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BRAZ SOARS TO GOLD

Rio 2016: Thiago Braz da Silva delivers Brazil’s first athletics gold with Olympic Record in shock pole vault win

Da Silva became the first man in Olympic history to clear six metres

THE noise echoing around the Olympic stadium swung suddenly from boos and jeers to victorious cheers around midnight, when Thiago Braz da Silva delivered Brazil's first track and field gold medal with an unlikely win in the pole vault.

Braz da Silva didn't wilt despite the dominance of defending champion Renaud Lavillenie, producing an Olympic record vault of 6.03 meters on Monday for a victory to delight the host nation.

 Thiago Braz da Silva claimed a shock win in the pole vault on Monday
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Thiago Braz da Silva claimed a shock win in the pole vault on MondayCredit: AAP
 The Brazilian delivered the first track-and-field medal for the hosts in Rio
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The Brazilian delivered the first track-and-field medal for the hosts in RioCredit: EPA

Braz da Silva had misses at earlier heights, while the world-record holder Lavillenie was clean through 5.98.

The Olympic record put the 22-year-old Brazilian in gold-medal position, but Lavillenie still had a chance to win.

Lavillenie raised the bar to 6.08 for one final attempt and, as he prepared, the crowd started booing him. The Frenchman gave a thumbs-down signal to the crowd, went up for the last attempt, but failed.

"There was no fair play from the public," Lavillenie said. "It is for football, not track and field."

 Da Silva became the first man in Olympic history to clear six metres
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Da Silva became the first man in Olympic history to clear six metresCredit: AP:Associated Press
 Da Silva celebrates after setting an Olympic record on his way to gold
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Da Silva celebrates after setting an Olympic record on his way to goldCredit: Getty Images

Regardless, after some three hours, including a rain-delay, Braz da Silva was celebrating. The host nation, which had been counting on the female vaulter Fabiana Murer to win gold later in the Olympics, now has a new star.

And, like their famous football players, the full name doesn't matter, the champion is known here as Braz.

The win sets him up as a serious rival for Lavillenie, perhaps even a threat to his world record of 6.16. He surely has the dedication. At 20, he left home to move to Italy and train with Vitaly Petrov, a former coach of the great vaulter Sergei Bubka.

 Defending champion Renaud Lavillenie failed on his attempt at 6.08m, handing the gold to the Brazilian
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Defending champion Renaud Lavillenie failed on his attempt at 6.08m, handing the gold to the BrazilianCredit: EPA

For Lavillenie, it was the second shocking defeat of a bad summer. Last month, he lost the European title when he failed to clear his opening height. This one will feel far worse though, since his whole season he had worked for this night.

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