Who Was Left Out of the Olympic Trials Pole Vault?

In the previous post I discussed USATF’s qualifying procedure change that means marks from high school and college meets not on the World Athletics Calendar no longer count for qualifying for the Olympic Trials.

In the men’s pole vault, this change had no impact on who qualified for the Olympic Trials.

Chris Nilsen and KC Lightfoot both had their best performances in the window at meets that did not count, but this had no impact on them as they have reached all qualifying standards numerous times.

Bradley Jelmert of Arkansas State had a best of 5.72, the OT auto, from a meet at Pittsburg State that did not count, but he was able to get into the Trials with his best counting mark of 5.65.

In the women’s pole vault, the entries were impacted by marks being rejected that would have been accepted under the old system.

Here are the accepted entries for the 2024 Olympic Trials

Above is how the entries played out under the current system.

Sydney Horn (High Point) and Kyla Davis (Pittsburg St) had their best marks rejected but were accepted with their best counting marks.

Note that Kyla only made it in because several athletes scratched.

A hypothetical look at how entries would have looked under the old system

Above is a look at how entries would have looked under previous qualifying systems.

Madi Wulfekotter graduated last year from DII Central Missouri, she had a 4.51 at Nebraska-Kearney that did not count, and would have just missed getting in with her next best 4.38.

Jathiyah Muhammad is a high school pole vaulter who set a best of 4.45 at a meet at the Air Force Academy. She did not get in with her next best of 4.37.

Alina McDonald was also impacted, but decided not to pursue the Olympic Trials when the women’s pole vault was scheduled for a Sunday, which conflicts with her religious beliefs.

4.47 was the lowest mark accepted for the women’s pole vault at the 2021 Olympic Trials.

USATF Qualifying Procedure Change Leaves Some Small College and HS Athletes Out of Olympic Trials

Karsyn Leeling (NE) has the best high jump mark in the country for high school girls, at 6’1.50″/1.86m  

It is tied for the 12th best mark among all US women this year, a mark that should rank high enough to compete at the Olympic Trials.

Karsyn’s PR was no fluke, she has also high jumped 1.85, 1.82 (2x), and 1.80 (4x) at HS meets this year  

But you won’t see Karsyn at the Olympic Trials.

You would have seen her at every Olympic Trials from 1972-2021 and possibly earlier. The NFHS is a 5C member of USATF and in the past, marks from larger high school meets were always accepted by USATF for qualifying purposes.

Last year, World Athletics added a policy that meets must be on their World Athletics calendar for marks to count for their purposes, which include Olympic Games qualifying and world rankings.

A path was created for NCAA track meets to be added to this calendar. Many colleges did not add their meets, but most of the larger schools did.  

No such path exists for high school meets, and even if it did, most high schools can’t afford the extra expense.

Whether or not World Athletics recognizes a mark has no bearing on whether or not USATF accepts it for Olympic Trials qualifying.  

WA doesn’t care who we let in our Olympic Trials. Most countries don’t even have an Olympic Trials.

We know this is not about the World Athletics lists anyway because USATF *is* accepting marks from USATF-sanctioned meets that are *not* on the World Athletics calendar.

Karsyn competed in a USATF-sanctioned meet one week after her state championship. She won with a respectable mark of 1.75m, but that is below the Olympic Trials minimum entry standard of 1.80m.

From Michael Nussa, Director of High Performance at USATF: 

“USATF is committed to ensuring fair competition for all athletes at the USATF Championships and Olympic Trials and this means athletes must qualify at meets operating under USATF/World Athletics Rules.”

For most events there is little to no meaningful difference between the competition rules at the high school, college and elite levels of our sport.  

It is not inherently unfair to allow marks from college and high school meets to be used for qualifying.

In cases where “illegal” shoes were used, those marks should not be accepted, regardless of whether or not the meet was on the WA calendar.  

Given how ubiquitous video footage of competition is these days, it is not difficult for an athlete to prove their shoes were legal.

The women’s high jump is not a strong event for Team USA at the moment. We only have two women with the OG standard and no one else currently ranked high enough to be selected.  

