Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (2024)

Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (1)

If you watched one pole vaulter this week, it was probably French Olympian Anthony Ammirati, who became a viral sensation when his manhood tipped the crossbar and saw him prematurely ejected from the Games.

But this is a story about another pole vaulter whose package went unnoticed as he soared 20 feet, six inches into the air, landing the Olympic gold medal, breaking his 9th world record, and establishing himself as the most dominant athlete in his field—if not track and field more broadly.

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Armande “Mondo” Duplantis is the GOAT in an obscure activity that dates back to ancient Greece, when soldiers used poles to overleap obstacles like fortifications. At age 24, he is poised to become one of the most famous Swedish brands since Volvo or ABBA.

Duplantis was born, however, in the American South, seemingly predestined for this golden moment. He grew up in Lafayette, Louisiana, with a Cajun accent (and a Swedish passport). His father and coach was a world-class pole vaulter who competed in four US Olympic trials. His mother and trainer was a Swedish volleyball player and a heptathlete.

Naturally, he began pole vaulting at a young age in his yard, after his father installed a dirt runway, foam pit, and bar made from oil field pipes.

“I fell in love with it from the very beginning,” Duplantis told an interviewer in 2017. He began competing at age six. By 10, he set his first age group world record. (He is still the world record holder for all age groups below 12.)

High school was a blur of championships and junior world records.

When he headed to Louisiana State University (both his parents’ alma mater) in 2019, as a top recruit for track and field, he became friends with Olympic sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson. He lasted a year before devoting himself full time to pole vaulting.

Sweden recruited Duplantis when he was a 16-year-old teen, sweetening the deal by offering his father a job as his coach—a parental/professional crossover not allowed by Team USA. (Selection for the Swedish national team is also based on athletes’ overall records, rather than the highly competitive trials would-be American Olympians must undergo.)

Pole vaulting is a competition in which athletes try to leap over a bar typically set in a height range equivalent to that of adult giraffes. Medals are usually won by margins of a centimeter (0.4 inches), the width of a button or a staple. But Duplantis bests his peers by almost a foot—a staggering gap.

Duplantis won gold in Tokyo in 2021 and holds four world titles. He has made nine of the top ten jumps of all time.

Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (3)

How—and why—is he so good at his sport? The answer is mainly his blazing speed, but it’s more complicated.

David Young, a professor of physics at LSU, told The Athletic that elite pole vaulters need four skills to succeed: “The speed of a world-class sprinter, the ability of a long jumper, the agility of a gymnast and the flexibility of a ballerina.”

Going into the 2024 Games, Duplantis held the world record at 20 feet, 5 ¾ inches—a figure which puts him in a class of his own. He had won almost before he even started. And that’s actually his greatest challenge in competition: He must first dispatch his immediate rivals, and then he must take on history.

And so on the world’s biggest stage in Paris, Duplantis clinched the gold medal easily—then he was ready for something that had never been done before. The bar was set at a new world record mark. Mondo tried once. He failed. He tried again. He failed. Before his third attempt, he consulted with his father and made tactical adjustments to the standards that hold the crossbar in place. And then he took off with his neon carbon fiber pole.

The crowd of 80,000 at Stade de France watched as he sailed over the bar at 20 feet, six inches, landed in the pit, and ran to the stands to kiss his girlfriend, a Swedish fashion model and influencer, and to hug his brothers and his parents.

Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (4)

Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (5)

How did it feel to set a new world record—for the ninth time—and win gold by nearly 12 inches?

“I felt like I had already been in this moment 1,000 times,” Duplantis said, recalling all those times in his yard with his dad in Lafayette. So what’s next? His life is already pretty amazing. He’s a huge celebrity in Sweden, where billboards feature his face and endorsem*nts for Puma, Omega and the electric vehicle company Polestar. New sponsors are lining up.

Of course, the financial rewards of pole vaulting aren’t exactly the same as pro soccer or basketball, but Duplantis earns sponsorship bonuses of $30,000 to $100,000 each time he breaks the world record. As a result, he is purposeful about raising the bar in small increments and setting new records as often as he can. “I think I would be lying if I didn’t say that was a part of it,” Mondo told TIME magazine before the Olympics. So one thing is certain. Methodically, Mondo will keep raising the bar and reaching for the sky, centimeter by centimeter.

