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Russia's Isinbayeva pole vaults to world record, gold

TimePublished on Tue, Aug 19, 2008 at 08:57, Updated on Tue, Aug 19, 2008 at 09:56 in Sports » Others section

VAULTING FOR GOLD: Twenty six -year-old Isinbayeva has broken the world record an incredible 24 times now.

VAULTING FOR GOLD: Twenty six -year-old Isinbayeva has broken the world record an incredible 24 times now.


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Beijing: Yelena Isinbayeva of Russia put in yet another masterful display of high-class pole vaulting in Beijing on Monday to better her own world record on the way to defending Olympic gold.

The reigning double world and triple European champion cleared 5.05m, one cm higher than her own world record of 5.04m set in Monaco last month.

The height was also a massive 25cm higher than her closest competitor in an event she has completely dominated for the last four years and in which she has rarely been tested by rivals.

The 26-year-old has been the world record holder since July 2004 and has now raised the bar on 24 occasions, although until last month she had not broken the outdoor mark since 2005.

"I love to be alone at the top," said Isinbayeva. "It's so cool and I will try to keep my position as long as possible."

She added that she still believed in what she said after she won the world title in Osaka last year that no one could beat her but herself.

"I like to prove it, not just say it. I like to prove who is the best and who is the strongest."

Worringly for her competitors, Isinbayeva said she thought she could go higher.

"I don't know how high I can go," she said. "My coach says I can go 5.20m or higher and I trust him."

Isinbayeva, a former Russian Army lieutenant, had seen her 23-meet win streak snapped indoors at Poland earlier this year by Russian rival Svetlana Feofanova, the 2004 Olympic runner-up and a former world record holder.

But she only entered the competition at the National Stadium here at 4.70m, when there were only four other vaulters still in with a chance. Seven others had crashed out at sub-4.70m heights.

She passed twice at 4.75m and 4.80m before easily vaulting 4.85m. She then set a new Olympic record of 4.95m after failing twice at that height.

Burying herself under a duvet between vaults, the Volgograd-born athlete, who trained as a gymnast, cleared 5.05m at her third attempt.

Isinbayeva immediately fell to her knees, then stood up and promptly did a forward somersault before running to fetch a Russian flag for a well-deserved lap of honour.

"I just like to go under there to get my focus and concentrate," she said of her duvet. "Sometimes the cameras get close and I don't like it and that allows me to shut things out."

American Jennifer Stuczynski won silver with 4.80m after bailing out three times at 4.90m. Feofanova took bronze with a best of 4.75m.

"I came first out of the all the people who lost to Yelena, that's the best way to look at it," said Stuczynski, who made a rather hopeful pre-Olympic promise to "kick some Russian butt", in reference to Isinbayeva.

"To come to get a silver medal at my first Olympics, I couldn't ask for more," said the 26-year-old.

"I just need more experience. She (Isinbayeva) has way more but I'll make up for lost ground."

Russian Yulia Golubchikova finished fourth on 4.75m on countback from Feofanova. Monica Pyrek of Poland cleared 4.70m before bailing out.

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