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PARIS, France – Day five of track & field witnessed the greatest performance in pole vault history, and maybe even track and field history, at the Stade de France in Saint Denis.

Mondo Duplantis continues to cement his legacy as the greatest pole vaulter in world history, claiming his second Olympic-gold medal on Monday. This accomplishment made him the first back-to-back pole vault gold medalist at the Olympics since Bob Richards (USA) who did so at 1952 Helsinki and 1956 Melbourne. Duplantis also ties Bob Richards for the most pole vault gold medals in Olympics history at two.

The day started for Duplantis passing the first height of the competition at 5.50 meters (18’ 0.5”). He took his first jump of the day at height No. 2, which came in at 5.70 meters (18’ 8.5”), an cleared the bar with ease. He proceeded to skip height three (5.80m) and went on to skip 5.85 meters (19’ 2.25”) with ease once again. After skipping the height of 5.90 meters (19’ 4.25”), Duplantis was one of two athletes to clear the sixth bar height of 5.95 meters (19’ 6.25”).

He continued his historic day clearing the height of 6.00 meters (19’ 8.25”), which secured his Olympic-gold-winning day. But he was not done there. Duplantis set his eyes on his next target: the Olympic record. The American-Swede cleared the height of 6.10 meters (20’ 0.25”) with ease, continuing his perfect day above the pit.

The undisputed greatest of all time in pole vault capped it off by attempting his ninth world record in his premier event. Duplantis had the height on his first two attempts to clear 6.25 meters (20’ 6”), but was unable to go unscathed has he came down from the fall both times. His third attempt was to perfection as he soared over the record height.

A day after clocking a season-best time of 22.24 seconds (+0.5 m/s) to win her 200-meter first-round heat, Favour Ofili was back for more a day later.

Ofili did not disappoint the crowd in Paris as she put up a new season-best time of 22.05 seconds (0.0 m/s) in heat one of the semifinals, earning an auto-qualifying spot for the final at 2:40 p.m. CT tomorrow. Her first final appearance makes her the first Nigerian woman to make the 200m closer since the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. She finished third overall of the three heats combined, and will most likely need to see a new PR and Nigerian national-record time to win tomorrow

Starting the day for the Tigers was Ella Onojuvwevwo in the women’s 400-meter heats. The sophomore got out fast in heat three but slowly faded to a sixth-place finish in the heat with a time of 51.65 seconds. Although she did not earn a qualifying spot for the semifinals, she will get a second chance at life in the repechage rounds tomorrow at 4:20 a.m. CT.

Senior Claudio Romero had a stellar season that saw many highs, including making his first Olympic appearance for his home-country Chile. He began his first appearance Monday in the discus throw qualification round in Group B. Romero was unable to register a throw without a fault, finishing his trip with “no mark”.

(Release via LSU Athletics)

Filed Under: LSU Baseball
Originally published on TigerDroppings.com
16 Comments
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Cajun7517 months
I don't know all the details of why he represents Sweden and not the US, but I've disliked for YEARS the ability of athletes who are citizens of this country representing other countries. I wonder how much time he's actually spent in Sweden. I do like that he gave a shoutout to LSU by mentioning he was used to crowd noise after having been in Tiger Stadium!
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cajunmud17 months
That was awesome how he did that. I'm waiting for a selfie of him and Livvy and Paul and Joe and JJ and Jamar and Shaq and...
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LSU82Cajun17 months
He’s actually a traitor.
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Sailor Sam17 months
I believe that his mother is from Sweden
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deltafarmer17 months
Contrary to popular belief, white men can jump.
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cajunmud17 months
...and have huge poles.
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trakmak77717 months
Proud day for Sweden, but man he’d look great in red, white, and blue.
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Damn. I remember when 19 feet was a hell of a pole vault.
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Bill W Tiger17 months
I remember the aluminum poles(before the mid-late 60s) and they did NOT bend...it was shear strength! Harry Fishback from Lafayette High in Lafayette, La I think he was the first one to use the fiberglass pole in the mid-60s. Same school Mondo and his pole-vaulting Dad competed for.
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cajunmud17 months
Da man!
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Im4LSUnTN17 months
Amazing athletic feat
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CaptainJ4717 months
Proud day for Sweden
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Bill W Tiger17 months
and the USA...and LLLLLSSSSUUUU!!!!
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