Armand “Mondo” Duplantis delivered another historic moment in athletics, clearing 6,31 metres to set a new pole vault world record at the Mondo Classic in Uppsala, Sweden. The Swedish-American Olympic champion achieved the milestone in front of a packed IFU Arena, claiming the 15th world record of his career and the first in front of his home club Upsala IF. Afterwards, Duplantis explained why this record felt extra special.
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Mondo takes his 15th world record
Duplantis is the undisputed GOAT of pole vaulting. At just 26, he has notched up a staggering 15 world records and cleared the 6m mark more times than anyone in history. A multiple Olympic champion, World Champion and three-time World Athlete of the Year – was there anything left for him to achieve?
Actually, there was one thing. Previously, he was yet to break the world record in front of his home crowd in Uppsala. That was, until now.
After completing first-time clearances of 5.65m, 5.90m and 6.08m, Duplantis rounded out the night by soaring over the new record height of 6.31m at the first attempt.
“This is my house. This means so much to me,” Mondo said afterwards.
He turned to the audience and his home club Upsala IF and said: "Every time I'm on track I represent you. I represent me, my family, and you. I feel so proud to be able to do this infront of you".
This is my house.
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Mondo’s 22 steps
For this competition, Duplantis switched up his runway technique by increasing it to 22 steps – something he has barely practised. It was a risky move, but one that paid off.
“Mondo is a good runner and 22 steps gives him the ability to use his speed,” his father and trainer, Greg Duplantis, said to Swedish television after the show.
“I think he is going to jump higher, a lot higher,” Greg Duplantis said.
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Mondo Classic 2026: what went down?
Mondo Classic returned to Uppsala bringing the world’s best pole vaulters to Duplantis home arena IUF Arena. The competition itself delivered high-quality vaulting throughout the evening.
Greece’s Emmanouil Karalis arrived in strong form after clearing 6.17 metres at the Greek Indoor Championships at the end of February but unfortunately didn’t clear 6 meters during the evening. Instead, it was Norwegian Sondre Guttmorsen who, for the third time in his career, cleared what is known to most as “the dream height”. The next height, 6.08m, proved a step too far for the Norwegian, leaving Duplantis as the last man standing.
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Results Mondo Classic 2026
- Armand Duplantis, 6,31 meters
- Sondre Guttmorsen, 6,00 meters
- Zachery Bradford, 5,90 meters