'Incredible display': Nina Kennedy breaks Australian pole vault record
Nina Kennedy is the new Australian pole vault record holder after breaking Alana Boyd's mark on Saturday night.
Using one of Boyd's old poles, Kennedy smashed the two-time Commonwealth champion's Australian record at the Sydney Track Classic.
On a night where several of Australia's leading female athletes excelled, Kennedy was the standout.
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The 23-year-old powered over the bar at 4.82m at her first attempt, adding seven centimetres to her personal best and consigning the five-year-old mark of 4.81m set by the now-retired Boyd to the history books.
"I'm just happy that it's done and I got it tonight," said Kennedy.
"I've attempted it about five or six times this this season, so to just nail it on my first attempt, I'm so happy.
"I've had my last two comps where I've jumped on new poles and it hasn't quite worked so I actually used ... Alana Boyd's poles.
"So thanks Alana, here's a shout-out."
Riley Day sets new Personal Best in 200 metres
Meanwhile, fellow female star Riley Day smashed her PB with an Olympic qualifier of 22.77 seconds in the women's 200m.
"I knew that I was running fast, I just needed some good conditions and I had a perfect 2.0 (metres per second tailwind)," said Day.
"I couldn't be more happy.
"I've had a lot of injuries and there has been some pressure on me, people saying that I've had my day and all I've wanted to do was prove them wrong and run for myself."
Day shot to prominence as a 16-year-old when she ran against against Usain Bolt in the short-lived Nitro Series in 2017.
Dani Stevens makes epic return in discus
Competing for the first time in 16 long months after recovering from spinal surgery, former world discus champion Dani Stevens (63.36m) also made a winning return in Sydney.
Had the Tokyo Olympics taken place as scheduled in July last year, there's no way Stevens would have been there.
But with COVID-19 pushing the Games back by 12 months, Stevens' dream of finally winning an Olympic medal to go with her 2009 gold and 2017 silver at the world titles and back-to-back Commonwealth crowns remains very much alive.
"I have to keep it in perspective," said Stevens.
"This time last year was really, really hard; I'd just come out of surgery and couldn't lift my arm.
"My priority was just to get function back (and see) if I could ever throw discus again, which I'm able to do now
"It's made my realise how much I love it, how much I missed throwing, how much I missed competing."
Two days after bettering the Olympic qualifying standard in her favoured 1500m in Canberra, in-form Linden Hall stepped down in distance to win the women's 800m in 2:01.27.
Commonwealth champion Kurtis Marschall was an impressive victor of the men's pole vault with 5.75m, while Matthew Ramsden and Jenny Blundell won the national 5000m titles.
Para-athlete Michael Roeger stripped more than six seconds off his 5000m T46 world record with a time of 14:00.25.
Huge night for several Australian women at the Sydney Track Classic. @ninakennedy breaks national PV record with 4.82m, Riley Day gets Oly qualifier in 200m with 22.77s and Dani Stevens wins discus on return to action.
— John Salvado (@JohnSalvado) March 13, 2021
She came, she soared, she conquered! New national record of 4.82m for pole vaulter Nina Kennedy. https://t.co/jgoeDmtCg5
— Nicole Jeffery (@nicolejeffery) March 13, 2021
What a week in Australian athletics! Nina Kennedy's national record headlines our weekly wrap, which also includes all the action from the Canberra Track Classic, Sydney Track Classic, Queensland Championships and NCAA Indoors.
Read at https://t.co/WWwZeFtpmf pic.twitter.com/zepaK4La1E— Inside Athletics (@insideaths) March 15, 2021
NEW AUSTRALIAN RECORD FOR NINA KENNEDY!! Nina has cleared 4.82m in the Womenโs Pole Vault at the Sydney Track Classic.
๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ pic.twitter.com/511XJpq1rD— Athletics West (@athswest) March 13, 2021
What an incredible display ๐Congratulations Nina Kennedy on your new National Record. Looks like you will fly even higher
Special night of athletics in Sydney, thanks to all the athletes & officials who made it possible ๐ https://t.co/dGKSMK0BKL— Athletics Aus Pres ๐ฆ๐บ (@Pres_AthsAust) March 13, 2021
with AAP
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