Which is why it is so valuable for young talent like Karsyn to have the opportunity to gain experience.

The NCAA and AAU used athletes as pawns for decades until Congress stepped in, broke up the AAU and required the applicable NGBs to give the NCAA representation on their boards, an attempt to force all of the major players in each sport to play nice.

Karsyn is far from the only athlete impacted by this policy change.  

In the women’s pole vault we have three athletes who would have qualified to the Trials under the old system, but are now left out in the cold, their best marks rejected.

High school and college athletes have no control over whether or not the meets they attend are on the WA calendar, but USATF sure is doing a great job of teaching them a lesson about competing in the “wrong” meets under the “wrong” rules.

Are Your Spikes Legal?

Are your spikes legal for international purposes?

This is important if you are hoping to compete at USATF Championships/Olympic Trials.

World Athletics quietly updates their list of legal shoes throughout the year and some of these may catch pole vaulters by surprise, for example…

adidas: The TJ 2 is legal for pole vault but the TJ/PV spike is not.

Asics: The LJ Pro and LJ Pro 3 are legal for pole vault but the LJ Pro 2 is not.

Nike: The LJ Elite, PV Elite and TJ Elite are legal for pole vault but the TJ Elite 2 is not.

Check your spikes here: https://certcheck.worldathletics.org/FullList

Updates on the Jim Estes lawsuit against USATF

USATF filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit.

Jim is suing Max Siegel as an individual for allegedly defaming him and he is suing USATF as an entity for Max’s alleged defamation.

The judge dismissed the claim against Max as an individual, ruling that Max was acting solely in his capacity as USATF CEO.

The judge did not dismiss the defamation claim against USATF, finding that Jim has properly alleged defamation and that the matter should move forward to discovery.

Jim is also suing Renee Washington as an individual for negligence and USATF as an entity for Renee’s alleged negligence.

These claims were both dismissed because the judge ruled that Renee did not have a duty (in the legal sense) to Jim.

World U20 Champs Reversal?

I zoomed in to the USATF BOD meeting yesterday, and it came up briefly at the end that USATF is negotiating with World Athletics to see if they can get their security concerns addressed adequately to send a team to the World U20 Championships.

Automatic Pole Vault Standards Contribute to Injury

Yesterday at the World Indoor Championships, the automatic raising pole vault standards repeatedly malfunctioned, causing delays in the competition.

These standards malfunction at nearly every international championship, going back to at least the 1996 Olympics. I have attached photos of myself complaining about this repeatedly, going back many years.

These delays are difficult for the athletes because the vaulter who is “up” normally has no idea how long the delay will be, and has to maintain readiness because at any moment the issue will be fixed and then they will only have 60 seconds to take their attempt.

Yesterday, the French vaulter Margot Chevrier was delayed due to the standards malfunctioning. When she finally got to take her attempt, something was off and she bailed out.

When she landed on the front slant piece of the pit, her spikes somehow caught the edge of the cover and she broke her leg so badly that the bone was sticking out and blood got all over the box.

This caused further delays to the competition, as it took medical staff 20 minutes or so stabilize her and clean up the blood.

In the 30 or so years this equipment has been in use, World Athletics has complained repeatedly about the competitions taking too long. They have changed rules in ways to try and speed up the competition, for example giving the pole vaulters less time for each attempt, shortening the pegs, rounding the crossbar ends, etc.

But World Athletics continues to refuse to make a change to the faulty pole vaulting equipment that causes delays at almost every championship. This is not new technology that needs a few kinks worked out, if anything the rate of malfunction is increasing.

I am writing this post in hopes that anyone who is in a position to influence World Athletics will do so, and encourage them to stop using this type of pole vaulting standard.

I don’t understand how a technology can repeatedly fail for decades, causing one of the biggest problems we are trying to avoid in the sport (delays) and now it has contributed to an athlete being injured, without any changes being made to remedy the problem.

Thank you to everyone on the US side of the sport who has kept this faulty technology out of our domestic meets.