Personal information | |||||||||||||||
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Born | Geelong, Victoria, Australia | 1 February 1996||||||||||||||
Height | 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) | ||||||||||||||
Weight | 70 kg (154 lb) | ||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||
Country | Australia | ||||||||||||||
Sport | Athletics | ||||||||||||||
Event | High jump | ||||||||||||||
Club | Melbourne University Athletics Club | ||||||||||||||
Coached by | Sandro Bisetto [1] | ||||||||||||||
Achievements and titles | |||||||||||||||
Personal best | High jump: 2.33 (2023) | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Updated on 29 August 2015 |
Joel Baden (born 1 February 1996) is an Australian high jumper. [2] A member of Australia's track and field squad at the 2015 IAAF World Championships and 2016 Summer Olympics, he cleared an extraordinary 2.29-metre mark twice as his personal best at the 2014 junior national meet in Melbourne, and at the North Queensland Games in Cairns two months before his maiden Games. [1] [3] Baden currently trains for the University of Melbourne's athletics club under the tutelage of his coach and mentor Sandro Bisetto. [1]
At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Baden competed for Australia, along with his fellow countryman Brandon Starc, in the men's high jump. Booking a berth on the nation's track and field team for the Games, Baden jumped a height of 2.29 metres to match his personal best that he set two years earlier in Melbourne and to attain the IAAF Olympic entry standard at the North Queensland Games in Cairns. [4] During the qualifying phase, Baden entered a height of 2.17 at his second attempt, but he could not trump the 2.20-metre barrier with all three failing attempts, ending his campaign quickly in a forty-first-place tie with Israel's Dmitry Kroyter. [5] [6]
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Representing Australia | ||||
2014 | World Junior Championships | Eugene, United States | 8th | 2.17 m |
2015 | World Championships | Beijing, China | 21st (q) | 2.26 m |
2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 41st (q) | 2.17 m |
2018 | Commonwealth Games | Gold Coast, Australia | 17th (q) | 2.15 m |
2019 | World Championships | Doha, Qatar | 25th (q) | 2.17 m |
2022 | World Championships | Eugene, United States | 10th | 2.27 m |
2023 | World Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 32nd (q) | 2.14 m |
2024 | Olympic Games | Paris, France | 27th (q) | 2.15 m |
Debbie Arden Brill, is a Canadian high jump athlete who at the age of 16 became the first North American woman to clear 6 feet. Her reverse jumping style—which is now almost exclusively the technique of elite high jumpers—was called the Brill Bend and was developed by her when she was a child, around the same time as Dick Fosbury was developing the similar Fosbury Flop in the US. Brill won gold in the high jump at the 1970 Commonwealth Games, and at the Pan American Games in 1971. She finished 8th in the 1972 Summer Olympics, then quit the sport in the wake of the Munich massacre, returning three years later. She won gold at the IAAF World Cup in 1979 and at the 1982 Commonwealth Games. She has held the Canadian high jump record since 1969, and set the current record of 1.99 metres in 1982, a few months after giving birth to her first child.
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