Olympic Men’s TJ — Ex-Cubans Conquer Podium

Now representing Spain, Jordan Alejandro Díaz jumped golden in the first round. (KIRBY LEE/IMAGE OF SPORT)

LEADING AN UNOFFICIAL Cuban medal sweep, Jordan Alejandro Díaz took gold with his opening round effort. That backed up his stunning 59-7¾ (18.18) world-leading mark from June’s European Championships, when he competed in a Spanish jersey for the first time.

Behind him were two other Cuban-born jumpers. Defending champion Pedro Pichardo, who has represented Portugal since ’19, took the silver and Andy Díaz Hernández, who was only cleared to compete for Italy on August 01, earned bronze.

Despite a runway that was wet from earlier rain, the competition got off to a hot start. Jumping third, Pichardo made an immediate statement, landing at 58-4½ (17.79). That didn’t top the leaderboard for long, as the 23-year-old Jordan Alejandro Díaz opened his card with a 58-7¼ (17.86), a mark that would ultimately hold up for the gold.

Díaz Hernández kept things interesting with his 57-10¼ (17.63) opener, while reigning world champion Hugues Fabrice Zango of Burkina Faso sat 4th with his 57-2¼ (17.43).

The podium was already set, but In the second round, Pichardo improved to 58-6½ (17.84) to solidify his hold on 2nd, while Jamaica’s Jaydon Hibbert moved ahead of Zango with a 57-9½ (17.61).

Jordan Alejandro Díaz backed up his lead with the day’s second longest effort, 58-6¾ (17.85) in the third round, while Díaz Hernández effected a slight improvement on his final jump, 57-10½ (17.64).

“The main objective of this competition, talking to my coach, was during the first three jumps to try to get the medal and that’s how it turned out,” said the winner — the ’18 World U18 and Youth Olympic champion, whose last global meet was the ’19 Worlds, in which he placed 8th for Cuba.

Pichardo, who followed his Tokyo victory with ’22 World Championships gold, was frustrated by his narrow defeat.

“Sadly, it didn’t turn out as I hoped,” he lamented, “but this is how competitions are, and in this competition you cannot make any mistakes. I made a lot of them and I paid for them. I lost the gold medal.”

Hibbert grabbed his hamstring during an aborted fifth-round effort and passed on his final attempt, thus remained in 4th. Zango improved to 57-5 (17.50), but that was only good for 5th, and just his second loss of the year.

NCAA champion Salif Mane, the surprise winner of the U.S. Trials, acquitted himself well in his first international appearance, opening with a 56-8½ (17.28) that was good enough to put him 8th and earn the full complement of six attempts. The 22-year-old Bronx native saved his best for last, 57-1½ (17.41), to move up to 6th.


MEN’S TRIPLE JUMP RESULTS

FINAL (August 09)

(temperature 72F/22C; humidity 88-90%)

(winds ranged from +0.9 to –1.5)

1. Jordan Alejandro Díaz (Spa) 58-7¼ (17.86)

(58-7¼, 57-10½, 58-6¾, 58-6½, 56-7¼, f) (17.86, 17.64, 17.85, 17.84, 17.25, f);

2. Pedro Pichardo (Por) 58-6½ (17.84)

(58-4½, 58-6½, f, 57-5¾, p, 58-5¼) (17.79, 17.84, f, 17.52, p, 17.81);

3. Andy Díaz Hernández (Ita) 57-10½ (17.64)

(57-10¼, 56-10¼, p, p, f, 57-10½,) (17.63, 17.33, p, p, f, 17.64,);

4. Jaydon Hibbert (Jam) 57-9½ (17.61)

(56-9½, 57-9½, 57-6¼, f, f, p) (17.31, 17.61, 17.53, f, f, p);

5. Hugues Fabrice Zango (BF) 57-5 (17.50)

(57-2¼, f, 56-7¼, 52-8, 57-5, f) (17.43, f, 17.25, 16.05, 17.50, f);

