Yaroslava Oleksiivna Mahuchikh (Ukrainian: Ярослава Олексіївна Магучіх; pronounced [jarosˈɫawa maˈɦutʃix]; born 19 September 2001) is a Ukrainian high jumper and women's high jump world record holder. She won the gold medal at the 2024 Summer Olympics, 2023 World Championships and 2022 World Indoor Championships. Mahuchikh is also the 2020 Summer Olympics bronze medalist, 2019 and 2022 World Championships silver medalist and 2024 World Indoor Championships silver medalist. She is a three-times Diamond League title holder.
At the 2024 Paris Diamond League, she broke the world record in the event with a jump of 2.10 m.
Early life
editYaroslava Mahuchikh was born on 19 September 2001 in Dnipropetrovsk (now - Dnipro)[1] to Olha and Oleksiy Mahuchikh. Her father Olekiy was a canoeist and mother Olha was a gymnast and did athletics. Older sister Anastasia Hryhorovich was into karate and athletics and represented Ukraine in karate competitively.[9][10][11]
Mahuchikh began doing sports at the age of seven[12] following her sister's lead. Karate became young Mahuchikh's first sport when she accompanied her sister to her karate classes.[13] But Mahuchikh didn't like karate and gave up after a few tries. To help channel the tireless energy of young Mahuchikh to good use, her sister brought her to the local sports club, where she trained, to try athletics next. Young Mahuchikh began to train under her sister's coach Olena Kutsenko where what started off as play classes gradually turned into full-fledged training.[14] Prior to focusing on high jump, Mahuchikh started out competing as a sprinter, hurdler and long jumper,[13] until her current coach Tetiana Stepanova came to the sports club in Dnipro when Mahuchikh was 11. At first, Kutsenko and Stepanova coached Mahuchikh together, but later at the age of 13, Mahuchikh came under the tutelage of Tetiana Stepanova after the coaches parted ways. Under Stepanova's guidance, Mahuchikh deepened her love for sports and found her niche in high jump progressing rapidly in the next few years.[15][9][14]
Aside from athletics, Mahuchikh attended singing and art lessons when she was little. She grew to like drawing and painting and participated in art contests until about 2015 - 2016.[16][17] She dreamed of becoming an artist or singer but that changed after she started with track and field.[18] She went on later to enrol in Dnipro Higher School of Physical Education to pursue her new aspirarion to become a coach.[11][18]
Career
edit2016 - 2018: Youth and junior career
editIn 2016, she won the gold medal at the Ukrainian National Juniors Athletics Championships, held in Zaporizhzhia.[19] In that year, Mahuchikh competed at international youth track and field competition between Ukrainian, Belarusian and Turkish national athletics teams in Lutsk, winning a silver medal.[20]
At the age of 15, Mahuchikh competed at her first international meeting in Minsk, jumping 1.82 metres.[21] In May 2017, she won a first gold medal in her youth career at international youth track and field competition between Ukrainian, Belarusian and Turkish national athletics teams in Bursa with a clearance of 1.88 metres.[22] In July 2017, she won the gold medal at the 2017 IAAF World U18 Championships in Nairobi by the largest margin in World U18 Championships history with a personal best of 1.92 m. She equalled the championship record of her compatriot Iryna Kovalenko from 2003.[23] A few weeks later, she won the high jump event at the European Youth Olympic Festival in Győr with a clearance of 1.89 m.[24]
In May 2018, Yaroslava competed at the international meeting Internationales Pfingstsportfest, winning a bronze medal with a jump of 1.86 metres.[25] In July 2018, Mahuchikh cleared 1.94 m at the European U18 Championships and won the gold medal by 10 cm over the runner-up, setting a new championship record.[26] In the end of this month, Yaroslava won a silver medal at the international track and field meeting in Schifflange, jumping 1.93 metres.[27] In October, she won the gold medal at the Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires with a combined height of 3.87 m and set a new personal best of 1.95 m at stage 2.[28] A month after her Youth Olympic success, Mahuchikh improved her personal best to 1.96 m and equaled the world U18 best in an annual indoor meeting in Minsk.[29]
