Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A plaque on Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria, commemorating Stefka Kostadinova's high jump world record of 2.08 m set on 31 May 1986. The first world record in the women's high jump was recognised by the Fédération Sportive Féminine Internationale (FSFI) in 1922.
Women's high jump at the 2022 World Championships; Venue: Hayward Field: Dates: 16 July (qualification) 19 July (final) Competitors: 31 from 19 nations: Winning ...
The women's world record has been broken on three occasions at the Olympics, with records coming in 1928, 1932 and 1972. [1] Ellery Clark was the first Olympic champion in 1896 and Ethel Catherwood became the first female Olympic high jump champion 32 years later.
In September, she won the high jump at the Brussels Diamond League meeting with a world-leading mark of 2.05 m, which was also a Ukrainian national record. [72] Later that month, she won the Diamond League Final in Zürich with a jump of 2.03 m, 9 cm ahead of her nearest competitor to claim her first Diamond League title.
The championship records for the event are 2.41 m for men, set by Bohdan Bondarenko in 2013, and 2.09 m for women, set by Stefka Kostadinova in 1987. Additionally, Kostadinova's championship record jump of 2.09 m was also the only time the world record has been broken at the World Athletics Championships.
In 2020, at age 16/17, Weerman won Dutch under-18 titles in the high jump both indoors and outdoors and also claimed her first national senior titles, both indoors and outdoors. [ 2 ] The following year, she earned the gold medal at the European U20 Championships held in Tallinn , Estonia with a jump of 1.88 m .
Women's high jump at the 2022 European Athletics Championships The medalists shortly after the event. Venue Olympic Stadium Location Munich Dates 19 August (qualification) 21 August (final) Competitors 24 from 17 nations Winning height 1.95 m Medalists Yaroslava Mahuchikh Ukraine Marija Vuković Montenegro Angelina Topić Serbia ← 2018 2024 → 2022 European Athletics Championships Track ...
A Croatian record breaking jump of 2.03 m in Ljubljana put her in good stead for the 2004 Athens Olympics. However, when she competed at the Olympic high jump final she only managed eleventh place with a jump of 1.89 m.