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Thiago Braz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brazilian pole vaulter (born 1993)
In thisPortuguese name, the first or maternalfamily name isBraz and the second or paternal family name isda Silva.
Thiago Braz
Personal information
Born (1993-12-16)16 December 1993 (age 31)
Marília,São Paulo, Brazil
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight75 kg (165 lb)
Sport
CountryBrazil
SportAthletics
EventPole vault
Achievements and titles
Personalbest
  • Pole vault: 6.03 m (2016)

Thiago Braz da Silva (born 16 December 1993) is a Brazilian athlete specializing in thepole vault who held theOlympic record of 6.03 metres. He won the gold medal at the2016 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal at the2020 Summer Olympics.

Career

[edit]

In 2012, he won the gold medal at theWorld Junior Championships.

In 2013, he became the South American champion with a new outdoorarea record of 5.83 metres. On 24 June 2015, he set a new record of 5.92 metres inBaku,Azerbaijan.[1]

On 13 February 2016, he extended the South American indoor record to 5.93 metres inBerlin,Germany.[2]

On 15 August 2016, at the2016 Olympic Games inRio de Janeiro, Thiago Braz da Silva won the gold medal inmen's pole vault by beatingFrench pole-vaulterRenaud Lavillenie, the incumbent world record holder and gold medalist inLondon Olympic Games. In the final, Lavillenie and Braz were the only two athletes to achieve the high of 5.93m, and consequently, they were the only two left to dispute the gold medal. Lavillenie easily cleared the next height, 5.98m, with his first attempt, but da Silva decided to skip 5.98m (as clearing that height would still have left him in silver-medal position on countback) and went on to 6.03m. With a successful second attempt at 6.03m, da Silva set a newOlympic Record. Lavillenie, having failed his first two attempts at 6.03m, attempted 6.08 with his final jump but failed. Thiago Braz da Silva won the gold medal with an Olympic record and surpassed his personal best performance by 10 cm. He was just 1 cm away from matchingBrad Walker'sAmericas record of 6.04 m.

After an Olympic cycle much lower than expected, without medals in World Championships and even in Pan American Games between 2016 and 2020, Braz participated in the2020 Summer Olympics inTokyo again without being the favorite, but at the same time, with everyone knowing the possibilities for the Brazilian to win a medal again. At heats, he qualified easily, missing two jumps, but reached the 5.75 mark without needing the third and final attempt at any mark. In the final, he missed an attempt at the 5.70 and 5.80 marks but managed to pass the second time; when he reached 5.87, a mark not so easy to overtake, he beat it on the first attempt, which became crucial to reach the bronze medal. At this point in the race,Renaud Lavillenie, who competed with both feet injured, still had a chance to overtake Braz and gave up from 5.87, passing the bar to 5.92; however, he failed in his attempts and was left without a medal. This ensured Braz on the podium, as only he, the SwedeArmand Duplantis, who was the world record holder and favorite for gold, and the AmericanChris Nilsen, who surprisingly reached 5.97 getting the silver, remained in the race. Braz missed three attempts in the 5.92 and ended up with the bronze. Duplantis easily managed 6.02 and could have tried to break Thiago Braz's Olympic record of 6.03; however, he changed the attempt to 6.19 to beat his own world record of 6.18 but failed. Braz finished with his second consecutive Olympic medal, a very rare feat in Brazilian athletics.[3][4]

At the2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Belgrade, Serbia, Braz got his first medal in the World Championships, a silver obtained with a jump of 5.95, a newindoor South American record. The gold went to the Swedish Duplantis, who broke the world record there with 6.20.[5]

At the2022 World Athletics Championships, Braz obtained the best position in the history of Brazil in the World Championships in the pole vault, finishing in4th place with a jump of 5.87.[6]

In July 2023, Braz tested positive forostarine and was provisionally suspended by theAIU.[7] On 28 May 2024, he was banned for 16 months by a disciplinary tribunal which heard his case. The ban, which Braz stated he would lodge an appeal against with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, was backdated to the start of his provisional suspension making him eligible to return to competition on 27 November 2024.[8][9]

Personal bests

[edit]
  • Pole vault (outdoor):6.03 mRio de Janeiro, Brazil, 15 Aug 2016
  • Pole vault (indoor):5.95 mBelgrade, Serbia, 20 March 2022

Competition record

[edit]
YearCompetitionVenuePositionResult
Representing Brazil
2009South American Junior ChampionshipsSão Paulo, Brazil3rd4.40 m
2010Youth Olympic GamesSingapore2nd5.05 m
South American Youth ChampionshipsSantiago, Chile1st5.10 m
2011Pan American Junior ChampionshipsMiramar, United States1st5.20 m
South American Junior ChampionshipsMedellín, Colombia2nd4.85 m
2012World Junior ChampionshipsBarcelona, Spain1st5.55 m
2013South American ChampionshipsCartagena, Colombia1st5.83 m
World ChampionshipsMoscow, Russia14th (q)5.40 m
2014World Indoor ChampionshipsSopot, Poland4th5.75 m
South American GamesSantiago, ChileNM
2015Pan American GamesToronto, CanadaNM
World ChampionshipsBeijing, China19th (q)5.65 m
2016World Indoor ChampionshipsPortland, United States12th5.55 m
Olympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil1st6.03 mOlympic recordAR
2018World Indoor ChampionshipsBirmingham, United Kingdom12th5.60 m
2019South American ChampionshipsLima, Peru2nd5.41 m
Pan American GamesLima, Peru4th5.51 m
World ChampionshipsDoha, Qatar5th5.70 m
2021Olympic GamesTokyo,Japan3rd5.87 m
2022World Indoor ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia2nd5.95 miAR
World ChampionshipsEugene, United States4th5.87 m

iAR = indoor Area Record

References

[edit]
  1. ^Nick Butler (24 June 2015)."Holzdeppe wows crowds to win pole vault gold at Baku Street Athletics". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved17 March 2016.
  2. ^"Pole Vault Results"(PDF).livecache.sportresult.com. 13 February 2016. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 5 April 2016. Retrieved17 March 2016.
  3. ^Thiago Braz ressurge em Tóquio após ciclo de frustrações depois da Rio 2016
  4. ^Thiago Braz leva a medalha de bronze no salto com vara nas Olimpíadas de Tóquio
  5. ^Thiago Braz vence mais um Lavillenie, leva a prata no Mundial de Atletismo, e faz história
  6. ^Thiago Braz fica em 4º lugar no Mundial de Atletismo
  7. ^"Former Olympic pole vault champion Thiago Braz fails doping test".AW. 2023-07-28. Retrieved2023-07-29.
  8. ^"Rio 2016 Olympic champion Braz given 16-month doping ban". BBC Sport. 28 May 2024. Retrieved2024-05-28.
  9. ^"Thiago Braz, Rio Olympic pole vault gold medalist, suspended through Paris Games". NBC. 28 May 2024. Retrieved2024-05-28.

External links

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