I don't try to keep files on the full range of men's records, as I do on the women's. However, these should be pretty accurate for the top of the list. Heinrich Hubbeling, who is doing the vault national records for the Helsinki Statistics Handbook with Winfried Kramer, tells me that the Handbook should be available from IAAF just about when the World Championships begin. That will have updates up to two weeks ago on men's vault records for over 200 countries.
Ukraine		6.14	Sergey Bubka		1994-07-31	Sestriere															
Russia		6.05	Maksim Tarasov		1999-06-16	Athina					
Australia		6.05	Dmitriy Markov		2001-08-09	Edmonton					
South Africa	6.03	Okkert Brits		1995-08-18	Köln					
United States	6.03	Jeff Hartwig		2000-06-14	Jonesboro					
Belarus		6.00	Dmitriy Markov		1998-02-20	North Shore					
Uzbekistan	6.00	Rodion Gataullin  	1989-09-16	Tokyo					
Germany		6.00	Tim Lobinger		1997-08-24	Köln					
France		5.98	Jean Galfione		1999-07-23	Amiens					
Israel		5.93	Alex Averbukh		2003-07-19	Madrid					
Hungary		5.92	Istvan Bagyula		1991-07-05	Linz					
Kazakhstan	5.92	Igor Potapovich		1992-06-13	Dijon					
Poland		5.90	Miroslaw Chmara  	1988-06-27	Villenuve d'Ascq					
Italy			5.90	Giuseppe Gibilisco  	2003-08-28	Saint-Denis					
Sweden		5.87	Oscar Janson		2003-06-29	Somero					
Estonia		5.86	Valeri Bukrejev		1994-07-03	Somero					
Japan		5.83	Daichi Sawano		2005-05-03	Shizuoka					
Finland		5.82	Jani Lehtonen		1993-06-26	Kuortane					
Spain		5.81	Montxu Miranda		2000-09-02	Barcelona					
Netherlands	5.81	Rens Blom		2004-06-08	Zaragoza					
Bulgaria		5.80	Atanas Tarev		1986-09-02	Lausanne					
Latvia		5.80	Aleksandrs Obizajevs	1987-07-17 	Bryansk					
Great Britain	5.80	Nick Buckfield		1998-05-27	Khania					
Czech Republic	5.80	Adam Ptacek		2002-07-13	Praha					
Austria		5.77	Hermann Fehringer  	1991-07-05	Linz					
Brazil		5.76	Tom Hintnaus		1985-08-21	Zurich					
Denmark		5.75	Piotr Buciarski		2002-04-27	Fort-de-France					
Norway		5.72	Trond Barthel		1996-07-21	Halmstad					
Mexico		5.72	Paul Benavides		1994-06-18	El Paso					
Greece		5.72	KonstadÃÂnos FilipÃÂdis 	2005-06-14 	AthÃÂna					
Switzerland	5.71	Felix Böhni		1983-06-11	Bern					
Belgium		5.70	Thibault Duval		2000-06-11	Oordegem					
St. Lucia		5.70	Dominic Johnson  	2000-08-26	El Paso					
Moldova		5.70	Aleksandr Zhukov  	1987-06-20	Chelyabinsk					
Turkey		5.70	Ruhan Isim		2000-06-06	Jonesboro					
China		5.70	Liu Feilang		2005-06-04	Eugene OR					
Portugal		5.66	Nuno Fernandes  	1996-07-13	Maia					
Puerto Rico	5.65	Edgar Diaz		1998-05-14	Abilene					
Cuba		5.65	Angel Garcia		1992-06-12	La Habana					
Canada		5.61	Doug Wood		1991-07-14	Papendal					
Slovenia		5.61	Jurij Rovan		2004-07-08	Zagreb					
Korea, South	5.60	Kim Yoo-Suk		2004-06-12	Austin TX
			
									
									
