Mondo Duplantis: Why does vault for sweden| Olympics

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The Swedish pole vaulter flew over the bar at a new world record height of 6.25 metres, earlier securing the Paris 2024 gold medal with a vault of 6.00 meters on Monday evening, August 5. Today we will discuss about Mondo Duplantis: Why does vault for sweden| Olympics.

Mondo Duplantis: Why does vault for sweden| Olympics

Armand Gustav “Mondo” Duplantis (born 10 November 1999) is a Swedish-American pole vaulter, the current world outdoor and indoor record holder (6.25 m (20 ft 6 in) and 6.22 m (20 ft 5 in) in) respectively), two-time Olympic (2020 and 2024) champion, two-time World outdoor (2022 and 2023) and two-time indoor champion, current European champion and current Diamond League champion. He won a silver medal at the 2019 World Championships. Duplantis is a three-time European champion since 2018, when he set the current world under-20 record, and since 2022 and 2024, he is the gold medalist of the 2022 World Indoor Championship and the 2021 European Indoor Championship. He is widely considered to be the greatest pole vaulter of all time.

Personal information
Birth name Armand Gustav Duplantis
Nickname Mondo Duplantis
Nationality
  • Swedish
  • American
Born 10 November 1999 (age 24)
Lafayette, Louisiana, U.S.
Education Louisiana State University
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)[1]
Weight 79 kg (174 lb)[1]
Sport
Country Sweden
Sport Athletics
Event Pole vault
Club Upsala IF
Coached by Greg & Helena Duplantis
Achievements and titles
Highest world ranking 1st (2023)[2]
Personal bests 6.25 m WR (Paris 2024)

Why does vault for sweden

Mondo Duplantis: Why does vault for sweden| Olympics

 

Duplantis ultimately chose to represent the Swedish Olympic team rather than the United States, this after the intervention of his Olympic youth coach, who offered his father a job as the national team pole vault coach. This decision was instrumental in his selection for development in the game.

Olympics

Finally, Mondo Duplantis takes the spotlight. The formalities on the track are over, Keely Hodgkinson has won her gold medal, Noah Lyles has been given his award, and this evening for the first time all eyes are on the 24-year-old sailing from Sweden to Louisiana, bar suspended Given is 6.25 meters high and cool, warm air between them.

Duplantis has already won his gold medal, his second in a row. Nobody really cares much about that part. He had to jump four times to win the competition, and it turned out that he didn’t actually need to jump the first two or the fourth time. It’s a bit like the end of Eurovision where the winner gets to play again, except that the winner is The Beatles, and the winning song was Octopus Garden, and now they’re going to play the whole of Sgt Pepper as an encore. Have been.

But when you’ve won your 18th consecutive competition, have nine of the 10 highest vaults in history and set eight world records in four years, you’re classified on a slightly different curve. And so the night moved on to the duel everyone wanted to see: Duplantis versus gravity, Duplantis versus the laws of physics, Duplantis now versus Duplantis four months ago, when he set his last world record of 6.24 metres. The bar is at 6.25 metres.

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