High Jump
Male
| Pos | Athlete | Mark | Country |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Javier Sotomayor | 2.45 |
CUB
|
| 2 | Patrik Sjöberg | 2.42 |
SWE
|
| 3 | Igor Paklin | 2.41 |
KGZ
|
| 4 | Rudolf Povarnitsyn | 2.40 |
UKR
|
| 5 | Sorin Matei | 2.40 |
ROU
|
Female
| Pos | Athlete | Mark | Country |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Stefka Kostadinova | 2.09 |
BUL
|
| 2 | Blanka Vlašic | 2.08 |
CRO
|
| 3 | Lyudmila Andonova | 2.07 |
BUL
|
| 4 | Anna Chicherova | 2.07 |
RUS
|
| 5 | Kajsa Bergqvist | 2.06 |
SWE
|
Calendar
-
10 AUG 2013 - 18 AUG 2013IAAF World Championships Moskva
RUS
-
10 JUL 2013 - 14 JUL 2013IAAF World Youth Championships Donetsk
UKR
-
16 FEB 2013British Athletics Grand Prix Birmingham, GBR
GBR
-
10 FEB 2013Flanders Indoor Gent
BEL
-
03 FEB 2013Russian Winter Moskva
RUS
TOP STORIES
-
10 FEB 2013 Trost triumphs, Maslak and Gregan deny Borlee brothers home wins ...
-
10 FEB 2013 Grabarz and Bleasdale grab the limelight at UK Champs
-
08 FEB 2013 Trost takes on Hellebaut on home ground in Gent
-
07 FEB 2013 Soumare speeds to 200m world lead in Eaubonne
High Jump
How it works
Competitors jump unaided and take off from one foot over a 4m-long horizontal bar. They seek to clear the greatest height without knocking the bar to the ground.
All competitors have three attempts per height, although they can elect to ‘pass’, i.e. advance to a greater height despite not having cleared the current one. Three consecutive failures at the same height, or combination of heights, cause a competitor’s elimination.
If competitors are tied on the same height, the winner will have had the least failures at that height. If competitors are still tied, the winner will have had the least failures across the entire competition. Thereafter, a jump-off will decide the winner.
History
High jump contests were popular in Scotland in the early 19th century, and the event was incorporated into the first modern Olympics Games in 1896.
Of the field events, the High Jump has perhaps undergone the most radical changes of technique. The Eastern Cut-off, Western Roll and Straddle are methods that have been previously used by the world’s elite. However, the Fosbury Flop, which involves going over with the jumper's back to the bar and became possible with the introduction of foam landing beds in the early 1960s before then popularised by the 1968 Olympic champion Dick Fosbury, is now pre-eminent.
Did you
know
Built up shoes were used by many top jumpers in 1956 and 1957, with soles of up to 5cm. Yuriy Stepanov, from the Soviet Union, cleared what was then a World record height of 2.16m in 1957 using such footwear but the IAAF banned these shoes the following year.
Gold
standard
Russia has supplied three of the past four Olympic Games women’s gold medallists, including London 2012 winner and current World outdoor champion Anna Chicherova, and also the last two Olympic men's champions Andrey Silnov and Ivan Ukhov.
Icons
Valeriy Brumel
The Soviet jumper set an unprecedented six World records in the event in the space of little more than two years between 1961 and 1963 before winning the gold medal at the 1964 Olympic Games.
Iolanda
Balas
The Romanian won 150 consecutive competitions between 1957 and 1967 and set 14 World records with a variant of the outmoded scissors technique. She also won Olympic Games gold medals in 1960 and 1964, in Rome and Tokyo respectively, and was inducted into the IAAF Hall of Fame in 2012.
CUB
SWE
KGZ
ROU
BUL
CRO