						Men's National Records--Top 20%
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Re: Men's National Records--Top 20%
Roger Ruth wrote:France 5.98 Jean Galfione 1999-07-23 Amiens
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Galfione jump 6.00m?
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Re: Men's National Records--Top 20%
Scott Go Pre wrote:Roger Ruth wrote:France 5.98 Jean Galfione 1999-07-23 Amiens
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Galfione jump 6.00m?
Your right.
Jean Galfione 5.98 Outdoors, 6.00m Indoors (1999 World Championships)
Radion Gataullin as well 6.00m Outdoors, 6.02m Indoors
-Guess they are compiling an outdoor list for the outdoor championships. Makes sense.
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That would be funny.  The one who Jeff mentors becomes greater than himself.  Kind of like Star Wars a little bit.
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									To quote Darth Vader:
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Men's National Records--Top 20%
How sweet it is, to find this forum still alive: even if the evidence of this is in posts questioning the accuracy of my lists. I invited that, and I'm appreciative of the responses.
VaultNinja already has set straight the differences between indoor and outdoor national records. (That might have been clear in the very first example, of Bubka's all-time best of 6.14m. If indoor marks had been included, his national record would have been shown as 6.15m.)
Some other examples from my list:
Galfione did, indeed, have 6.00m (but indoors, at the 1999 Maebasi World Championships meet.). He also had 6.00m outdoors, at Besacon on 23 May 1997, but this was in an exhibition performance, not in a sanctioned meet.
Gataullin had 6.00m outdoors, as shown. He did 6.02 indoors, but I didn't include indoor marks in this summary. I'm sorry that I didn't make that clear. I should have. More on combining outdoor/indoor marks, later.
As PV Newbie pointed out, Toby Stevenson has a 6.00 that would seem to qualify for this list, but as VTech Vaulter responded, this was a summary of national records and Toby's 6.00 was not a NR.
As I said before, I should have made it clear that this was a summary of outdoor national records. Just now, I'm struggling a bit with the fairness of combining outdoor and indoor marks in a single list. That first came to my attention when I discovered that several girls in my "Young Vaulters" list had better indoor than outdoor records for their ages and that some of these would move them above Australia's Vicky Parnoy in the age category lists. The problem, for me, is that Parnoy, however talented a 12- or 13- or 14-year-old, never had an opportunity to vault indoors. The problem can be extended to include many, many vaulters from other countries where indoor meets are not held. The question I'm trying to deal with is whether it's fair to compare vaulters who enjoy both indoor and outdoor seasons with those who can compete only outdoors. I'd appreciate opinions on this.
			
									
									
						VaultNinja already has set straight the differences between indoor and outdoor national records. (That might have been clear in the very first example, of Bubka's all-time best of 6.14m. If indoor marks had been included, his national record would have been shown as 6.15m.)
Some other examples from my list:
Galfione did, indeed, have 6.00m (but indoors, at the 1999 Maebasi World Championships meet.). He also had 6.00m outdoors, at Besacon on 23 May 1997, but this was in an exhibition performance, not in a sanctioned meet.
Gataullin had 6.00m outdoors, as shown. He did 6.02 indoors, but I didn't include indoor marks in this summary. I'm sorry that I didn't make that clear. I should have. More on combining outdoor/indoor marks, later.
As PV Newbie pointed out, Toby Stevenson has a 6.00 that would seem to qualify for this list, but as VTech Vaulter responded, this was a summary of national records and Toby's 6.00 was not a NR.
As I said before, I should have made it clear that this was a summary of outdoor national records. Just now, I'm struggling a bit with the fairness of combining outdoor and indoor marks in a single list. That first came to my attention when I discovered that several girls in my "Young Vaulters" list had better indoor than outdoor records for their ages and that some of these would move them above Australia's Vicky Parnoy in the age category lists. The problem, for me, is that Parnoy, however talented a 12- or 13- or 14-year-old, never had an opportunity to vault indoors. The problem can be extended to include many, many vaulters from other countries where indoor meets are not held. The question I'm trying to deal with is whether it's fair to compare vaulters who enjoy both indoor and outdoor seasons with those who can compete only outdoors. I'd appreciate opinions on this.
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