Athletics News

Women’s High Jump in Stockholm

Women’s High Jump in Stockholm

Women’s High Jump

It is easy to think that the high jump is just about a group of people jumping in turn and one who jumps highest wins. And at one level it is but there is so much more in terms of strategy and intrigue – at which height to start and whether to take every bar. In simple terms there were 9 jumpers in Stockholm. Six cleared 1.91 but failed at 1.93, leaving the top three to contest the “medals”.

Olysagers and Mahuchikh came into the competition at 1.91, by which time they had watched – or probably not watched – 25 jumps from those who started at 1.75 or 1.80.  It was soon clear that it would come down to a shoot-out or jump-off between those two.  It was probably an advantage for Olysagers that she was jumping before Mahuchikh and able to put pressure on, well perhaps.

Nicola Olysagers won the high jump in 2.01m in Stockholm, June 15, 2025, photo by Diamond League AG

Then the intrigue came in. Both Olysagers and Mahuchikh cleared 1.91, skipped 1.93 and cleared 1.95. Surprisingly to some Olysagers skipped 1.97 conceding the lead to Mahuchikh. Both cleared 1.99 – Olysagers first and Mahuchikh needing it to stay on level terms.

When Olysagers cleared 2.01 at the first attempt, she was ahead again. Mahuchikh failed twice at 1.99 and opted to keep her third attempt for 2.03.  Neither cleared  2.03 meaning that Olysagers won with 2.01.

Stuart Weir with Yaroslava Mahuchikh, Eugene 2022, photo by friend of Stuart Weir

What impressed me beyond the excellence of the high jumping was the length of time both spent giving interviews afterwards – or in Olysagers case – showing journalists, photographers and TV cameras her famous notebook with all her assessments of her jumps.

The comments of the two protagonists were as follows. Yaroslava: “It was a great atmosphere here with a lot of Ukrainians present and very noisy support which is lovely for me. Today Nicola  was better than me but that is ok as we have a great relationship together out there in the field. We all get on well and help one another along. We never know who will win on the day but it is always fun. It is interesting to watch us as it is fun. It is such a cool atmosphere out there when someone jumps well. We all train together so are friends and competitors”.

Yaroslava Mahuchikh’s WR of 2.10 meters! photo by Diamond League AG

Nicola: “That felt great jumping out there in those conditions. I was glad to equal my season’s best. I take great inspiration competing…

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