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Athletics

Mondo's 14th world record: what’s fuelling this streak?

From backyard prodigy to global icon, Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis broke the pole-vault world record – again. Here’s how the Swedish superstar built one of the most dominant careers in track and field.
Written by Hanna Jonsson
8 min readUpdated on
Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis has taken the world by storm, bringing pole vaulting into the homes of even casual sports fans. At just 25, the Swedish-American superstar has already made history, breaking the world record 14 times and vaulting six metres or higher more often than any athlete before him. Most recently, he cleared 6.30m at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, Japan, in mid-September 2025. Breaking the record he set a month earlier by one centimetre.
Duplantis thinks it's possible to break 6.40m, and if anyone can do it, it's him.
Armand Duplantisposes with his new world record height of 6.3m in men’s pole vault during World Athletics Championships 2025 in Tokyo, Japan, on September 15, 2025.

Most athletes never break a world record: Duplantis has done it 14 times

© Sona Maleterova/Red Bull Content Pool

After breaking the record for the 12th time, at the Diamond League meeting in Stockholm in June 2025, Duplantis said: “This was one of my biggest goals and dreams, to set a world record here at Stadion. It’s like the Olympics and Stadion, they’re the same level for me. I really wanted to do it, I had my whole family here, from both sides, it’s magic. Every time I broke the world record, I felt it in my first jump that ‘this could be the day’, but today it felt a little tougher. It didn’t feel that natural from the beginning, it didn’t feel great in my legs, but I only needed one try.”
With each new height, Duplantis continues to redefine the limits of his sport. To understand how he became the phenomenon he is today, we need to go back to where it all began.
Mondo Duplantis's journey to pole vault sensation began at an early age, leading to impressive results as young as seven years old. His rise to pole vault legend wasn’t without its challenges, however.

1 h 36 min

Born to Fly

Map the extraordinary rise of Mondo Duplantis from backyard dreamer to global pole vault sensation.

English +9

01

Duplantis' pole vaulting is a family affair

That Duplantis reached such heady heights at such a young age should perhaps not come as a surprise to those who have been following his journey. Pole vaulting is in many ways part of his DNA with his American dad, Greg, a talented pole vaulter himself and his Swedish mum, Helena, a former heptathlete. With a pole vaulting set-up in the back garden of their home in Lafayette, Louisiana, Mondo was only three years old when he first tried his hand at the sport.
An image of a young Armand Duplantis holding a pole.

Even at a young age, Duplantis was hooked on pole vaulting

© Duplantis Family

Most kids had basketball nets in the backyard. We had a pole vault set-up. That made us pretty unique
With a deep love and fascination for the sport, Duplantis quickly took to it and under the watchful eye of his dad, who’s still his coach today, it became clear that the young pole vaulter possessed a natural talent. Together with help from his mum, coaching him in fitness and strength, his career quickly became a family affair. Duplantis set his first age-group world best at the age of seven and proceeded to break the record in his age group the following six years.
An incredibly complex sport, athletes are required to push off the ground, only to twist and turn upside down in order to fly over the bar and then free-fall down to the mat. It’s a technique that takes years to master, and it requires a sense of fearlessness. Young Duplantis spent hours watching videos of his heroes, with his favourite being Frenchman Renaud Lavillenie, a graceful pole vaulter who held the world record between 2014 and 2020.
Check out Mondo's backyard set-up in the video below:

4 min

Red Bull Backyards – Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis

Take a trip to Lafayette, Louisiana, USA to the backyard of world record pole vaulter, Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis.

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02

Representing Sweden

During his childhood, the family often spent their summers in Sweden, but that didn’t stop Duplantis from continuing to train and compete. Realising just how big track and field is in the European nation, with Sweden hosting numerous competitions that are televised nationwide, Mondo chose to represent the country. “In Sweden, a track and field stadium is as common as a football or baseball field in the USA,” he says.
Still in high school and living in Lafayette, he began to spend more time in Sweden. He joined the local track and field club, Upsala IF, and started perfecting his Swedish language skills. Dedicating himself to his Swedish heritage quickly gained him bonus points among the Swedes, and his popularity began to skyrocket.
Armand Duplantis of Sweden seen during the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Belgrade, Serbia on March 20, 2022.

Though born and raised in the USA, Duplantis decided to represent Sweden

© Predrag Vuckovic/Red Bull Content Pool

03

Taking his career to the next level

It’s pretty clear that Duplantis has never been the dark horse or the underdog. At junior level, he won the 2015 World Youth Championships, the 2017 European Junior Championships and the 2018 World Junior Championships. By the time he stepped up into the elite ranks, everyone in pole vaulting knew who he was.
That kind of reputation, as exciting as it is, comes with a lot of pressure. Competing at his first-ever elite World Championships in London in 2017 was a tough lesson that things don’t always go to plan. But learning to accept defeat is just as important as a win for an athlete, so Duplantis picked himself back up and came back stronger.
Armand Duplantis of Sweden performs during the Belgrade Indoor Meeting in Belgrade, Serbia on March 7, 2022.

