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Juggling world records comprise the best performances in the fields of endurance and numbers juggling. Manuel and Christoph Mitasch, world record-holding club passers.
Michal Kapral (born 1972) [1] is a Canadian joggler based in Toronto, Ontario.He owns the world records for running the fastest marathon and half-marathon while juggling, for the fastest 10-kilometer run while juggling without a drop, and formerly held the world record for fastest marathon while pushing a stroller.
He has set numerous world records for juggling with more than nine balls. He became the first person to ever juggle eleven balls, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and to flash 13 [ 1 ] and 14 balls. [ 3 ] In August 2010, aged 16, he set his first world record when he did 15 catches with 11 balls, tying with Bruce Sarafian's world record from 2001.
Gatto formerly shared the record for most rings juggled and caught at least once. He currently holds the following 7 juggling world records: Rings. 7 rings for 15 minutes 5 seconds in 2011. [12] 8 rings for 1 minute 17 seconds in 1989. [12] 9 rings for 235 catches in 2005. [12] 10 rings for 47 catches in 2005. [12] Clubs
Albert Lucas – holds certain world records for number of objects juggled. Club juggling trick 'Alberts' and by association 'Treblas' named after him. Marcus Monroe – comedian and juggler, 2012 winner of the Andy Kaufman Award [10] Bobby May – Vaudeville performer; Steve Mills – inventor of the juggling pattern Mills Mess
Adoboe lobbied Guinness World Records to establish a world record for speed juggling and in 1999, he set the first record at the Ft Lowell Shootout in Tucson, Arizona, by recording 136 touches in 30 seconds and 262 in one minute. [citation needed] He would later speed juggle a soccer ball 141 times in 30 seconds on The Today Show on Aug. 27, 2003.
A selection of his world-records: 1987 Juggling a ball for 14 Hours, 17 Minutes, and 40 Seconds, touching the ball 94,360 times in the process. 1995 Juggling a 3 kg medicine ball with his feet for 1 Hour, 6 Minutes, touching the ball 8,107 times. This is equivalent to a total weight-change of 24 tons.
The previous men's record was held by Martinho Eduardo Orige of Brazil who kept a regulation football in the air for 19 hours and 30 minutes using only the head, feet and legs. The feat was accomplished on 2 and 3 August 2003. [3] The fastest completed marathon while ball-juggling was by Abraham Muñoz in the México City Marathon, August 2016 ...