Kiwi pole vaulter Eliza McCartney falls short but impresses in memorable Olympic comeback
New Zealand pole vaulter Eliza McCartney shook off a troubled five-year period to make the Olympic finals on Wednesday night (7 August). While she would ultimately fall short, it was a performance that will long be remembered by Kiwis and pole vault fans around the world.
The Rio 2016 bronze medallist enjoyed a brilliant start to the competition, clearing some great heights in one of the most competitive fields the discipline has ever seen.
After clearing 4.70, she struggled with her three attempts at clearing 4.80 – coming painstakingly close on her second attempt – and the Kiwi had to settle with a hard-fought 6th place.
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McCartney was incredibly gracious in defeat, and her trademark smile never left her face, even after knocking the bar on her final attempt. She would also stick around to show her support for the remaining competitors, including gold medallist Nina Kennedy, silver Katie Moon and bronze Alysha Newman.
"To be able to get to a final and come sixth equal, I'll absolutely take that. It's been a little bit rough lately and I think it showed," she told New Zealand publication Stuff. "I didn't have the preparation I wanted, my attempts at 4.80m were not quite it. I think it showed I hadn't quite had the right run in."
McCartney has endured a horror spell of injuries since the 2016 games, including a mystery illness that required her to re-learn her craft.
McCartney was born on December 11, 1996, in Auckland, New Zealand. She grew up in the seaside suburb of Devonport and developed an interest in sports from a very young age, largely thanks to her parents William McCartney and Donna Marshall, who were both former athletes themselves.
McCartney attended Belmont Intermediate School and Takapuna Grammar School and played a few different sports during this time. Like many Kiwi girls, she developed a love for netball, which she would play alongside singer-songwriter Lorde. The singer even congratulated her for her jump in Rio, as the New Zealand Herald reported.
She would also enjoy athletics, initially focusing on high jump, but she switched to pole vaulting in 20111. Seeing her potential in this, coach Jeremy McColl encouraged her to train more intensively; a move that would pay dividends as McCartney would win the national youth title and the New Zealand secondary school championship just one year later in 2012.
McCartney’s career reached a high point at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where she won the bronze medal in pole vault with a jump of 4.0m, becoming only the fourth New Zealander to win an Olympic medal in a field event, as reported by the New Zealand Herald. Aged 19 years and 252 days at the time, it also made her the youngest-ever women's pole vault medallist ever.
Following the Olympics, McCartney would continue to improve her jumps at various competitions around the world. In June 2018, she set a new New Zealand and Oceania record with a record jump of 4.92m. In July, she would reach 4.94m, breaking her previous record and claiming the number vault in the world in 2018. It seemed she was destined to hit the golden 5m mark soon. The world record is 5.06m, set by Yelena Isinbayeva in 2009.
But McCartney would face a major setback later in the year, as she would suffer a debilitating Achilles injury that left her unable to walk properly, as reported by The New Zealand Herald.
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She would battle through this over the coming years to make it to some competitions in 2019 and 2021, but struggled to find her previous form. Her Achilles tendinopathy, which she believes is attributed to an autoimmune disorder but has been difficult to formally diagnose, wreaked havoc on her ability to train as well as conduct normal day-to-day activities.
She told Stuff in 2021 that the injury was not just isolated to her Achilles, but had spread to her lower right leg as well, rendering her unable to compete in the Tokyo Olympics.
Despite the setbacks, she was determined to regain her form and become an international competitor once again. "The last time I was on top of my game was probably the middle of 2018. It’s been quite a long time now. It’s why the No 1 priority is the long game – making sure I can get back vaulting, and vaulting consistently," she told Stuff in 2021.
In 2022, she underwent what she called a 'biomechanical reset' in order to overcome the injury issues that had hampered her career. This would involve her learning how to walk and run in a different way to counteract the issues going on in her right leg.
The program facilitated by trainer Matt Dallow seemed to work and McCartney would be competing again in January 2023 at the Potts Classic, recording a jump of 4.36m – a step in the right direction.
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"It’s exciting to feel much more in control of the situation again, and feel this isn’t a lost cause, that it is salvageable," she told Stuff at the time. "Everybody wholeheartedly agreed that there are many reasons to think this will work and it’s completely worth doing again, and it’s not some sort of fantasy."
Proving that it wasn't a lost cause, On 7 July 2023, she cleared 4.73m at the Miting meet in Barcelona, securing her spot at the Paris Olympics in 2024 and setting a new meeting record in the process. A sensational comeback for one of the best pole vaulters in the world.
Things got even better for the now 26-year-old on July 31, as she recorded a jump of 4.85m – her best height in four and a half years – to win the CAS International in Luxembourg. "I’m happy to hit a season’s best and be back in the 4.80s again and to be jumping in the 80s again," she told Stuff at the time.
Though things seem to be on the upswing for McCartney, just one month later in August 2023, a flare-up of her injury saw her stumble at the World Championships in Budapest, failing to record a height.
2024 has been much kinder to the Kiwi star however, and her results in the lead up to the Olympics showed her to be a genuine medal threat at the Games, including a second place finish at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Glasgow, where she recorded a jump of 4.80.
At 27, we don't believe we've seen the last of McCartney between the sticks. She's still one of the best in the world on her day and still has a lot more to offer the sport over the next four years.
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