Duplantis soars to 6.29m in Budapest, breaks pole vault world record for 13th time
Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis bettered his pole vault world record by a centimetre on Tuesday, clearing 6.29 metres at the athletics meet in Budapest.
Sweden's Duplantis broke the world record for the 13th time as he soared over the bar at the second attempt to improve on his 6.28m from Stockholm in June.
It was the 25-year-old's third record of 2025 having also cleared 6.27m in Clermont-Ferrand in February.
Duplantis notched up his 33rd competition victory, clearing 6.11m on his first attempt to finish ahead of Greece's Emmanouil Karalis (6.02m) and Australia's Kurtis Marschall (5.83m).
On his second attempt at 6.29m, Duplantis touched the bar with one leg and his stomach, but it held, and the jump was validated.
Since Ukrainian Sergey Bubka became the first athlete to clear 6 metres on July 13, 1985 in Paris, the world record has been broken 26 times, including 12 times by Bubka, 13 times by Duplantis and once by Frenchman Renaud Lavillenie.
The US-born Duplantis first broke the world record in 2020 with 6.17m.
Duplantis is favourite for a third consecutive outdoor world title in a month's time in Tokyo.
On the track Jamaican sprinter Bryan Levell laid down a marker for those championships by posting the third quickest time this year to win the men's 200m.
The 21-year-old, who reached the semi-finals at last year's Olympics, headed into the race with a season's best of 20.10.
He pulled away from the field in the home straight to win in 19.69 to clock the third best time of the year behind the Americans Noah Lyles (19.63sec) and Kenneth Bednarek (19.67sec).
Levell smashed Erriyon Knighton's meeting record by 0.19sec leaving South African veteran Wayde van Niekerk a distant runner-up in 20.07.
Olympic bronze medallist Muzala Samukonga held off Jereem Richards and Khaleb McRae to win the men's 400m in a season's best of 44.11 while Laban Kipkorir Chepkwony, who finished fourth at Kenya's World Trials last month, won the men's 800m in a personal best of 1min 42.96sec, breaking David Rudisha's meeting record from 2016.
Olympic champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce only managed a fourth-placed finish in the women's 100m as Ivorian sprinter Marie-Josee Ta Lou Smith held off Tina Clayton and world 200m champion Shericka Jackson.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
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The Alternative Premier League Table: No 1 – Making sense of season predictions and projections
Introducing The Alternative Premier League Table, a new series you can enjoy on The Athletic every Thursday during the season. We all know how compelling it is to stare at a league table. Whether your team is in the middle of a winning run or mired in terrible form, five minutes looking at the standings can convince you that a hundred different futures are possible. Advertisement Everyone knows the standard layout of a league table, and ours will contain several of those elements. What it will also have each week is one or two guest metrics that tap into the conversations taking place across the competition. It could be how the 20 sides are performing versus their expected goals, how many teenagers each team have fielded so far this season, how sides take corners, or how many times the coaching staff have been shown yellow cards. Frankly, the possibilities are endless — and exciting. Our aim is to enhance your holistic knowledge of the most popular football league on the planet, unearth and explain some of the season's underlying trends. Each week, Anantaajith Raghuraman will analyse the whole division, but in week one, with the games yet to begin, he starts by breaking down the Premier League season predictions and projections… The Premier League is back, and that means everyone from armchair fans to the most advanced supercomputers has plenty of thoughts about how the next nine months will play out. Opta's expected points model — based on 10,000 simulations of the upcoming season using their team strength model — is a solid starting point. And the first edition of The Alternative Premier League table below orders all 20 teams by their xPT (as of Monday, August 11). We have also included The Athletic's staff predictions by way of comparison. Oh, and you can sort the table by any metric each week by clicking the column title. While xPT will be our starting point for assessing the new season, it would be remiss not to acknowledge some of its limitations. Recent competitive form — which for most clubs means the 2024-25 season — is a significant indicator, which may explain some of the rankings in the above table. While taking in transfer activity via the impact of player trading on betting markets, the metric