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This article is about the athletic event. For the US Military operation, see Operation Highjump. For the film directed by Mani Ratnam which was tentatively titled High Jump, see Lajjo.
2004 Summer Olympics champion Yelena Slesarenko using the Fosbury Flop technique
The high jump is an athletics (track and field) event in which competitors must jump over a horizontal bar placed at measured heights without aid of any devices. It has been contested since the Olympic Games of ancient Greece. Over the centuries since, competitors have introduced increasingly more effective techniques to arrive at the current form. Javier Sotomayor (Cuba) is both the indoor and outdoor world record holder in this event with jumps of 2.43 m (8 feet) and 2.45 m (8 feet ½ inch), respectively. Sotomayor\'s record, set in 1993, is the longest standing in the history of the men\'s high jump. Stefka Kostadinova (Bulgaria) has held the women\'s world record since 1987, the longest standing record in overall history of the sport.
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DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1920 till:2004 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1920
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id:Basis value:red legend:World_record_women\'s_high_jump
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bar:Leaders mark:(line,white) align:left fontsize:XS shift:(22,-4) from:1922 till:end color:Basis at:1922 text:Nancy Vorhees_1,46_m at:1926 text:Phyllis Green_1,55_m at:1929 text:Carolina Gisoll_1,60_m at:1932 text:Jean Shiley_1,65_m at:1939 text:Dorothy Adams_1,66_m at:1943 text:Fanny Blankers-Koen_1,71_m at:1956 text:Mildred Singleton_1,76_m at:1958 text:Iolanda Balas_1,80_m at:1960 shift:(22,-8) text:Iolanda_Balas_1,85_m at:1961 shift:(22,-7) text:Iolanda_Balas_1,90_m at:1961 shift:(22,0) text:Iolanda_Balas_1,91_m at:1971 text:Ilona Gusenbauer_1,92_m at:1972 text:Jordanka Blagojewa_1,94_m at:1974 text:Rosemarie Ackermann_1,95_m at:1976 shift:(22,-8) text:Rosemarie_Ackermann_1,96_m at:1977 shift:(22,-8) text:Rosemarie_Ackermann_1,97_m at:1977 shift:(22,-1) text:Rosemarie_Ackermann_2,00_m at:1978 shift:(22,-2) text:Sara Simeoni_2,01_m at:1982 shift:(22,-6) text:Ulrike Meyfarth_2,02_m at:1983 shift:(22,-8) text:Ulrike_Meyfarth_2,03_m at:1983 shift:(22,-1) text:Tamara Bykowa_2,04_m at:1984 shift:(22,-5) text:Tamara_Bykowa_2,05_m at:1984 shift:(22,2) text:Ludmilla Andonowa_2,07_m at:1986 text:Stefka Kostadinova_2,08_m at:1987 text:Stefka_Kostadinova_2,09_m
Performed as early as the Olympics in ancient Greece, the first recorded high jump event took place in Scotland in the 19th century, with heights of up to (1.68 m) contested. Early jumpers used either an elaborate straight-on approach or a scissors technique. In the latter, the bar was approached diagonally, and the jumper threw first the inside leg and then the other over the bar in a scissoring motion. Around the turn of the 20th century, techniques began to modernise, starting with the Irish-American M.F. Sweeney\'s Eastern cut-off. By taking off as if with the scissors, but extending his back and flattening out over the bar, the Sweeney achieved a more economic clearance and raised the world record to 6\' 5⅝" (1.97 m) in 1895.
Another American, M.F. Horine, developed an even more efficient technique, the \'Western roll\'. In this style, the bar again is approached on a diagonal, but the inner leg is used for the take-off, while the outer leg is thrust up to lead the body sideways over the bar. Horine increased the world standard to 6\' 7" (2.01 m) in 1912. His technique predominated through the Berlin Olympics of 1936, in which the event was won by Cornelius Johnson at 2.03 m (6\' 8").
American and Russian jumpers held the playing field for the next four decades, and they pioneered the evolution of the straddle technique. Straddle jumpers took off as in the Western roll, but rotated their (belly-down) torso around the bar, obtaining the most economical clearance to date. Straddle-jumper Charles Dumas broke the elusive 7\' (2.13 m) barrier in 1956, and American wunderkind John Thomas pushed the world mark to 2.23 m (7\' 3¾") in 1960. Valeriy Brumel took over the event for the next four years. The elegant Soviet jumper radically sped up his approach run, took the record up to 2.28 m (7\' 5¾"), and won the Olympic gold medal in 1964, before a motorcycle accident ended his career.
Gold medal winner Ethel Catherwood of Canada scissors over the bar at the 1928 Summer Olympics. Her winning result was 1.59 m.
American coaches, including two-time NCAA champion Frank Costello of the University of Maryland, flocked to Russia to learn from Brumel and his coaches. However, it would be a solitary innovator at Oregon State University, Dick Fosbury, who would bring the high jump into the next century. Taking advantage of the raised, softer landing areas by then in use, Fosbury added a new twist to the outmoded Eastern Cut-off. He directed himself over the bar head and shoulders first sliding over on his back and landing in a fashion which would likely have broken his neck in the old sawdust landing pits. After he used this Fosbury flop to win the 1968 Olympic gold medal, the technique began to spread around the world, and soon floppers were dominating international high jump competitions. The last straddler to set a world record was the late Vladimir Yashchenko, who cleared 2.33 m (7\' 7¾") in 1977 and then 2.35 m (7\' 8½") indoors in 1978.
Among renowned high jumpers following Fosbury\'s lead were: Americans Dwight Stones and his rival, 5\' 8" (1.73 m) Franklin Jacobs of Paterson, NJ, who cleared 2.32 m (7\' 7¼"), an astounding two feet (0.59 m) over his head; Chinese record-setters Ni-chi Chin and Zhu Jianhua; Germans Gerd Wessig and Dietmar Mögenburg; Swedish Olympic medalist and world record holder Patrik Sjöberg; and female jumpers Iolanda Balaş of Romania, Ulrike Meyfarth of Germany and Italy\'s Sara Simeoni.
Hunter Taylor holds the record for the high jump with 74" jump!
High-jump shoes are different from most other track shoes in that there are an additional one to four holes in the heel of the takeoff shoe, where the user can insert spikes for increased traction. As in the pole vault, heel strike in the high jump is important for lift-off as it allows the user efficiently to transfer energy. In addition, heel spikes aid greatly when the jumper makes the last four to five steps of his/her approach.
| Mark | Athlete | Nationality | Venue | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.09 | Stefka Kostadinova | | Rome | August 30, 1987 |
| 2.07 | Blanka Vlašić | | Stockholm | August 7, 2007 |
| Lyudmila Andonova | | Berlin | July 20, 1984 | |
| 2.06 | Kajsa Bergqvist | | Eberstadt | July 26, 2003 |
| Hestrie Cloete | | Paris | August 31, 2003 | |
| Yelena Slesarenko | | Athens | August 28, 2004 | |
| 2.05 | Tamara Bykova | | Kiev | June 22, 1984 |
| Heike Henkel | | Tokyo | August 31, 1991 | |
| Inha Babakova | | Tokyo | September 15, 1995 | |
| 2.04 | Silvia Costa | | Barcelona | September 9, 1989 |
| Venelina Veneva | | Kalamata | June 2, 2001 |
updated (January 8, 2008)
updated (January 9, 2008)
| YEAR | HEIGHT | ATHLETE | VENUE |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1977 | 2.00 | Berlin | |
| 1978 | 2.01 | Brescia | |
| 1979 | 1.99 | Turin | |
| 1980 | 1.98 | Turin | |
| 1981 | 1.97 | Bruxelles | |
| 1982 | 2.02 | Athens | |
| 1983 | 2.04 | Pisa | |
| 1984 | 2.07 | Berlin | |
| 1985 | 2.06 | Moscow | |
| 1986 | 2.08 | Sofia | |
| 1987 | 2.09 | Rome | |
| 1988 | 2.07 | Sofia | |
| 1989 | 2.04 | Barcelona | |
| 1990 | 2.02 | Seattle | |
| 1991 | 2.05 | Tokyo | |
| 1992 | 2.05 | San Marino | |
| 1993 | 2.05 | Fukuoka | |
| 1994 | 2.00 |