2019 - 2020: First medal at the World Championships and new world junior record (indoor and outdoor)
editDuring the 2019 indoor season, Mahuchikh jumped 1.99 m at the Miloslava Hübnerová Memorial in Hustopeče and equaled Vashti Cunningham's U20 world record.[30]
At the start of outdoor season in May, she won the opening meeting of the Diamond League in Doha with an outdoor personal best of 1.96 m and became the youngest athlete ever to win a Diamond League event at the age of 17 years and 226 days.[31]
On 30 June, at the Prefontaine Classic in Palo Alto, 7th league of the 2019 Diamond League series, Mahuchikh cleared 2.0 m for the first time, becoming the youngest jumper in history to do so. She finished 3rd at that diamond league event.[32]
In September, she jumped 1.89 m at the Diamond League Final in Brussels, finishing in sixth place.[33] Later that month, she jumped 2.04 m at the World Championships in Doha, winning the silver medal and breaking the world U20 record held by Heike Balck[34] since 1989 to become the youngest ever field event medallist in World Championships history[32] at the age of 18 years and 11 days, displacing Heike Drechsler who won the long jump title in 1983 at 18 years and 241 days.[13]
Mahuchikh is a member of the Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces of Ukraine since 2019.[35]
Mahuchikh was voted the European Athletics Female Rising Star and World Athletics Female Rising Star that year.[36][37]
In January 2020, Mahuchikh jumped 2.01 m in Lviv, a new world U20 indoor record,[38] which she broke again a few days later when she jumped over 2.02 m in Karlsruhe.[39] On 5 March, World Athletics officially ratified her world indoor U20 record.[40] She was the overall winner of the World Indoor Tour in February, thereby securing a wildcard for participating in World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, later postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic regulations in China.[41][42][43][44]
2021: First Olympic medal and first European indoor title
editIn January, Mahuchikh debuted her indoor season competing at the Christmas Starts in Kyiv, where she jumped 2.02 m matching her Ukrainian indoor record which she set in Karlsruhe last January.[45] Later that month, Mahuchikh won a gold medal at the International High Jump Meeting Udinjump, held in Udine, Italy, jumping 2.00 metres, but with three failures at 2.03 m.[46]
In February, Mahuchikh cleared 2.06 m at Banská Bystrica, the highest any woman had jumped indoors since 2012 and a Ukrainian national record.[47] On 12 February, Mahuchikh won the gold medal at the Ukrainian Athletics Indoor Championships, jumping 2.00 m.[48]
In March, she finished her indoor season receiving the gold medal at the European Indoor Championships in Toruń.[49]
In June, Mahuchikh won the gold medal at the Ukrainian Athletics Championships in Lutsk with a jump of 2.00 m.[50]
In July, Mahuchikh won the Diamond League stage BAUHAUS-galan in Stockholm with an outdoor world-leading mark of 2.03 m.[51] On 10 July, she won the gold medal at the European U23 Championships in Tallinn, clearing a championship record of 2.00 m.[52]
In August, Mahuchikh won the bronze medal in the high jump at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.[53] It was the third Olympic medal won by Ukraine in the women's high jump event after Inha Babakova and Vita Styopina, who both clinched bronze medals too at the 1996 and 2004 Summer Olympics respectively.[54][55]
In September, Mahuchikh finished first at the Diamond League stage 2021 Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, jumping 2.02 m.[56] Later that month, she came in second at the Diamond League Final in Zürich with a jump of 2.03 m.[57]
2022: First World Indoor Championships gold medal and first Diamond League title
editIn February, 9 days before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Mahuchikh cleared a European-leading jump of 1.99 metres at the Banská Bystrica high jump meeting in Slovakia.[58]