Speed, power and technique

© Predrag Vuckovic/Red Bull Content Pool

Armand Duplantis of Sweden performs during the Belgrade Indoor Meeting in Belgrade, Serbia on March 7, 2022.

Getting inverted six metres off the ground seems impossible to most

© Predrag Vuckovic/Red Bull Content Pool

In the following years, he racked up positive results as well as gained valuable experiences, including winning the 2018 European Championships with a jump of 6.05m – the joint fifth highest jump in history.
04

A record-breaking year

2020 was the year that Duplantis found the final pieces to his puzzle. Right at the start of the season, on February 8 in Toruń, Poland, he cleared the remarkable height of 6.17m and broke the almost six-year-old world record held by his childhood idol Lavillenie. It was a feat that he’d worked his entire life towards.
Armand Duplantis seen during the Diamond League track and field competitions in Stockholm, Sweden on August 23, 2020.

That winning feeling

© Sophie Odelberg/Red Bull Content Pool

It’s something I’ve wanted since I was three years old
Once it clicked for Duplantis, he became unstoppable. It only took a week until his next great feat. On February 15 in Glasgow, Scotland, he sailed over 6.18m and broke his own world record. Then, in September in Rome, Italy, he broke legendary pole vaulter Sergey Bubka’s 1994 outdoor world best of 6.14m by jumping 6.15m. “I hit the mat, but I haven’t really fallen back to Earth," Duplantis said moments after his jump.
05

Holding all the titles

Since his incredible 2020 season, Duplantis has become a household name, not just in Sweden but around the world. In 2022, he cemented his role in history by once again beating his own world record – not once, but three times. He started the season by clearing the height of 6.19m in Belgrade, Serbia; followed it up by sailing over 6.20m a week later at the World Athletics Indoor Championships; and finally soared over 6.21m - with room to spare - at the World Championship in Eugene, Oregon, USA.
With his win at the World Championships in Eugene, Duplantis has now won all the biggest titles in the sport. On top of that, his record-breaking 2022 season saw him vault six metres or higher a staggering 22 times. It means that the 23-year-old has more six-metre clearances than any other pole vaulter in history.
Armand Duplantis of Sweden poses for a portrait during the Belgrade Indoor Meeting in Belgrade, Serbia on March 7, 2022.

Mondo had broken his own world record five times at this point

© Predrag Vučković/Red Bull Content Pool

And the records haven't stopped coming. In early 2023, Mondo raised his own world record to 6.22m at the All Star Perche indoor meet in Clermont-Ferrand, France. This was followed by yet another gold at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, before signing off the year with another new world record height when he cleared 6.23m at the Diamond League event in Eugene. Then, in 2024, he added another centimetre to that world-best mark in the Diamond League in Xiamen, China.
06

A world record on the biggest stage of all

In the 2024 Paris Games, Mondo won a gold medal after clearing 6m and beating out his competitors. But that was not enough for him. He wanted to push himself further. He did exactly that by jumping an incredible 6.25m, breaking the world record he set a few months earlier.
Armand Duplantis performs during a photoshoot in Uppsala, Sweden on January 29, 2020.

He's been obsessed with pole vaulting since he was three-years-old

© Adam Klingeteg/Red Bull Content Pool

Behind all the world records and titles is, of course, a lot of hard work. The two-time World Athlete of the Year (2020 and 2022) still remains humble and never seems to take any win for granted. As for what the future holds, there are surely more records to come - and not just of the athletics variety. In February 2025, the day he set his 11th world record at All Star Perche in Paris was, coincidentally, the same day he released his debut single, Bop, under the name Mondo. There was no new release to coincide with his subsequent world records, but the future remains bright on both counts.
Duplantis has continued to raise the bar even higher, claiming a 13th world record in August 2025, when he cleared a towering 6.29m at the Hungarian Grand Prix in Budapest. Just one month later, Duplantis won gold at the World Championships in Athletics in Tokyo, Japan, with the world record height of 6.30m.
Armand Duplantis celebrates gold in men's pole vault at World Athletics Championships 2025 in Tokyo, Japan, setting a new world record and honouring Sweden's colours on the podium

Another world record, another gold medal; all in a day's work for Duplantis

© Sona Maleterova/Red Bull Content Pool

Discover the mental strategies behind Mondo Duplantis’s incredible pole vaulting feats in our latest Mind Set Win podcast episode. Dive deep into how he mentally prepares to soar to heights of 6.30 metres and beyond!
As Duplantis himself puts it: “I just try to go out there, I try to jump high, I try to break records and I try to just keep improving.”

Part of this story

Armand Duplantis

Swedish-American pole vaulter Armand Duplantis has been setting new standards since he was seven and has now broken the world record on a staggering 14 separate occasions.

SwedenSweden

Born to Fly

Map the extraordinary rise of Mondo Duplantis from backyard dreamer to global pole vault sensation.

1 h 36 min