cannot measure the projected success of signings or the impact of departures. The same applies to managerial changes, too. Keeping all that in mind, we have divided the 20 teams into three distinct categories. Last season's big-name underperformers, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur, have been similarly rated by the xPT model, with predicted finishes of 12th and 14th, respectively. United have retooled their attack by spending about £200million ($270m) on Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Sesko. The need for an athletic midfielder and perhaps a reliable goalkeeper remains but this now feels like a squad with enough depth for a no-European-games campaign. Advertisement Ruben Amorim's methods required time on the training ground and following a busy preseason, they should get plenty of it during the campaign too. Their start to the campaign, by Opta's fixture difficulty scale, is the toughest in the league with Arsenal, Fulham, Burnley, Manchester City and Chelsea in their opening five games. Results early on, a Conference League spot and a deep cup run should be bare minimums for Amorim's second season. Who has the hardest (and easiest) start to the season? It's bad news for Manchester United, Bournemouth and Arsenal fans... United start with Arsenal, Fulham, Burnley, Man City and Chelsea — the hardest first five games of any team, based on Opta Power Rankings. Arsenal's… — Opta Analyst (@OptaAnalyst) August 11, 2025 As for Tottenham, Europa League success has been followed by the departures of coach Ange Postecoglou and captain Son Heung-min, and the arrivals of new coach Thomas Frank, winger Mohammed Kudus, and midfielder Joao Palhinha. The misfortune with injuries that hit the club for most of last season has continued into this summer. James Maddison may well be out for the entire season with a knee injury, while Dejan Kulusevski is still recuperating from knee surgery and Dominic Solanke missed plenty of pre-season. Playing in the expanded Champions League will pose its challenges, too. Tottenham hit their absolute floor in the league last season, but pre-season and Frank's press conferences have hinted at promise. Their expectation should be to finish somewhere between sixth, as predicted on average by our staff, and 14th. Newcastle's projected finish — above weekend opponents Aston Villa — may raise eyebrows too. Their form to end last season was middling, with two wins in their final six games, while their transfer window, as has been discussed endlessly, has been a struggle. With Callum Wilson gone and Alexander Isak — as it stands — in effective exile, a frontline that boasts Anthony Elanga, Anthony Gordon, Harvey Barnes, and Jacob Murphy still needs some extra firepower. Advertisement Pre-season has been tricky too, with defeats against Celtic, Arsenal, Atletico Madrid, and the K-League XI. While Newcastle have kept hold of many of their key players, have added defender Malick Thiaw and are pursuing forwards before the end of the window, their midfield still feels light outside of the first-choice trio of Bruno Guimaraes, Sandro Tonali and Joelinton. Joe Willock, who is currently injured, and Lewis Miley are their only real backups, which explains the interest in Jacob Ramsey. Ahead of the season's first game, it's tough to see them combine another top-five finish with Champions League participation. The wave of optimism has reached the banks of Selhurst Park too, with the xPT model seeing Crystal Palace mount a seventh-place finish. Success in the FA Cup and Community Shield are undoubtedly a factor, as is the fact that they have — so far — kept hold of their core from last season. Even considering all that, Conference League football is bound to take its toll and Palace's squad is not deep enough. Wide defender Borna Sosa is their only outfield addition of the window so far, while Eddie Nketiah, Matheus Franca, Cheick Doucoure, and Chadi Riad are all injured. Daichi Kamada joined that list after hobbling off against Liverpool at Wembley. The futures of Marc Guehi and Eberechi Eze are in doubt, too. Unless there's a flurry of activity in the final weeks of the window, a club-record seventh-place finish feels far-fetched. The same may be felt about Brentford, predicted to finish 10th by the xPT model. Along with Frank, his coaching staff and Mbeumo, they have also lost captain Christian Norgaard and goalkeeper Mark Flekken, while Yoane Wissa could depart too. The foundations currently in place should serve new manager Keith Andrews well. Caoimhin Kelleher and Jordan Henderson are handy additions, while Kevin Schade, Mikkel Damsgaard, Nathan Collins and Yegor Yarmolyuk, among others, are fantastic players. Advertisement Having finished 10th last season, a regression looks likely, though relegation — as predicted