In March, days after fleeing the Russian invasion, Mahuchikh claimed the gold medal in the high jump at the World Indoor Championships in Belgrade.[59] She had to undertake a three-day journey of 2000 km by car from Ukraine to Serbia to compete at the championships.[60] Afterwards, she moved to Germany to train while the war continued in her country.[61]
In April, Mahuchikh won the Diamond League stage Prefontaine Classic in Eugene, jumping a world-leading mark of 2.00 metres, to claim her first circuit victory since the start of Russian invasion of her country.[62] In June, she improved her world lead to 2.01 metres at the Diamond League stage 2022 Meeting de Paris.[63]
In July, Mahuchikh won the silver medal at the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon,[64] and in August, she took gold medal at the European Championships in Munich, becoming the first Ukrainian to earn the European title in high jump.[65]
In September, she won the high jump at the Brussels Diamond League meeting with a world-leading mark of 2.05 m, which was also a Ukrainian national record.[66] Later that month, she won the Diamond League Final in Zürich with a jump of 2.03 m, 9 cm ahead of her nearest competitor. Mahuchikh won five of the seven Diamond League high jump events in 2022.[67]
In October, World Athletics announced that Mahuchikh together with fellow Ukrainian high jumper Andriy Protsenko were shortlisted as one of the three finalists for the International Fair Play Committee’s (CIFP) Fair Play Award 2022. Both athletes were nominated for displaying "incredible strength and resilience" to win silver and bronze medals respectively at the Oregon 2022 World Championships, despite facing huge challenges due to the current situation in Ukraine.[68] The fair play award eventually went to Katie Nageotte and Holly Bradshaw. For her sporting achievements in 2022, Mahuchikh was a finalist in her first nomination for the European Female Athlete of the Year award competition.[69] She was also nominated for the Women's World Athlete of the Year award by World Althletics,[70] for the first time too.
In November, Mahuchikh was nominated for the 2022 International Female Athlete of the Year by Athletics Weekly (Readers' Choice Awards)[71] and also for the World Women's Athlete of the Year by Track and Field News.[72]
2023: First senior World Championships gold medal and second Diamond League title
editIn January 2023, Mahuchikh cleared a world-leading jump of 2.00 m at the Demyanyuk Memorial in Lviv.[73] The following month, she improved her world-leading result, jumping 2.02 m at Metz Moselle Athelor meeting in Metz.[74] In March, Mahuchikh finished her indoor season, winning the gold medal at the European Indoor Championships.[75]
In June, she won the gold medal at the European Games. It was the third gold medal for the Ukrainian athletics team during this European Games.[76]
In August, Mahuchikh won the gold medal at the World Championships in Budapest[77] becoming the first Ukrainian to win a world title in 10 years since 2013 when high jumper Bohdan Bondarenko and heptathlon athlete Hanna Melnychenko last won gold medals at the 2013 World Championships in Moscow.[78] It was also the second gold medal in women's high jump at the World Championships after Inha Babakova in 1999.[79] Three days later after Mahuchikh's win at the World Championships, Estonia handed over a lifesaving demining robot "Yaroslava", named after her, to the Ukrainian Armed Forces.[80]
On 2 September, Mahuchikh jumped a season-best mark of 2.02 m at the Diamond League stage in Xiamen.[81] Later in the month, she defended her diamond league title at the Diamond League Final in Eugene, Oregon with a world-leading mark of 2.03 m, becoming the first Ukrainian in history to win two Diamond League trophies.[82]
Later in the year, Mahuchikh was a finalist in the 2023 Women's European Athlete of the Year award competition for a second consecutive year. She was also nominated by World Athletics for the 2023 Women's World Athlete of the Year award, also for a second time in her career.[83] [84] For the second time in her career, Mahuchikh was also a nominee for the 2023 International Female Athlete of the Year award by Athletics Weekly (Readers' Choice Awards)[85] and for the 2023 World Women's Athlete of the Year award by Track and Field News.[86]