6. Salif Mane (US) 57-1½ (17.41)

(56-8½, 54-6¾, 55-10¼, f, 56-4¾, 57-1½) (17.28, 16.63, 17.02, f, 17.19, 17.41);

7. Max Heß (Ger) 57-¼ (17.38) PR

(54-1¾, 55-6¼, 57-¼, f, f, 56-0) (16.50, 16.92, 17.38, f, f, 17.07);

8. Lázaro Martínez (Cub) 56-10¾ (17.34)

(55-9¼, f, 56-10¾, 43-9¾, f, 54-6¾) (17.00, f, 17.34, 13.35, f, 16.63);

9. Yasser Triki (Alg) 56-6 (17.22)

(f, 55-11¼, 56-6) (f, 17.05, 17.22);

10. Yaming Zhu (Chn) 55-0 (16.76)

(f, 55-0, f) (f, 16.76, f);

11. Almir dos Santos (Bra) 53-10¼ (16.41)

(53-10¼, f, 53-5) (16.41, f, 16.28);

12. Connor Murphy (Aus) 53-5¾ (16.30)

(52-5½, 53-5¾, 52-10¼) (15.99, 16.30, 16.11).

(best-ever mark-for-place: 5–9)


* = progression of the leading jump; ¶ = athlete’s best of the day
first 3 rounds
dos Santos 16.41*¶ f 16.28
Zango 17.43* f 17.25
Pichardo 17.79* 17.84¶ f
Martínez 17.00 f 17.34¶
Hibbert 17.31 17.61¶ 17.53
Murphy 15.99 16.30¶ 16.11
Triki f 17.05 17.22¶
Heß 16.50 16.92 17.38¶
Zhu f 16.76¶ f
Díaz 17.86*¶ 17.64 17.85
Mane 17.28 16.63 17.02
Díaz Hernández 17.63 17.33 p
last 3 rounds
Mane f 17.19 17.41¶
Martínez 13.35 f 16.63
Heß f f 17.07
Zango 16.05 17.50¶ f
Hibbert f f p
Díaz Hernández p f 17.64¶
Pichardo 17.52 p 17.81
Díaz 17.84 17.25

QUALIFYING (August 07; auto-qualifier 56-1¼/17.10)

Qualifiers: Pichardo 57-2¾ (17.44), Díaz 56-6¾ (17.24), Zango & Mane 56-3¾ (17.16), dos Santos 55-11¾ (17.06), Hibbert 55-9 (16.99), Heß 55-8½ (16.98), Zhu 55-5¾ (16.91), Triki 55-3½ (16.85), Murphy 55-1½ (16.80), Martínez & Díaz Hernández 55-1 (16.79);

Non-qualifiers: Jean-Marc Pontvianne (Fra) 55-1 (16.79), Donald Scott (US) & Thomas Gogois (Fra) 55-¼ (16.77), Wen Su (Chn) & Andy Hechavarría (Cub) 54-9½ (16.70), Cristian Atanay Nápoles (Cub) 54-8¼ (16.67), Andrea Dallavalle (Ita) 54-7½ (16.65), Emmanuel Ihemeje (Ita) 54-1¾ (16.50), Abdulla Narangolintevida (Ind) 54-1¼ (16.49), Russell Robinson (US) 54-½ (16.47), Geiner Moreno (Col) 53-9¾ (16.40), Jordan Scott (Jam) & Tiago Pereira (Por) 53-8¼ (16.36), Jang-Woo Kim (SK) 53-6¼ (16.31), Praveen Chithravel (Ind) 53-3¾ (16.25), Jah-Nhai Perinchief (Ber) 53-3 (16.23), Leodan Torrealba (Ven) 53-1 (16.18), Ethan Olivier (NZ) 53-¼ (16.16), Yaoqing Fang (Chn) 52-0 (15.85), Necati Er (Tur) 44-9½ (13.65).