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The pole vault at the World Athletics Championships has been contested by men since 1983 and women since 1999. The competition format typically has one qualifying round contested by two groups of athletes, with all those clearing the qualifying height or placing in top twelve overall advancing to the final round.
The women's pole vault at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest on 21 and 23 August 2023. For the first time in the women's pole vault at these championships, two gold medals were awarded.
USATF Masters Weight and Superweight Championships 45-49 4703 pts. Eric Cole 1970-May-07 45 Lisle, Illinois: 2016-Aug-07 USATF Masters Weight and Superweight Championships 50-54 4905 pts. Jim Wetenhall 1954-Oct-01 54 Bowling Green, Ohio: 2009-Sep-12 55-59 5623 pts. Jim Wetenhall 1954-Oct-01 55 Bowling Green, Ohio: 2009-Oct-18 60-64 4692 pts ...
Kennedy started pole vaulting one year later after a pole vault coach identified her talent at an athletics meet. In 2012, aged 14, Kennedy placed second in the senior Australian pole vault championships with a personal best of 4.10m. A year later she set a best of 4.31m and placed fifth at the IAAF World Youth (U18) Championships. At the 2014 ...
Women's pole vault at the 2022 World Championships; The medalists shortly after the final. Venue: ... Championship record: 5.01 m: Helsinki, Finland: 12 August 2005
Alysha Newman of Canada celebrates a jump and twerks during the Women's Pole Vault Final on day twelve of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de France on August 7, 2024 in Paris, France.
Prior to 2019, the maximum number of women who cleared 4.80 m in a World Championship final was three, in 2013 and 2015. In fact, the winning height of 4.95 m would have won all previous World Championships except for 2005 when Yelena Isinbayeva won with a then-world record of 5.01 m.
In 2024, she was the NCAA Division II indoor and outdoor champion in the pole vault. [6] To win the indoor title she cleared a personal best height of 4.65 metres, becoming the fifth best all-time collegiate indoor competitor. [7] She won the Division II outdoors title in May 2024 with a height of 4.60 metres. [8]