All Star Perche: Difference between revisions
m →Winners: rm unnecessary centers |
|||
(5 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
Organiser Lavillenie was the first men's winner at the competition, setting a meet record of {{T&Fcalc|6.02}},<ref>Minshull, Phil (2016-02-21). [https://www.worldathletics.org/news/report/lavillenie-indoor-round-up Lavillenie clears world-leading 6.02m in Clermont Ferrand – indoor round-up]. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> which was the second best indoor mark that year.<ref>[https://www.worldathletics.org/records/toplists/jumps/pole-vault/indoor/men/senior/2016?regionType=world&page=1&bestResultsOnly=false senior indoor 2016 Pole Vault men]. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> Two [[national records in athletics|national records]] were also set at the first edition: [[Konstantinos Filippidis]] set a [[List of Greek records in athletics|Greek record]] of 5.84 m while [[Robeilys Peinado]] set a [[List of Venezuelan records in athletics|Venezuelan record]] of 4.53 m. The 2017 edition was attended by around 4700 spectators and the meet was given [[European Athletics]] Indoor Permit Meeting status.<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=clermont-ferrand-stages-pole-vault-spectacular/index.html Clermont-Ferrand stages pole vault spectacular]. European Athletics (2017-02-06). Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> The 2018 meeting showed strength in depth in the men's competition, with seven men clearing 5.88 m, which included a [[List of world under-20 records in athletics|world under-20 record]] for Sweden's [[Armand Duplantis]]. [[Katie Nageotte]] won the women's competition on countback, with both her and [[Anzhelika Sidorova]] setting a meet record of 4.86 m, while [[Ninon Guillon-Romarin]] set a [[List of French records in athletics|French record]] of 4.76 m.<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=records-galore-set-clermont-ferrand/index.html Records galore set in Clermont-Ferrand]. European Athletics (2018-02-26). Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> [[Piotr Lisek]] of Poland won the 2019 meet with a world leading performance of 5.93 m while [[Anzhelika Sidorova]] and [[Angelica Bengtsson]] shared the women's title with clearances of 4.81 m (a [[List of Swedish records in athletics|Swedish record]] for Bengtsson).<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=lisek-clears-93m-clermont-ferrand-defeat-kendricks-countback/ Lisek clears 5.93m in Clermont-Ferrand to defeat Kendricks on countback]. European Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> |
Organiser Lavillenie was the first men's winner at the competition, setting a meet record of {{T&Fcalc|6.02}},<ref>Minshull, Phil (2016-02-21). [https://www.worldathletics.org/news/report/lavillenie-indoor-round-up Lavillenie clears world-leading 6.02m in Clermont Ferrand – indoor round-up]. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> which was the second best indoor mark that year.<ref>[https://www.worldathletics.org/records/toplists/jumps/pole-vault/indoor/men/senior/2016?regionType=world&page=1&bestResultsOnly=false senior indoor 2016 Pole Vault men]. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> Two [[national records in athletics|national records]] were also set at the first edition: [[Konstantinos Filippidis]] set a [[List of Greek records in athletics|Greek record]] of 5.84 m while [[Robeilys Peinado]] set a [[List of Venezuelan records in athletics|Venezuelan record]] of 4.53 m. The 2017 edition was attended by around 4700 spectators and the meet was given [[European Athletics]] Indoor Permit Meeting status.<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=clermont-ferrand-stages-pole-vault-spectacular/index.html Clermont-Ferrand stages pole vault spectacular]. European Athletics (2017-02-06). Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> The 2018 meeting showed strength in depth in the men's competition, with seven men clearing 5.88 m, which included a [[List of world under-20 records in athletics|world under-20 record]] for Sweden's [[Armand Duplantis]]. [[Katie Nageotte]] won the women's competition on countback, with both her and [[Anzhelika Sidorova]] setting a meet record of 4.86 m, while [[Ninon Guillon-Romarin]] set a [[List of French records in athletics|French record]] of 4.76 m.<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=records-galore-set-clermont-ferrand/index.html Records galore set in Clermont-Ferrand]. European Athletics (2018-02-26). Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> [[Piotr Lisek]] of Poland won the 2019 meet with a world leading performance of 5.93 m while [[Anzhelika Sidorova]] and [[Angelica Bengtsson]] shared the women's title with clearances of 4.81 m (a [[List of Swedish records in athletics|Swedish record]] for Bengtsson).<ref>[https://www.european-athletics.org/competitions/indoor-permit-meetings/news/article=lisek-clears-93m-clermont-ferrand-defeat-kendricks-countback/ Lisek clears 5.93m in Clermont-Ferrand to defeat Kendricks on countback]. European Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.</ref> |
||
In 2022 [[Anzhelika Sidorova]] set a new meet record on the women's side with a 4.87 m jump. In 2023 [[Armand Duplantis]] beat the world record and therefore set a new meet record, with a 6.22 m jump.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mondo Duplantis breaks world record at All Star Perche |url=https://olympics.com/en/news/mondo-duplantis-breaks-world-record-at-all-star-perche |access-date=25 February 2023 |website=olympics.com}}</ref> |
|||
== Meeting records == |
== Meeting records == |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! |
!scope="col"| Division |
||
! |
!scope="col"| Mark |
||
! |
!scope="col"| Athlete |
||
! |
!scope="col"| Country |
||
! |
!scope="col"| Date |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Men's |
!scope="row"|Men's |
||
|6.22 m |
|6.22 m |
||
|[[Armand Duplantis]] |
|[[Armand Duplantis]] |
||
Line 30: | Line 32: | ||
|25 February 2023 |
|25 February 2023 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Women's |
!scope="row"|Women's |
||
|4.87 m |
|4.87 m |
||
|[[Anzhelika Sidorova]] |
|[[Anzhelika Sidorova]] |
||
Line 38: | Line 40: | ||
== Winners == |
== Winners == |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!Year |
!scope="col"| Year |
||
!Men |
!scope="col"| Men |
||
!Mark |
!scope="col"| Mark |
||
!Women |
!scope="col"| Women |
||
!Mark |
!scope="col"| Mark |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2016 |
!scope="row"|2016 |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Renaud Lavillenie]]|FRA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Renaud Lavillenie]]|FRA}} |
||
| |
|6.02 m |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Fabiana Murer]]|BRA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Fabiana Murer]]|BRA}} |
||
| |
|4.71 m |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2017 |
!scope="row"|2017 |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Shawnacy Barber]]|CAN}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Shawnacy Barber]]|CAN}} |
||
| |
|5.83 m |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Sandi Morris]]|USA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Sandi Morris]]|USA}} |
||
| |
|4.71 m |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2018 |
!scope="row"|2018 |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Sam Kendricks]]|USA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Sam Kendricks]]|USA}} |
||
| |
|5.93 m |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Katie Nageotte]]|USA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Katie Nageotte]]|USA}} |
||
| |
|4.86 m |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2019 |
!scope="row"|2019 |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Piotr Lisek]]|POL}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Piotr Lisek]]|POL}} |
||
| |
|5.93 m |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Angelica Bengtsson]]|SWE}}<hr>{{flagathlete|[[Anzhelika Sidorova]]|RUS}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Angelica Bengtsson]]|SWE}}<hr>{{flagathlete|[[Anzhelika Sidorova]]|RUS}} |
||
| |
|4.81 m |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|2020 |
!scope="row"|2020 |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Armand Duplantis]]|SWE}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Armand Duplantis]]|SWE}} |
||
|6.01 m |
|6.01 m |
||
|{{flagathlete|[[Sandi Morris]]|USA}} |
|{{flagathlete|[[Sandi Morris]]|USA}} |
||
|4.80 m |
|4.80 m |
||
|- |
|||
!scope="row"|2021 |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Renaud Lavillenie]]|FRA}} |
|||
|6.06 m |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Holly Bradshaw]]|GBR}} |
|||
|4.78 m |
|||
|- |
|||
!scope="row"|2022 |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Menno Vloon]]|NED}} |
|||
