Pole Vault World Record Setter: Duplantis Clears 6.29 Meters (Over 20 Feet)
Armand Duplantis Breaks Pole Vault World Record for the 13th Time
Olympic champion Armand Duplantis has once again made history in the world of athletics, setting a new pole vault world record of 6.29 meters at the István Gyulai Memorial meet in Budapest on August 12, 2025.
Duplantis' record-breaking performance came after an unsuccessful attempt at 5.62 meters and a successful clearance of 6.11 meters. On his second attempt at 6.29 meters, he added 1 cm to his previous world record set in June 2025 in Stockholm, his home country.
This marks Duplantis' 13th career world record in the pole vault event. He first set the world record at an indoor meeting in Clermont-Ferrand, France, on March 1, 2025, where he jumped 6.27 meters.
The meeting in Budapest was well-attended, with Duplantis winning the world championship there two years ago. In the World Athletics Championships, he won the title by clearing 6.02 meters early in the competition and surpassing Emmanouil Karalis. His 2025 world record in Budapest came at the same stadium where he claimed the previous world championship, demonstrating ongoing peak performance.
Meanwhile, in the hammer throw, Hungary's Bence Halasz, the Olympic silver medalist, won with a strong throw of 83.18 meters. Olympic champion and world champion Ethan Katzberg from Canada finished second with a throw of 81.88 meters. German champion Simon Batz won the long jump at the meeting with a jump of 8.07 meters, but further details about his performance are not available.
Despite not providing any information about Simon Batz's recent competition results or records, the provided search results indicate that he won the long jump at the meeting in Budapest. For more details on Simon Batz's achievements, please specify, and I can check further outside these results.
After setting the world record, Duplantis celebrated with fans and colleagues, marking yet another milestone in his impressive athletic career. Batz, the German long jump champion, jumped two centimeters further than Olympic and world champion Miltiadis Tentoglou from Greece, but no new world records were set in the current paragraph.
Sports enthusiasts rejoiced as Armand Duplantis, the Olympic champion, broke the sports record for pole vault yet again. His record-breaking leap of 6.29 meters at the István Gyulai Memorial meet in Budapest put him in the history books for the 13th time in his career.