Berliner Boersenzeitung - Duplantis unfazed by late world champs in Tokyo

EUR -
AED 4.275245
AFN 80.901295
ALL 97.598504
AMD 445.427608
ANG 2.083252
AOA 1067.359335
ARS 1582.395466
AUD 1.786009
AWG 2.095144
AZN 1.97841
BAM 1.956815
BBD 2.344067
BDT 141.573452
BGN 1.955817
BHD 0.438805
BIF 3430.798329
BMD 1.163969
BND 1.49961
BOB 8.042276
BRL 6.360513
BSD 1.163829
BTN 102.67427
BWP 15.689207
BYN 3.926221
BYR 22813.790418
BZD 2.340665
CAD 1.60424
CDF 3335.934551
CHF 0.936454
CLF 0.028909
CLP 1134.078324
CNY 8.310158
CNH 8.310336
COP 4662.859409
CRC 588.417925
CUC 1.163969
CUP 30.845176
CVE 110.518451
CZK 24.496426
DJF 206.860622
DKK 7.462441
DOP 73.561428
DZD 151.26239
EGP 56.476355
ERN 17.459533
ETB 164.936006
FJD 2.631738
FKP 0.859489
GBP 0.869776
GEL 3.136872
GGP 0.859489
GHS 13.676129
GIP 0.859489
GMD 83.805409
GNF 10079.970473
GTQ 8.920628
GYD 243.387322
HKD 9.085964
HNL 30.740771
HRK 7.531693
HTG 152.262268
HUF 395.318341
IDR 19146.124418
ILS 3.944749
IMP 0.859489
INR 102.433512
IQD 1524.799258
IRR 48973.991512
ISK 143.68017
JEP 0.859489
JMD 186.686858
JOD 0.825275
JPY 172.758596
KES 150.736565
KGS 101.710049
KHR 4662.859423
KMF 491.194836
KPW 1047.544334
KRW 1624.755065
KWD 0.356081
KYD 0.969807
KZT 628.516091
LAK 25229.026472
LBP 104242.148507
LKR 351.710031
LRD 235.150782
LSL 20.532634
LTL 3.436898
LVL 0.704074
LYD 6.308951
MAD 10.51937
MDL 19.342118
MGA 5208.761287
MKD 61.571945
MMK 2443.570724
MNT 4187.387661
MOP 9.357695
MRU 46.523528
MUR 53.367775
MVR 17.929452
MWK 2020.649727
MXN 21.776939
MYR 4.917785
MZN 74.37609
NAD 20.532884
NGN 1779.999524
NIO 42.845312
NOK 11.678315
NPR 164.279233
NZD 1.986179
OMR 0.447557
PAB 1.163829
PEN 4.111716
PGK 4.826394
PHP 66.953242
PKR 327.948225
PLN 4.258555
PYG 8406.36145
QAR 4.237542
RON 5.079443
RSD 117.170904
RUB 93.758111
RWF 1681.935059
SAR 4.367607
SBD 9.556556
SCR 16.511661
SDG 698.967839
SEK 11.007534
SGD 1.500059
SHP 0.914697
SLE 27.120941
SLL 24407.843463
SOS 665.208671
SRD 44.990894
STD 24091.806163
STN 24.792538
SVC 10.183283
SYP 15133.380911
SZL 20.532098
THB 37.637512
TJS 10.951329
TMT 4.085531
TND 3.344667
TOP 2.72613
TRY 47.897435
TTD 7.900269
TWD 35.806009
TZS 2906.828457
UAH 48.132259
UGX 4121.138159
USD 1.163969
UYU 46.564359
UZS 14520.511734
VES 170.985483
VND 30664.760641
VUV 138.985823
WST 3.098256
XAF 656.305967
XAG 0.028513
XAU 0.00033
XCD 3.145684
XCG 2.097533
XDR 0.811317
XOF 653.562842
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.352525
ZAR 20.606265
ZMK 10477.113934
ZMW 27.5769
ZWL 374.797511
  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    76

    -1.32%

  • BCC

    -1.0000

    85.78

    -1.17%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.63

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    13.51

    -0.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0810

    23.659

    -0.34%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    16.77

    +0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.5300

    24.43

    -2.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    14.35

    +0.56%

  • NGG

    -2.5900

    67.98

    -3.81%

  • RIO

    -0.8300

    61.89

    -1.34%

  • RELX

    -1.2300

    45.44

    -2.71%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    11.72

    -2.05%

  • BP

    0.0000

    35.23

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    38.96

    -1.82%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    80.19

    +0.36%

  • BTI

    -1.6500

    55.24

    -2.99%

Duplantis unfazed by late world champs in Tokyo
Duplantis unfazed by late world champs in Tokyo / Photo: Jonas EKSTROMER - TT NEWS AGENCY/AFP/File

Duplantis unfazed by late world champs in Tokyo

Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis insisted on Thursday he was unfazed by the lateness of the world championships in Tokyo, the September 13-21 event bringing the curtain down on a gruelling season.

Text size:

The championships are generally held in August, with the exception of the 2019 edition in Doha, where it was pushed back to the last week of September in a bid to beat the suffocating heat in the Gulf state.

The 2027 world champs in Beijing will also be held in September.

But the unflappable double Olympic champion, speaking in Monaco ahead of Friday's Diamond League meet, the 10th of the 15-meet elite circuit, put any fears of burnout in what is one of track and field's toughest events to one side.

"I usually get better as the season goes on," maintained Duplantis, calling the worlds the "peak".

"I've had a lot of my best competitions in September, in the middle of September, like when we're going to have the world championships."

The worlds, Duplantis added, were a "super physical event".

"You have to be physically primed. But also it's very technical, and it's very specific timing that you have to have in feeling with the pole.

"So competitions are very necessary, and you need that to be really sharp and on point on everything.

"So I still have a nice series of competitions leading up to it, but of course I want the peak to be Tokyo," he said, adding he would take four weeks off after Monaco before re-focusing on the latter end of the season.

- Take what the day gives me -

Duplantis, with 39 Diamond League victories to his name, finished fourth and second in his two previous outings in Monaco, something the ultimate competitor was fully aware of.

"I feel like I have a little something bubbling to prove here," said the 25-year-old, adding he would be targeting the meet record of 6.02m at the Stade Louis II.

"I want to have every meeting record, I guess, and I feel that this is one of the ones that is missing."

Wherever and whenever Duplantis competes, the weight of expectation is for another tilt at a world record.

That currently stands at 6.28m, Duplantis having delighted a home crowd in Stockholm three weeks ago, the 12th time he has improved the world record.

Duplantis insisted, however, that improving that mark was always a factor he took into consideration.

"I take what the day gives me because I feel like when I'm in good shape and everything lines up, I have good conditions and a lot of the controllables from my side line up, I have the confidence that I'm capable of it on the given day if the form's there," he said.

"I feel like right now I'm jumping quite well. Of course I proved that a couple of weeks ago and just recently I've been jumping really high.

"If it's good conditions and I feel good physically and feel like I have a good rhythm on the runway then I feel like I go into almost every competition with that mentality that I'm trying to at least attempt or push the world record.

"It will be no different tomorrow."

Duplantis said his approach to vaulting was simple and not overly technical.

"I'm just trying to incorporate as much speed as I possibly can, while still being able to control the last few steps before take-off and still be in the position and still be able to control it.

"I just really try to hammer the run and the takeoff. Everything that happens after that, it's super specific, but it's kind of like riding a bicycle."

(O.Joost--BBZ)