|5.87 m |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Anzhelika Sidorova]]|RUS}} |
|||
|4.87 m |
|||
|- |
|||
!scope="row"|2023 |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Armand Duplantis]]|SWE}} |
|||
|6.22 m |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Amálie Švábíková]]|CZE}} |
|||
|4.66 m |
|||
|- |
|||
!scope="row"|2024 |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Armand Duplantis]]|SWE}} |
|||
|6.02 m |
|||
|{{flagathlete|[[Alysha Newman]]|CAN}} |
|||
|4.83 m |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
Latest revision as of 15:37, 6 September 2024
All Star Perche | |
---|---|
Date | February |
Location | Clermont-Ferrand Sports Hall, Clermont-Ferrand, France |
Event type | Pole vault |
Established | 2016 |
Official site | All Star Perche |
All Star Perche is an annual indoor pole vaulting meeting which is typically held in February at the Clermont-Ferrand Sports Hall in Clermont-Ferrand, France. The meeting was founded by world record-breakers Sergey Bubka and Renaud Lavillenie in 2016. Its creation was a response to the cessation of the annual Pole Vault Stars meeting in Donetsk (also organised by Bubka) due to the War in Donbass.[1][2]
Organiser Lavillenie was the first men's winner at the competition, setting a meet record of 6.02 m (19 ft 9 in),[3] which was the second best indoor mark that year.[4] Two national records were also set at the first edition: Konstantinos Filippidis set a Greek record of 5.84 m while Robeilys Peinado set a Venezuelan record of 4.53 m. The 2017 edition was attended by around 4700 spectators and the meet was given European Athletics Indoor Permit Meeting status.[5] The 2018 meeting showed strength in depth in the men's competition, with seven men clearing 5.88 m, which included a world under-20 record for Sweden's Armand Duplantis. Katie Nageotte won the women's competition on countback, with both her and Anzhelika Sidorova setting a meet record of 4.86 m, while Ninon Guillon-Romarin set a French record of 4.76 m.[6] Piotr Lisek of Poland won the 2019 meet with a world leading performance of 5.93 m while Anzhelika Sidorova and Angelica Bengtsson shared the women's title with clearances of 4.81 m (a Swedish record for Bengtsson).[7]
In 2022 Anzhelika Sidorova set a new meet record on the women's side with a 4.87 m jump. In 2023 Armand Duplantis beat the world record and therefore set a new meet record, with a 6.22 m jump.[8]
Meeting records
[edit]Division | Mark | Athlete | Country | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Men's | 6.22 m | Armand Duplantis | Sweden (SWE) | 25 February 2023 |
Women's | 4.87 m | Anzhelika Sidorova | Russia (RUS) | 19 February 2022 |
Winners
[edit]Year | Men | Mark | Women | Mark |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Renaud Lavillenie (FRA) | 6.02 m | Fabiana Murer (BRA) | 4.71 m |
2017 | Shawnacy Barber (CAN) | 5.83 m | Sandi Morris (USA) | 4.71 m |
2018 | Sam Kendricks (USA) | 5.93 m | Katie Nageotte (USA) | 4.86 m |
2019 | Piotr Lisek (POL) | 5.93 m | Angelica Bengtsson (SWE) Anzhelika Sidorova (RUS) |
4.81 m |
2020 | Armand Duplantis (SWE) | 6.01 m | Sandi Morris (USA) | 4.80 m |
2021 | Renaud Lavillenie (FRA) | 6.06 m | Holly Bradshaw (GBR) | 4.78 m |
2022 | Menno Vloon (NED) | 5.87 m | Anzhelika Sidorova (RUS) | 4.87 m |
2023 | Armand Duplantis (SWE) | 6.22 m | Amálie Švábíková (CZE) | 4.66 m |
2024 | Armand Duplantis (SWE) | 6.02 m | Alysha Newman (CAN) | 4.83 m |
References
[edit]- ^ Lavillenie takes Bubka's baton and launches meet. Bangkok Post (2015-08-25). Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ Bubka y Lavillenie lanzan el "All Star Pértiga" con los mejores del mundo (in Spanish). La Nación. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ Minshull, Phil (2016-02-21). Lavillenie clears world-leading 6.02m in Clermont Ferrand – indoor round-up. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ senior indoor 2016 Pole Vault men. World Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ Clermont-Ferrand stages pole vault spectacular. European Athletics (2017-02-06). Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ Records galore set in Clermont-Ferrand. European Athletics (2018-02-26). Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ Lisek clears 5.93m in Clermont-Ferrand to defeat Kendricks on countback. European Athletics. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
- ^ "Mondo Duplantis breaks world record at All Star Perche". olympics.com. Retrieved 25 February 2023.