2006 WOMEN'S NATIONAL INDOOR POLE VAULT BESTS
Australia 3.85i Erin Boxall 3 St. College, PA 10 Feb
Austria 4.05i Doris Auer 1 Wien 21 Jan
Belarus 4.05iNR Yuliya Taratynova 1 Minsk 12 Feb
Belgium 3.90i Karen Pollefeyt 1 Ghent 29 Jan
Brazil 4.41iNR Fabia
WOMEN'S POLE VAULT--COMBINED OUTDOOR/INDOOR PROGRESSION, Part 2
>From 2001-01-01, world records can be set indoors; to be ratified, outdoor
>marks must equal or better the indoor record.<
vaulter outdoor indoor dateplace notes
Stacy Dragila USA
With the eagerly-awaited vault duel between Dragila and Feofanova now just
two days away, I took a look at how the two have fared in indoor and
outdoor record production.
The 2001 rule change that permits an "absolute" world record to be achieved
at indoor competitions has made it more complicated
Actually according to the results link that Kebba provided, it appears
that after clearing 4.77 on her 2nd attempt, Feofanova made (2) attempts
at 4.82 before calling it a night.
T Jimenez, XC/T&F Coach
Sprague HS, Salem, OR.
r Ruth
Sent: 22 February 2003 04:51
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: t-and-f: WPV Record
Earlier today, Kebba posted the subject line, Birmingham: W PV WR -
4.77, without additional details. This would have referred to Svetlana
Feofanova's winning mark at this meet.
In a later exchange on the
Earlier today, Kebba posted the subject line, Birmingham: W PV WR - 4.77,
without additional details. This would have referred to Svetlana
Feofanova's winning mark at this meet.
In a later exchange on the VaultCanada mailing list, I took exception to
the description of this result, by VaultnGus,
I'll bet Chelsea has a better backyard vault pit than her father (Jan Johnson, '72
Olympic Bronze
medal) had growing up in that Chicago South Suburb of Chicago Heights (Bloom H.S.)
But, note below
the run the Bloom guys had in the vault (Tim is Jan's younger brother.)
http://www.ihsa.org/activi
I was at the meet and Kira's jump was 13' 4 1/2", not 13' 6". She had three
attempts at 13' 6", but did not have a good vault on any of them.
She appeared to tired after a long evening of vaulting. She started
vaulting at 11' 0", and did not appear to pass on any jumps on the way to
13' 4 1/2".
In addition to Mike Prizy's note on this question, posted to t-and-f, I
received this further information, off-list, from Jack Shepard. I
appreciate his permission to forward it to the list:
After Kira cleared the record 13-4 1/2 on her third attempt, she had the bar
raised to 13-6 1/2 and took on
t.com
- Original Message -
From: "Roger Ruth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2003 1:02 PM
Subject: t-and-f: WPV--High School Record?
> Thanks to Ken Stone for bringing to my attention the very
Sorry, at second look, this 13-8 is an outdoor mark.
Original Message
Subject: Re: t-and-f: WPV--High School Record?
Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 13:53:21 -0600
From: Mike Prizy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Organization: @attbi.com
To: Roger Ruth <[EMAIL
Here is what is listed at the Illinois High School Association site:
http://www.ihsa.org/activity/trg/records/eventrec.htm
pole vault
National 13-8, Shayla Balentine, Morro Bay, CA, 2001
IHSA 12-6, Elizabeth Boyle, Winnetka (New Trier), 2001 (finals)
Class A 9-6, Jackie Marquardt, Braidwoo
Thanks to Ken Stone for bringing to my attention the very impressive
vaulting of 17-year-old Kira Costa, Fresno/San Joaquin, in winning the high
school division of the women's vault at the Los Angeles Invitation on 15
February.
Kira's 4.08m (13'4 1/2") places her 59th, and 15th-ranked American, on
Well, look for 2003 to show further action with the German contingent
stepping it up. Perhaps, a changing of the guard?
In a message dated 12/5/2002 11:37:38 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>She went 9 and 0 versus Dragila. Dragila might as well have taken the
>year off like Merry and Freeman.
Increasingly unreliable memory had it that several top vaulters of the past
had narrowly better indoor than outdoor personal bests. When I asked Gerard
Dumas if he knew of other examples than mine of Dutch Warmerdam and Sergey
Bubka, he quickly came up with a list that included Dutch (4.78i, 4.77o)
In a moment of idle curiosity on a rainy Labor Day in Victoria, I wondered
how the number of countries with women's vault records over four meters
today compares with the number five years ago. Actually, the comparison
would extend over six seasons. When I first posted the women's records in
April
Notes on the pace of record change:
When I assembled my first file of women's indoor national records after the
1999 season, it included 41 countries and the average height of the NRs was
4.06m (13'3 3/4"). After the 2002 season, the average NR height for those
countries stands at 4.20m (13'9 1/4
In a message dated Sat, 9 Mar 2002 1:13:58 PM Eastern Standard Time, Mike Takaha
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Also getting collegiate records were Perdita Felicien in the 60H (7.90) and
> Candace Scott in the WT (23.05 / 75-7.5).
>
> It appears from the results that in the weight Jamine Moton
t;
To: "T&F Listserve" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, March 08, 2002 11:37 PM
Subject: t-and-f: WPV
> For those who had not realized, Amy Linnen's PV was another NCAA Record,
> her 2nd of the year.
>
> MJR
>
>
For those who had not realized, Amy Linnen's PV was another NCAA Record,
her 2nd of the year.
MJR
Last week, Georgia Tsiliggiri improved her own Greek national vault record
by eleven centimeters, to 4.36m. This especially interested me, in that it
continued a long, exciting rivalry with Thalia Iakovidou, with each now
having broken the Greek outdoor record nine times. It also raised the
questi
21 matches
Mail list logo