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Armand Duplantis of Sweden set a world pole vault record of 6.17 metres at an indoor meeting in Poland.
Duplantis, the US-born 20-year-old who won silver at last year's World Championships in Doha, cleared the bar on his second attempt in Torun to break the previous record of 6.16m set by French vaulter Renaud Lavillenie in February 2014.
"It's something that I wanted since I was three years old," Duplantis told the website of World Athletics. It's a big year, but it's a good way to start it."
"It's not a surprise. For two years now I knew he had the potential," the 33-year-old Frenchman told RMC Sports after competing at a meeting in Rouen.
Duplantis had almost broken the record at a meeting in Duesseldorf on Tuesday. His performance marks him out as a clear favourite for the Olympic title in Tokyo this year.
Long considered the man most likely to push the event forward, Duplantis began breaking age group records aged seven.
Coached by his American father Greg — himself a former pole vaulter who cleared 5.80m — Duplantis was a product of a track and field-crazy family which had their own vaulting apparatus in the garden.
He competed for Louisiania State University in the United States last year.
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