2024: New senior world record and first Olympic gold medal
editIn January, Mahuchikh kicked off her 2024 campaign at the Internationales Springer-Meeting in Cottbus in superb form clearing a world-leading jump of 2.04 m, both a meeting record and the highest she ever started in a competitive year.[87] In February, she debuted at the Millrose Games, where she won the gold medal with a jump of 2.00 m.[88] In March, Mahuchikh won the silver medal at the World Indoor Championships.[89] In June, she won the gold medal at the European Championships in Rome, Italy, becoming European champion for a second time in a row.[90]
In July, she broke the world record in high jump by jumping 2.10 m at the Wanda Diamond League in Paris. The previous record (2.09 m) was one of the longest-standing on the books, set by Stefka Kostadinova at the 1987 World Championships.[91] On 24 October 2024, World Athletics officially ratified her world record.[92] On 8 July, a day after Mahuchikh set the new world record, Russia launched a massive missile attack on Ukraine killing at least 47 people and injuring about 170 others including 2 adults who died when Okhmatdyt children's hospital was hit. Mahuchikh reacted to the missile attack on Instagram saying "No record will bring joy while Russia attacks my country every day, kills our soldiers, and takes the lives of children and their parents".[93]
In August, Mahuchikh won the gold medal at the Summer Olympics in Paris, jumping 2.00 m to become a new Olympic champion.[94][95][96] It was Ukraine's first individual gold of the Summer Games, following a victory in women's team sabre fencing.[97] Mahuchikh became the third Ukrainian Olympic champion in athletics after Inessa Kravets in triple jump in 1996 and Nataliya Dobrynska in pentathlon in 2008.[98] Mahuchikh also became the first Ukrainian sportswoman to win the Youth Olympic Games and Olympic Games[99] and to win two Olympic medals in athletics.[100] After the final of the high jump event, Time, The New York Times and other media outlets wrote about her routine of resting in a sleeping bag during jump breaks, which aided her in winning gold medal at this Summer Olympics, and all of her sudden she became a hero of memes.[101][102][103]
On 22 August, Mahuchikh marked her debut as Olympic champion winning the Diamond League stage Athletissima in Lausanne by jumping 1.99 m.[104] With this victory, her third Diamond League win of the season having previous triumphed in Stockholm and Paris, she qualified early for the Diamond League Finals at Brussels before the last leg of the diamond league high jump series at Zürich.[105]
In September, Mahuchikh won the Diamond League stage Weltklasse Zürich amid rainy conditions with a clearance of 1.96 m, her lowest winning height in a year and a half at international competitions.[106][107] On 13 September, Mahuchikh won the Diamond League Final in Brussels by jumping 1.97 metres and winning her third Diamond League title of her career.[108][109]
In October, Mahuchikh was crowned the European Female Athlete of the Year for the first time, becoming too the first Ukrainian sportswoman to win this award and just the second Ukrainian to be crown after high jumper Bohdan Bondarenko won the men's award in 2013.[110][111] She was a finalist for the award in 2022 and 2023. Later in the month, for the third time in her career, Athletics Weekly nominated Mahuchikh for International Female Athlete of the Year.[112]
In November, Mahuchikh was crowned the Balkan Female Athlete of the Year by Association of the Balkan Athletics Federations, where Ukrainian Athletic Federation is a member since 2016.[113] On 4 November, World Athletics announced that Mahuchikh and Nafissatou Thiam were shortlisted as finalists in the Women’s Field Athlete of the Year award competition.[114] On 23 November, International Sports Press Association nominated Mahuchikh for Best Female Athlete of 2024.[115]
Controversy with Lasitskene
