Sergei Bubka
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the pastry, see babka.
| Medal record | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Sergei Bubka |
|||
| Men's athletics | |||
| Olympic Games | |||
| Competitor for |
|||
| Gold | 1988 Seoul | Pole vault | |
| World Championships | |||
| Competitor for |
|||
| Gold | 1983 Helsinki | Pole vault | |
| Gold | 1987 Rome | Pole vault | |
| Gold | 1991 Tokyo | Pole vault | |
| Competitor for |
|||
| Gold | 1993 Stuttgart | Pole vault | |
| Gold | 1995 Gothenburg | Pole vault | |
| Gold | 1997 Athens | Pole vault | |
| European Championships | |||
| Competitor for |
|||
| Gold | 1986 Stuttgart | Pole vault | |
Sergey Nazarovych Bubka (Ukrainian: Сергій Назарович Бубка) (born December 4, 1963) is a retired Ukrainian pole vaulter. He represented the Soviet Union until its collapse in 1991. He is widely regarded as the best pole vaulter ever and one of the best athletes of modern times.
Bubka won 6 consecutive IAAF World Championships, an Olympics gold and broke the world record for men's pole vaulting 35 times[1] (17 outdoor and 18 indoor records). He was the first to clear 6.0 metres and the first and only (as of March 2008) to clear 6.10 metres (20 feet).[2][3]
He holds the current outdoor world record of 6.14 metres, set on 31 July 1994 in Sestriere, Italy[4] and the current indoor world record of 6.15 meters, set on 21 February 1993 in Donetsk, Ukraine.[5]
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Sergei Bubka was born and brought up in the city of Luhansk, Ukraine. His father was a soldier and his mother a medical assistant. He commented that neither of them were active in sports. He has an elder brother Vasiliy Bubka, who was also a pole vaulter.[6] Vasiliy's personal best outdoors is 5.86 meters.[3] Sergei had a ferocious competitive spirit which was channeled into multiple sports until he met the pole vault coach Vitaly Petrov. Bubka started pole vaulting at the age of 11, when he entered Dynamo Children and Youth Sports School in Voroshilovgrad, he was trained by Vitaly Petrov there.[7] In 1978 at an age of 15, Bubka moved to Donetsk, Ukraine with his coach for better training facilities.
[edit] Pole vaulting career
Sergei Bubka entered international athletics in 1981 participating in the European Junior Championships where he fetched a 7th place. But the 1983 World Championships held in Helsinki proved to be his actual entry point to the mainstream world athletics, where a relatively unknown Bubka snatched the gold clearing 5.70 metres (18 feet 8 inches). The years that followed witnessed the unparalleled dominance of Bubka on pole vaulting with him setting new records and standards in pole vaulting.
He set his first world record of 5.85m in 26 May 1984 which he improved to 5.88m a week after and then to 5.90 m a month after. He cleared 6.00 metres (19 feet 8 inches) on 13 July 1985 in Paris.[3] This height had long been considered unattainable. With virtually no opponents, Bubka improved his own record over the next 10 years until he reached his career best and the current world record of 6.14 m in 1994.
He was the first and only (as of March 2008) athlete ever to jump over 6.10 metres in San Sebastián, Spain in 1991. He set the current world record of 6.14 metres in 1994 after some commentators had already predicted the decline of the great sportsman. Bubka increased the world record by 21 centimetres (8 inches) in the 4 years between 1984 and 1988, more than other pole vaulters had achieved in the previous 12 years. He cleared the once considered unattainable height 6.00 meters (or better) on more than 44 occasions.
