His retreat from 6.28 m away in Stockholm presented the world record No. 12. Katallic Denneh lies to many Olympic, world and European champion’s emergency growth
Most of the Olympic gold, world titles and world posts, Mondo Duplantis was a student of her sports – one of the insufficient appetite for improvement. If he had not been on the flying runway, the father built in their back yard in Luizate’s Luisate, he often thought about it, to ever raise his body.
“I was at school all the time at school, about when I was going to return home and jump,” he said. “I feel like a rather early age I realized that this is what I was going to do.”
Duplantis has cleared the world’s age between seven and 12, all of which are standing, and his 12th high-ranking record of his last Diamond League, Stockholm, shows that he is complete. But Duplantis is also something else – innovative.
It has been 10 years since he exploded on an international stage, defeating the title of under the age of 18 in Kallibia, Colombia is only 15 years old, and it has been said about him. But most of it clearly studied what he does to jump this high jump, given his event technical minutia is often incomprehensible to those who have never tried.
Understand better, Time Speaked of Duplantis and Mitch Krier, a long-term coach and a Greek star husband, 2016 Olympic gold medalist and world champion.
Most of the polar necks can be grouped from jumping into one of two thrown styles, a Russian model or a French model. The former is mostly related to Vitaly Petrov, who trains Sergey Bubk, Ukraine and many other champions, such as Russia’s Elena Isinbayeva and Brazilian Fabiana.

As a child, Dulantis studied all the adults, then took what he saw in his back yard. “I tried to imitate many flights,” he said. “I tried to jump like Bubka, I tried to jump Renoud (Lavillenie) as Jean Galfion, many French boys, all the people I saw on YouTube.
The Bubka / Petrov method includes the knee up and keep your hands closer to each other on the pole, but trying that it is not right in his adolescence.
“The way to Bubba the pole of the pole and gets out of his right knee, it has never been good to me, it was not liquid,” he said. “So I found more my own way of my performance and jumping to contact my own way.” His current technique is “slightly different people.”
“I jump a lot other than Bubba. He was also fast, but he had his fingers with a super surface (pole). He says:

KRier has trained the polar vault for 18 years, 10 of them as professionals, and he says that the style of Duplts is “closest to the French.” Another difference he sees between Duplantis and Bubka. How are they going out of the runway?
“The Russians are more, to try to create this tall, high attitude,” says Krys. “(Duplantis) begins to accelerate, but he can continue and continue to speed up, which is an amazing part. He continues. He continues.
Approaching to take, Duplantis rarely runs rarely because of their preferred methodology. He throws the pole early by letting it go with the runway before it passes the box. Kortane says that the traditional approach “always tried to go down at the end and on time”, so why is Dublantis going against grain?
“They think it can cause less counterattack at the pole when he first hits the ground,” says Krys. “He creates a full new vibration, while the pole is vibrating as much as he hits the box that these two forces can act against each other.”
However it comes at risk.
“Many boxes do not necessarily fall into the way where that edge satisfies,” says Krys. “So learning to do this will be difficult to teach someone to keep it on the ground and don’t let it jump on the box when it hits the ground and creates all kinds (problems).

But it also comes with a gift.
“The size of the whole pressure, which he puts it on the ground, is extraordinary to keep the pressure on the ground right,” says Krys. “I don’t know how you will train it.”
As for the puzzle application, he says:
Krieri says Dulantis is also lower than soon left hand than Bubba. “Petrov wanted your left arm to stay on the height of the chest and work as more comfortable and (Mondo) to put the pole forward.
As for the knee drop, the Krys suspects that his origin can be found in Duplantis as a child as a child. “I don’t know if it’s something watching someone else has used it to find out how those who go to a large amount. smoothly. “
Duplantis says height was a factor who he was like as a child. “I was quite small, so it was quite inspiring to see what Renauge does. He was like a protocol in the world.
Kryren thinks that the competitiveness of Dulantis also played a role.
“He learned to use the energy of the body exclusively to keep the ability to keep good,” he said. “I think it was probably due to the young and smaller and more competitive. If you have its competitiveness, he doesn’t keep that pole.

“We always looked at the body as this two-dimensional figure and pole as something else we could download. Now we are aware of how his comforting system can be implemented. “
Krieri says that Duplant’s plans – Father Greg was 5.80 meters, while his mother was Helena and a volleyball player.
“Children of many polar folders are really good polar necklaces and are very similar to their parents,” says Krys. “Their parents taught them to know the technique. I don’t know that this is definitely true with Greg and Helena. “
Kryen believes that 9 out of 10 coaches were “broken” on the road, mixed with sweating elements of his jumps, as he was early in the pole. “So many people are talking about, changing, just as his Torson put forward. There were a lot of things that many coaches probably don’t understand before they could change. “
The crip says that the success of Duplantis in the polar pad “has opened an open open.” .
Krys says that many young polar necks “begin to imitate” Dulantis and advise to look at the 21-year-old student of Illinoisis, adding that “you will see the little Mondo there.”
As for self-interest, does he think that others may know his approach? “Of course,” he said. “I don’t think it’s complicated. I don’t think nothing is so crazy. I think it’s a good jump and a lot of liquid and flows well. “
Dublantis says he has not been enough to evaluate young athletes in recent years, or others copy his style, but they add a smile that I feel worse. “