editAfter the final event at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Mahuchikh congratulated Russian high jumper and Olympic champion Mariya Lasitskene for her win and hugged her.[116] Her gesture of sportmanship however evoked a wave of nationalistic feelings among Ukrainians and caused a controversy because of the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War and the fact that both athletes were honorary members of their respective country's armed forces. Lasitskene held the rank of captain in the Russian Armed Forces while Mahuchikh was a junior lieutenant in the Armed Forces of Ukraine: their military ranks were awarded to them because of their outstanding athletic achievements.[117] Ukrainian karateka Stanislav Horuna, who won bronze in the men's under 75 kg kumite karate category, took to Facebook to express his support for Mahuchikh.[118][119] Mahuchikh herself explained that the photo with Lasitskene had no political intent.[116]
In September 2021, after the Diamond League Final, there was a new controversy because of another picture with Lasitskene, who had won the Diamond League Final.[120] This photo was published by Australian high jumper Nicola Olyslagers in Instagram.[121]
After the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Mahuchikh said that she regretted the photo with Lasitskene during the 2020 Summer Olympics and that Lasitskene wasn't her idol anymore.[122]
Scandal with Kulichenko
editDuring the 2024 European Athletics Championships Mahuchikh was upset of the participation of former Russian athletes at the international competitions in example of Elena Kulichenko, a Russian and Cypriot high jumper, future participant and flagbearer of 2024 Summer Olympics.[123]
Before Olympic Games, it was found an OnlyFans account of Elena Kulichenko, who herself explained that it was a fake account.[124] Her brother Vladimir Kulichenko accused Mahuchikh for throwing her psychological balance before Olympic Games.[125] After Olympic Games Kulichenko told a Russian sport publishing house Sport24 that she got angry to Mahuchikh and considered that sport must be without politics.[126] Some months later after Summer Olympics, Mahuchikh told Tribuna, a Ukrainian publishing house, in an interview that she didn't pay any attention to the disturbance of Kulichenko.[127]
Contributions to Ukraine's war effort
editOpposition to Russian athletes competing internationally
editOn 1 March 2022, in the wake of Russian invasion of Ukraine, World Athletics banned Russian and Belarusian athletes from all international track and field competitions for the forseeable future.[128]At the 2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships in mid-March 2022, Mahuchikh condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[129] In July 2022, during the 2022 World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon, Mahuchikh voiced support when World Athletics reaffirmed its decsion to exclude Russian athletes from Oregon22.[130]
The International Olympic Committee had earlier recommended international federations to exclude Russia and Belarus from hosting and competing in the wake of the Russian invasion. In June 2023, at the Lausanne diamond league, after the IOC made a partial change of decision in March 2023 recommending international federations to allow the gradual return of neutral Russian athletes - those evaluated to have no miltary links - back to international competitions, Mahuchikh publicly criticised president of the IOC Thomas Bach arguing defending Russian athletes citing discrimination is unacceptable when Ukraine's situation remained unchanged and many of her country's athletes were still deprived of a safe and proper training facility. She insisted Russians should be excluded from 2024 Paris Olympics. But IOC's decision in March 2023 held off on deciding whether Russian and Belarusian athletes could compete at next year's Summer Olympics until an appropriate time.[131][132][133]
In February 2024, after IOC announced in December 2023 that athletes from Russia and Belarus will be allowed to take part as individual neutral athletes in 2024 Paris Olympics, so long as they meet certain eligibility criteria, Mahuchikh expressed disappointment saying that it would be difficult for her to compete against athletes from those countries as they would remind her of the destruction of the cities and lives in Ukraine brought about by Russian people.[134][135]