Bubka officially retired from his pole vault career in 2001. His son Sergei Bubka Jr. is a tennis player and is currently a regular in ATP's second string circuits.[8]
[edit] IAAF World Championships
Bubka won the pole vault event in 6 consecutive IAAF World Championships In Athletics from 1983 to 1997:
| Tournament | Venue | Result | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 World Championships in Athletics | Helsinki | 1st | 5.70 |
| 1987 World Championships in Athletics | Rome | 1st | 5.85 |
| 1991 World Championships in Athletics | Tokyo | 1st | 5.95 |
| 1993 World Championships in Athletics | Stuttgart | 1st | 6.00 |
| 1995 World Championships in Athletics | Gothenburg | 1st | 5.92 |
| 1997 World Championships in Athletics | Athens | 1st | 6.01 |
[edit] Olympics curse
Though he had complete dominance on pole vaulting at his time, he was highly unlucky in the Olympic Games. The first Olympics after his introduction into international athletics was in 1984, which was boycotted by the USSR along with the other Eastern Bloc countries. Two months before the games he vaulted 12 cm higher than the eventual Olympic gold medal winner Pierre Quinon. In 1988 Bubka entered the Seoul Olympics and won his only Olympic gold medal. In 1992 he failed to clear in his first 3 attempts and was out of the Barcelona Olympics. In Atlanta, 1996, a heel injury caused him to withdraw from the competition without making even one jump. In Sydney, 2000, he was eliminated from the final after three attempts at 5.70 m.[9]
[edit] World record progression by Bubka
Bubka broke the world record for men's pole vaulting a total of 35 times in his career.[1] He broke the outdoor world records 17 times and the indoor world records 18 times. The fact that most of the time he improved his own previous record proves his absolute dominance in the event.
| Height (in metres) |
Date | Place |
|---|---|---|
| 6.14 | 31 July 1994 | Sestriere |
| 6.13 | 19 September 1992 | Tokyo |
| 6.12 | 30 August 1992 | Padova |
| 6.11 | 13 June 1992 | Dijon |
| 6.10 | 5 August 1991 | Malmö |
| 6.09 | 8 July 1991 | Formia |
| 6.08 | 9 June 1991 | Moscow |
| 6.07 | 6 May 1991 | Shizuoka |
| 6.06 | 10 July 1988 | Nice |
| 6.05 | 9 June 1988 | Bratislava |
| 6.03 | 23 June 1987 | Prague |
| 6.01 | 8 June 1986 | Moscow |
| 6.00 | 13 June 1985 | Paris |
| 5.94 | 31 August 1984 | Rome |
| 5.90 | 13 July 1984 | London |
| 5.88 | 2 June 1984 | Paris |
| 5.85 | 26 May 1984 | Bratislava |
| Height (in metres) |
Date | Place |
|---|---|---|
| 6.15 | 21 February 1993 | Donetsk |
| 6.14 | 13 February 1993 | Lievin |
| 6.13 | 22 February 1992 | Berlin |
| 6.12 | 23 February 1991 | Grenoble |
| 6.11 | 19 March 1991 | Donetsk |
| 6.10 | 15 March 1991 | San Sebastián |
| 6.08 | 9 February 1991 | Volgograd |
| 6.05 | 17 March 1990 | Donetsk |
| 6.03 | 11 February 1989 | Osaka |
| 5.97 | 17 March 1987 | Torino |
| 5.96 | 15 January 1987 | Osaka |
| 5.95 | 28 February 1986 | New York |
| 5.94 | 21 February 1986 | Inglewood |
| 5.92 | 8 February 1986 | Moscow |
| 5.87 | 15 January 1986 | Osaka |
| 5.83 | 10 February 1984 | Inglewood |
| 5.82 | 1 February 1984 | Milano |
| 5.81 | 15 January 1984 | Vilnius |
[edit] Technique
Bubka possessed enormous strength, speed and gymnastic abilities.[1] Reportedly his average speed during pole vaulting approach was 35.7 km/h (9.9 m/s, 22.2 mph) (which is very close to the average speed of a 100m sprinter). He gripped the pole higher than most vaulters to get extra leverage, though Bubka himself played down the effect of grip alone.[6] Bubka had great strength and could use a relatively heavier pole for his weight for generating more recoil force.
Along with these, his development and mastery of the Petrov/Bubka technical model is also considered as the key to his success. A technical model is a sequence of positions and pressures that describe the method and form of a style of pole vaulting. The Petrov/Bubka model is superior to many others today because it allows the vaulter to continuously put energy into the pole while constantly rising towards the bar. While most of the conventional models focus on heavy planting of the pole to the landing pad to create maximum bend in the pole even before they leave the ground, Petrov/Bubka model concentrates on driving the pole up rather than bending it while planting it on the landing pad. While the traditional models depended on the recoil by bending the pole, Petrov/Bubka model could exploit the recoil of the pole and it could exert more energy on the pole during the swinging action.
