in Seoul in 1988.

Appearing at Omega House in Paris about 12 hours after winning the gold medal, Duplantis said he had “partied with chicken and pizza” the night before. “The scene I had pictured with my eyes closed thousands of times has become reality. Ever since I was a kid playing in the backyard, I always dreamed of winning the Olympics with a world record. I broke the world record at the Olympics, the biggest stage for an athlete. And I did it in front of the biggest crowd I’ve ever competed in,” he said, still looking in disbelief. When asked about his next world record, Duplantis said, “I’m going to enjoy it right now. I just broke the world record at the Olympics. I’ve done something crazy that an athlete can do. I’m going to put the next thing on the back burner and enjoy the present. That’s the mindset I need the most right now.”

Duplantis’s competition has long been himself. He is the only pole vaulter to clear over 6m this season. On this day, Duplantis was the only one of the 12 participants to clear over 6m. After clearing 6.10m in his first attempt and breaking the Olympic record (6.3m) set by Thiago Bras (Brazil) at the 2016 Rio Games, Duplantis immediately challenged his own world record and succeeded. Duplantis

is a natural pole vaulter. He was born to an American father who was a pole vaulter and a Swedish mother who competed in the heptathlon and volleyball. Duplantis, who was already called a "prodigy" after jumping 3.86m at the age of 7, won the 2018 European Athletics Championships by clearing 6.5m, the junior (under 20) world record. He also emerged as a major player on the adult international stage by coming in second place with 5.97m at the 2019 World Championships in Doha, Qatar. Born and raised in Louisiana, USA, he attended Louisiana State University, but he represents his mother's country, Sweden, in international competitions. In

February 2020, Duplantis surpassed 6.17m at the World Athletics Federation Indoor Tour Meeting, breaking the previous indoor world record (6.16m) set by Renaud Lavillenie (France) in 2014 after 6 years, and has continued to break his own world record and has maintained his title as the 'world's strongest' for over 4 years.

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