by a fair few of our staff — may be a step too far in a negative direction. Fulham, after an 11th-place finish in a campaign where they competed for a European spot for large swathes, have been predicted to drop all the way to 15th. They have been the least active Premier League side in this transfer window, only signing goalkeeper Benjamin Lecomte from Montpellier. Rodrigo Muniz, who has 17 league goals across the last two campaigns despite starting just 26 matches, is being linked with a move away. If so, he will need replacing but with most of last season's stars and Marco Silva still at Craven Cottage, another top-half finish shouldn't be ruled out. The three newly-promoted sides are an apt place to start this tier. Sunderland have signed Reinildo, Granit Xhaka, Noah Sadiki, Simon Adingra, Omar Alderete and Marc Guiu (on loan), with more deals in the works too. While some may deem a predicted finish at the very bottom, below Burnley and Leeds United, to be unfair, there is an undeniable 2018-19 Fulham feel to it all. At best, Regis Le Bris' team could fight for 17th. But a season akin to 2023-24 Luton Town and 2024-25 Ipswich Town ending in relegation after inciting brief whispers of 'Could they do it?' is a very real possibility. Leeds have also bolstered their ranks. Lucas Perri should be an upgrade over Illan Meslier, while Sean Longstaff, Jaka Bijol and Lukas Nmecha add Premier League-level physicality and potential. They drew with Manchester United, Villarreal and Milan in pre-season and the need for a goalscorer is evident, hence the upcoming signing of free agent Dominic Calvert-Lewin. Leeds' vocal fans and proud history are welcome additions, and the club will hope our staff's 17th-place prediction comes true. But a Daniel Farke departure midway through the season and a swift return to the Championship by the end of it are also very much on the cards. Advertisement Burnley head coach Scott Parker's Premier League record (nine wins and 30 losses in 52 matches) is only a minor improvement on Farke's (six wins and 35 losses in 49 matches). Parker's side have a more solid defensive identity than Vincent Kompany's 2023-24 side, but the overall structure of Burnley's squad should still breed scepticism. They are a largely inexperienced team with few Premier League-ready starters. They might put up a better fight than they did last time out in the top flight, but it's difficult to see them displace one of the established names. If one of these three are to stay up, Wolves could be that team to make way, according to our staff, who predict them to finish 19th, and they are not too far away on xPT either at 17th. They have lost three trusted players in captain Nelson Semedo, Matheus Cunha, and Rayan Ait-Nouri, with the latter two contributing a combined 19 goals and 13 assists in the league last season. Vitor Pereira has done an admirable job so far. Jhon Arias and David Moller Wolfe profile as direct replacements for Cunha and Ait-Nouri, and Fer Lopez is a talented player too. Jorgen Strand Larsen's loan deal from Celta Vigo has been turned permanent but he is the subject of interest from Newcastle United. Wolves still need more incomings, potentially in central midfield and central defence, to build on the second half of last season. At the other end of the table, the usual suspects Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City are expected to fill the top three in exactly that order. A three-pronged fight for the title is on the cards, with all three teams given sizeable probabilities of a finish across the top three by our staff… … and Opta's prediction model. Liverpool are the consensus favourite to repeat their title success after adding Hugo Ekitike, Florian Wirtz, Milos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong, all of whom started their Community Shield defeat on penalties to Palace. Isak and Parma defender Giovanni Leoni may yet be added, too. Optimism at Anfield is through the roof but Arne Slot admitted after last Sunday's match that they need to find a balance between attack and defence. 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The 3-0 pre-season win over Palermo showed that Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Cherki together could provide some solutions in and out of possession. Pep Guardiola finally has a true left-back in Ait-Nouri, while Omar Marmoush should be better after a full pre-season. Advertisement Defensive transitions could hurt them again if Ilkay Gundogan and Bernardo Silva are forced to play lots of minutes, but otherwise, this City team is much better equipped to deal with the top two than last season's. Right below the current 'Big Three' are Chelsea. Another busy summer has included Club World Cup success (and the theatrics that came with it) in the U.S. and eight arrivals, including Joao Pedro, Liam Delap, Jamie Gittens, Jorrel Hato and Estevao. This still-massive squad has been trimmed too, with 11 permanent departures. Levi Colwill's ACL injury is the only blot on an otherwise successful preparatory period that has included convincing wins over Bayer Leverkusen and Milan. 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Picking Wolves' 2025-26 breakout player: Ki-Jana Hoever