[edit] Awards and positions held
- Bubka won the Prince of Asturias Award in Sports in 1991.
- Bubka was awarded best sportsman of the Soviet Union for three years in a row from 1984 to 1986
- Bubka was voted Sportsman of the Year for 1997 by the influential newspaper L'Équipe
- Bubka was honored as the best pole vaulter of the last half century by Track & Field News
- Bubka was designated as an IAAF council member in 2001
- He is currently serving as the president of National Olympic Council (NOC) of Ukraine and is an IOC member[10]
- Bubka was designated UNESCO Champion for Sport in 2003[11]
- From 2002 to 2006, he had been a member of the Ukrainian Parliament and its committee on questions of youth policy, physical culture, sport and tourism.
[edit] Quotes
- "I love the pole vault because it is a professor's sport. One must not only run and jump, but one must think. Which pole to use, which height to jump, which strategy to use. I love it because the results are immediate and the strongest is the winner. Everyone knows it. In everyday life that is difficult to prove."[12] - Sergei Bubka
- "Here is a man who has personally altered his art form, changed the way competitors prepare for it and perform it, even the way spectators perceive it." - Gary Smith of Sports Illustrated about Bubka
- "My jump was imperfect, my run-in was too short and my hands were too far back at takeoff. When I manage to iron out these faults, I am sure I can improve." - In an interview after he was the first person to break 20 feet.
[edit] Bibliography
Sergei Bubka (1987). An Attempt is Reserved (in Russian). Moscow: Molodaya gvardiya.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Bubka says farewell. BBC News. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
- ^ Top Lists: Pole Vault. IAAF.org. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. (Indoor)
- ^ a b c Top Lists: Pole Vault. IAAF.org. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. (Outdoor)
- ^ World Outdoor Records - Men. IAAF.org. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ World Indoor Records - Men. IAAF.org. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ a b On the Road to Atlanta. The Ukrainian Weekly (1996-06-02). Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ Sergei Bubka - A Man With A Pole
- ^ Bubka takes to tennis. New Age Sports. Agence France-Presse, New Delhi. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
- ^ Sydney 2000 results. IAAF.org. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
- ^ IOC > Members > Sergey Bubka. Official Website of the Olympic Movement. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
- ^ Ukrainian athlete Serhiy Bubka designated UNESCO Champion for Sport. Unesco.org (2003-11-04). Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ Sergey Bubka to Gary Smith in Sports Illustrated, September 14, 1988, referenced in Current Biography Excerpts: Track and Field. HW Wilson. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
[edit] External links
- Sergey Bubka's Official Site
- IAAF profile for Sergei Bubka
- A small video with the highlights of Bubka's career
- http://www.neovault.com/articles_bubka_speaks.asp
- Sergey Bubka's Official Site
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by |
Men's Track & Field Athlete of the Year 1988 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
United Press International Athlete of the Year 1991 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Track & Field Athlete of the Year 1991 |
Succeeded by |
| Sporting positions | ||
| Preceded by |
Men's Pole Vault Best Year Performance 1984 – 1989 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Pole Vault Best Year Performance 1991 – 1994 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Pole Vault Best Year Performance 1996 – 1997 |
Succeeded by |
|
|||||
| World champions in men's pole vault |
| Outdoor 1983: Sergei Bubka | 1987: Sergei Bubka | 1991: Sergei Bubka | 1993: Sergei Bubka | 1995: Sergei Bubka | 1997: Sergei Bubka | 1999: Maksim Tarasov | 2001: Dmitri Markov | 2003: Giuseppe Gibilisco | 2005: Rens Blom | 2007: Brad Walker |
| Indoor 1985: Sergei Bubka | 1987: Sergei Bubka | 1989: Rodion Gataullin | 1991: Sergei Bubka | 1993: Rodion Gataullin | 1995: Sergei Bubka | 1997: Igor Potapovich | 1999: Jean Galfione | 2001: Lawrence Johnson | 2003: Tim Lobinger | 2004: Igor Pavlov | 2006: Brad Walker |