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Why This Pole Vaulter Is Even Bigger Than the One With the Bulge (2024)

FAQs

What are the two instances when a pole vaulter fails an attempt? ›

Failed Attempt

Displaces the crossbar from the pins on which it originally rested with the body or the pole. If the crossbar and/or uprights are placed incorrectly by the official, the trial is not recorded as foul and an additional trial is awarded. 2. Leaves the ground in an attempt and fails to clear the crossbar.

Do pole vaulters use the same pole? ›

On average, each vaulter will personally bring five or more of those poles to a meet — the same poles they use during practice. In any given meet, a pole vaulter will then use two to five poles. Each pole is a different height and weight, and the bigger the pole, the higher an athlete will jump.

What makes someone a good pole vaulter? ›

Success in the pole vault event depends not only on speed and jumping ability; it also depends on good coordination, balance, strength and power.

How tall is the best pole vaulter? ›

Armand Gustav "Mondo" Duplantis (born 10 November 1999) is a Swedish-American pole vaulter, the current world outdoor and indoor record holder (6.25 metres or 20 feet 6 inches, and 6.22 metres or 20 feet 5 inches, respectively), two-time Olympic (2020 and 2024) champion, two-time World outdoor (2022 and 2023) and two- ...

What are the common mistakes in pole vault? ›

Take-off misalignment. Any factors can cause misalignment: late plant, low plant, close take-off, take-off wrong foot, run-up not central or looking for the pit. This athlete appears to have taken off on the wrong foot as the left leg is back and the right knee is driving forward.

Can you pass in pole vault? ›

Each competitor has a maximum of three attempts per height. A jump is considered successful if the athlete clears the bar without dislodging it. The height of the bar is raised in increments after each round of trials. Athletes may 'pass' an attempt and progress to a higher height without clearing the current one.

What body type is best for pole vaulting? ›

TALL AND LEAN.

Elite vaulters are generally tall. Taller athletes have an advantage in the pole vault, especially at the pole strike. A taller athlete usually has a higher reach, and an athlete with a higher reach can strike the pole at a higher angle than a shorter athlete with a lower reach.

Who is the fastest pole vaulter? ›

Mondo Duplantis soars to new world record, Olympic gold again: 'He's the fastest pole vaulter out there' - The Athletic.

Who is the hot pole vaulter? ›

Allison Rebecca Stokke Fowler

Who is the best 14 year old pole vaulter? ›

Isaiah Whitaker, the high-flying 14-year-old from Bloomington, Illinois, set a new world age group record in the pole vault with a clearance of 4.93 meters (16 feet, 2 inches), setting a new AAU age group (15-16) national record, an American (14) age group record and a world (14) age group record in the process.

Are pole vaulters fast? ›

Physical attributes such as speed, agility and strength, along with technical skill, are essential to pole vaulting.

What is a good pole vault for a high school girl? ›

There haven't been many if any high school girls pole vault competitions like the one this weekend. Based on the PRs of the participants, the maximum performance of the competition is 15-1.50 , the median is 14-0, the average is 13-8.75, and the minimum performance is 13-3.50.

What is the most common injury in pole vault? ›

Common injuries among professional and student track and field athletes in a variety of events include: Back: Spine fractures are concerningly common in pole vaulters, often due to poor landing technique. Spine fractures can lead to permanent mobility issues and back pain.

What are the three rules of pole vault? ›

Rules regarding Competitions
  • No artificial weights or aid are allowed to be used in the competition.
  • Using shoes that can give unfair advantage to an athlete is strictly prohibited.
  • Unless there is a wound, no tapping is allowed on any part of the fingers.

What happens if your pole breaks in pole vault? ›

If the pole breaks during the execution of a vault, it is considered an equipment failure and is ruled a non-jump, neither a make nor a miss. Other types of equipment failure include the standards slipping down or the wind dislodging the bar when no contact was made by the vaulter.

How many attempts do you get in pole vault? ›

Unlike many other sports, pole vault doesn't crush athletes' dreams for one fumble. Instead, pole vaulters get three attempts to clear a height. Adding more to the pot of high jump, this sport also poses the same challenge for the participants: to jump over the high crossbar without touching it.

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