Physical Address

304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Pole vault king Duplantis continues winning ways post-Olympics

Conceptual illustration of droughts and desertification in Africa. 
File: Former deputy president of Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party and new uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party national organiser Floyd Shivambu speaks during a press conference in Sandton, Johannesburg on August 22, 2024. 
Sensitivity readers are fair game in children’s fiction, argue some authors — but adults have the option to put a book down if it offends them. Getty Images via AFP/Brandon Bell
Women-Month
The City of Cape Town’s Public Emergency Communication Centre dealt with over 4,000 incidents of domestic violence between July last year and June this year.
Avbob Investment Plan
GENEVA – Armand Duplantis picked up from where he left off at his world record-setting, gold medal-winning showing at the Paris Olympics by dominating the men’s pole vault at the Lausanne Diamond League meet on Wednesday.
The meeting is the first on World Athletics’ elite circuit since the end of the Paris Games.
Duplantis defended his Olympic gold in the Stade de France in some style, improving his own world record to 6.25 metres.
In Lausanne, the Swede took part in a City Event held on an esplanade bordering Lac Leman — better known in English as Lake Geneva — 24 hours before the main fare at the Stade Olympique de la Pontaise.
The runway was raised off the tiled walkway, with thousands of fans packed in just metres away, the bar and landing mat placed under a circular tarpaulin, big screens allowing yet more passers-by a view of events.
It was once again Duplantis streets ahead of the competition, winning with a best vault of 6.15 metres.
“I’m really happy about it. I had a really good time. It was really nice to step out on the track,” Duplantis said.
“I don’t want to say that I was worried, but it’s always a bit of a question mark, I guess, the next meet after something like the Olympics, mentally.
“The past two weeks, it’s been hard to wake up. Not in a mental way, not in that way, but very tired mentally, just exhausted, even this morning.”
Duplantis said the difference between Olympic gold at the Stade de France and winning a City Event was miles apart, but bizarrely comparable.
“My last competition, it was like 75,000 people watching me,” he said.
“But you get such a cool connection with the crowd when they’re so close to you, it’s just more of this personal type of feeling.”
Duplantis added: “It’s just a really cool thing. It’s a really amazing thing and I just love these kind of events.
“It really is a great thing for our sport and a great thing for pole vaulting.”

en_USEnglish