Kurtis Marschall Explained

Kurtis Marschall
Headercolor:yellow
Nationality:Australian
Birth Date:25 April 1997
Birth Place:Adelaide, SA, Australia
Country:Australia
Sport:Track and field athletics
Event:Pole vault
Worlds:5.55 m
Olympics:5.60m
Pb:5.95m

Kurtis Marschall (born 25 April 1997) is an Australian pole vaulter, bronze medallist at the 2023 World Athletics Championships.

Early years

Marschall was born on 25 April 1997 in North Adelaide, South Australia.[1]

In 2008, as an 11-year-old, Marschall was inspired by Steve Hooker's gold medal win at the Olympic Games in Beijing. A year later he attended a ‘come-and-try' day in Adelaide where he jumped two metres.

Marschall started training with Alan Launder and 4 years later was clearing five metres. Launder died in 2014 and Kym Simons coached him for the next few years. Not long after, Marschall made his international debut at the World U20 Championships.[2]

Achievements

in 2016 in Germany, ahead of his second World U20 Championships appearance, Marschall cleared 5.70 m, locking up Olympic qualification. It was the highest vault by a junior in the world for three years. He then competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in the men's pole vault.[3] He missed qualifying for the Olympic pole vault final on countback.

In 2017 he was 11th in the final at the World Championships. At the 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games the following year he claimed gold for Australia. Marschall was now a 5.86m vaulter and top-5 in the Diamond Leagues.

He qualified for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. In his men's pole vault group he came 2nd with a leap of 5.75m which qualified him for the final. In the final he did not register a clearance after dislodging the bar with all 3 attempts at his opening height of 5.55m.[4]

At the 2022 Birmingham Commonwealth Games he claimed gold for Australia with a winning jump of 5.70 metres.

His personal best in the event is 5.95 metres, set in Sotteville, France on 7 July 2023 and equalled in the final at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary on 26 August 2023.

International competitions

Representing
2014World Junior ChampionshipsEugene, United States10th (q)5.00 m
2016World U20 ChampionshipsBydgoszcz, Polandbgcolor=silver2nd5.55 m
Olympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil15th (q)5.60 m
2017World ChampionshipsLondon, United Kingdom7th5.65 m
2018World Indoor ChampionshipsBirmingham, United Kingdom4th5.80 m
Commonwealth GamesGold Coast, Australiabgcolor=gold1st5.70 m
2021Olympic GamesTokyo, Japan5th (q)5.75 m1
2022World Indoor ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia7th5.75 m
World ChampionshipsEugene, United States24th (q)5.50 m
2023World ChampionshipsBudapest, Hungary3rd5.95 m
2024World Indoor ChampionshipsGlasgow, United Kingdom5th5.75 m
1No mark in the final

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kurtis Marschall . olympedia.org . 8 November 2021.
  2. Web site: Kurtis Marschall. 2021-10-05. Australian Olympic Committee. en-AU.
  3. Web site: Kurtis Marschall . rio2016.com . 3 September 2016 . 25 November 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161125223807/https://www.rio2016.com/en/athlete/kurtis-marschall . dead .
  4. Web site: Salvado. John. 2021-08-03. Marschall last in Olympic pole vault final. 2021-10-05. The Canberra Times. en-AU.