It is more than three years since Ki-Jana Hoever played a competitive game for Wolverhampton Wanderers. This weekend, there is a high chance that his long wait to add to his 25 Wolves appearances will come to an end, possibly even heralding a highly unexpected second chance at Molineux. Hoever's departure from the first-team picture was far from ordinary. Substituted 25 minutes into a 2-0 home defeat by Crystal Palace in March 2022, the Dutchman was then accused by then-head coach Bruno Lage of failing to prepare properly for matches, leaving himself more susceptible to injuries. There were promises of reintegration and even appearances for the club's under-23s, but until this summer, the chances of a first-team return seemed remote. Partly through necessity, the outlook has changed under a new head coach. Vitor Pereira has made Hoever his first-choice right wing-back throughout pre-season, albeit from a squad featuring precious few options. 'It's a new manager for me, and it's been good so far,' Hoever told the Express & Star in an interview during pre-season. 'I enjoy working with the team, but also with the staff. They really try to get me to the next level. I feel like they gave me an opportunity this time and I'm trying to do well. Advertisement 'I think this coach and the way we want to play suits me. So, hopefully I can be involved. He (Pereira) just tries to improve me as a player. That's the most important. I really love to work with him and with the staff. They just want to help me become a better player.' Hoever signed for Wolves from Liverpool in the summer of 2020 on the same day that the late Diogo Jota moved in the opposite direction, from Molineux to Anfield, although his £9million ($12.1m) move to the Midlands was accounted for separately to Jota's £41m transfer to Merseyside. He was regarded as a talented prospect and made 20 Premier League appearances, including nine starts, before his run-in with Lage appeared to have brought an end to his Molineux career. Much has changed at Wolves since his effective banishment. There have been two head coaches — Julen Lopetegui and Gary O'Neil — for whom he never played a game and three complete seasons, featuring relegation battles, a run to the FA Cup quarter-finals and some memorable wins. From the 19 players in the squad for Hoever's last Wolves appearance against Palace, only Jose Sa and Hwang Hee-chan remain at Molineux. Meanwhile, Hoever has made 100 appearances on loan for three clubs in three countries in eight different competitions. So much has happened that it would be easy to forget that Hoever is still just 23. While his days at Wolves appeared to be numbered when Lage decided to farm him out — first to PSV and then to Stoke City before last season's loan at Auxerre in France — he is still young enough to be considered for a second 'breakthrough' in England. Whether or not he gets it will depend in no small part on Wolves' activity in the remainder of this summer's transfer window. Signing a replacement for departed captain Nelson Semedo at right wing-back remains a priority before the transfer deadline and that player is likely to become Pereira's first-choice option in the position. What happens to Hoever at that time will be down at least in part to whether he and Wolves are happy for him to offer backup and possibly competition to the new arrival. But Wolves are unlikely to make two signings in the same position and Pereira's selection decisions throughout pre-season suggest that Hoever could well have a part to play, having started repeatedly ahead of another youngster, Rodrigo Gomes, who is currently his most obvious rival for the role. Advertisement That means that even when a new starter arrives, it seems very possible that Hoever will remain part of Pereira's squad plans. For much of the last three years, even that has felt almost impossible for Hoever. 'I hope I can be important for them as well, for the club,' he told the Express & Star. 'I obviously know I've been away for some years, but for me it's a big opportunity. 'I feel like when I came here when I was 18 years old, it was a long time ago. I was still really young, and I've developed a lot as a person, as a player, becoming an adult, and I feel like I'm ready, and hopefully I can show the staff, the gaffer, but also the fans, the club.' (Top image:) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle