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Sergei Bubka

"one Of Athletics' Most Anticipated Events"



Bubka was born to a working-class family in Voroshilovgrad in what was then the Soviet Union in 1963. His father, Nazar, was a member of the Soviet Army, and expected military-style discipline from Bubka and his brother, Vasily. Bubka's mother, Valentina, worked in a hospital.



Bubka's first exposure to pole vaulting came when he was nine years old; a friend invited him to join a vaulting club. Coaches there noted that he had talent, and he soon began training with coach Vitaly Petrov. Although Bubka's father tried to force him to quit, he continued to train.

Bubka's parents divorced when he was 15, and he went to live with Vasily in a factory dormitory in Donetsk, a manufacturing city. In Donetsk, Bubka continued to train with Petrov and went to school. In 1983, Bubka won his first world championship, beginning a long reign as the best in the sport. Before he entered the field, pole vaulting was a relatively obscure sport, like many other field events, and was rarely broadcast or publicized. However, according to Kevin B. Blackistone in the Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, Bubka "transformed the pole vault into one of athletics' most anticipated events.… a raucous, hand-clapping, crowd-energizing event."

Blackistone noted that at a meet in London in 1984, the bar was set at 18-8. Bubka soared over it by a foot

Sergei Bubka

and a half. It was moved to 19-4. Bubka cleared it by eight inches. Polish vaulter Tadeusz Slusarski, who had won an Olympic gold medal in 1976 and a silver in 1980, watched this and predicted to American vaulter Larry Jessee that they were seeing the beginning of a great athletic career. Bubka had arrived, and no one could beat him.

At the Seoul Olympics in 1988, Bubka won a gold medal in the pole vaulting event. Bubka went to the Olympics again in 1992, at the Barcelona Games, but did not clear a single bar in the final competition. On his first try, he went under the bar, and on his second, he knocked it over. He passed on his third try, gaining time to get himself together. On his fourth try, knowing it was his last chance, he tested the wind and changed poles when he felt a gust. However, when he started down the runway, he felt the wind die: he had chosen the wrong pole. On the way up, his shins slammed into the bar: he had just lost his Olympic chance.

In May of 1996, Bubka traveled to Brazil to compete, inadvertently setting off a chain of events that may have prevented the city of Rio de Janeiro from making a successful bid to host the Olympics in 2004. As he entered Brazil, suspicious customs officials sawed his poles in half, saying that they might contain smuggled items. The poles did not, but they were ruined, and Bubka had to compete in a Rio de Janeiro meet using borrowed equipment. Embarrassed Brazilian officials apologized, according to a report in the Adelaide, Australia Advertiser.

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Famous Sports StarsTrack and FieldSergei Bubka Biography - "one Of Athletics' Most Anticipated Events", "the Olympic Games Are Not Meant For Me", "bubka Does Not Jump, He Flies"