Assisting Ukraine's war needs
editIn November 2023, Mahuchikh supported the Ukrainian art project "Stolen art", established by United24 and the Oliz brand to draw attention to the destruction of Ukrainian culture.[136]
In August 2024, after her win at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Mahuchikh transferred a portion of her prize money to animal rights groups and military needs in her country. She donated 1 million hryvnas to animal rescue organisation Uanimals and four shelters: Sumy Society for the Protection of Animals,[137] "Pegas" in Dnipro, "Homeless World" and "Dnipro Animals Foundation".[138] She also donated 500 thousand hryvnas to the military's Azov's Angels Patronage Service and another 500 thousand hryvnas to the Hospitallers to fund the treatment and recovery of wounded soldiers with head injuries.[139][4] Later, Ukrainian influencer and blogger Ihor Lachenkov in Telegram announced Mahuchikh's donation of 1 million hryvnas to provide vehicles for combat units of the Ukrainian Armed Forces on the front line.[140]
In October 2024, Mahuchikh told Tribuna, a Ukrainian sports publishing house, in an interview that she donated her 2024 Paris Olympics competition bib to the "Heroes Cup" charity auction where it was sold for 300,000 hryvnas (UAH) to help with military rebuilding effort.[141] In the same month, Mahuchikh took part in the 18th Council of Europe Conference of Ministers responsible for Sport, held in Porto, where she made a speech about the Ukrainian sport during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[142][143] Later that month, Mahuchikh became an ambassador of the Ukrainian National project "Vriatyi Kintsivky" (Save Limb), dedicated to the rehabilitation of Ukrainian Armed Forces troops.[144]
In November 2024, Mahuchikh told to a television host and media personality Masha Efrosynina in an interview that she privately donated to troops of the Ukrainian Armed Forces since the beginning of the Russian invasion in 2022, spending all earned money in 3 years.[145][4]
International competitions
editYear | Competition | Venue | Position | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | World U18 Championships | Nairobi, Kenya | 1st | 1.92 m | CR[146] |
European Youth Olympics | Győr, Hungary | 1st | 1.89 m | [147] | |
2018 | European U18 Championships | Győr, Hungary | 1st | 1.94 m | CR[148] |
Youth Olympic Games | Buenos Aires, Argentina | 1st | 1.92 m + 1.95 m[a] | [149] | |
2019 | European U20 Championships | Borås, Sweden | 1st | 1.92 m | [150] |
Diamond League Final | Brussels, Belgium | 6th | 1.89 m | [151] | |
World Championships | Doha, Qatar | 2nd | 2.04 m | WJR[152] | |
2021 | European Indoor Championships | Toruń, Poland | 1st | 2.00 m | [153] |
European U23 Championships | Tallinn, Estonia | 1st | 2.00 m | CR[154] | |
Olympic Games | Tokyo, Japan | 3rd | 2.00 m | [155] | |
Diamond League Final | Zürich, Switzerland | 2nd | 2.03 m | [156] | |
2022 | World Indoor Championships | Belgrade, Serbia | 1st | 2.02 m | [157] |
World Championships | Eugene, USA | 2nd | 2.02 m | [158] | |
European Championships | Munich, Germany | 1st | 1.95 m | [159] | |
Diamond League Final | Zürich, Switzerland | 1st | 2.03 m | [160] | |
2023 | European Indoor Championships | Istanbul, Turkey | 1st | 1.98 m | [161] |
European Games | Chorzów, Poland | 1st | 1.97 m | [162] | |
World Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 1st | 2.01 m | [163] | |
Diamond League Final | Eugene, USA | 1st | 2.03 m | [164] | |
2024 | World Indoor Championships | Glasgow, United Kingdom | 2nd | 1.97 m | [165] |
European Championships | Rome, Italy | 1st | 2.01 m | [166] | |
Diamond League Paris | Paris, France | 1st | 2.10 m | WR[167] | |
Olympic Games | Paris, France | 1st | 2.00 m | [168] | |
Diamond League Final | Brussels, Belgium | 1st | 1.97 m | [108] |
National championships
editYear | Competition | Location | Position | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Ukrainian U18 Championships | Zaporizhzhia | 1st | 1.75 m | [19] |
2017 | Ukrainian U18 Indoor Championships | Zaporizhzhia | 1st | 1.83 m | [169] |
Ukrainian U20 Indoor Championships | Sumy | 1st | 1.84 m | [170] | |
Ukrainian U18 Championships | Kropyvnytskyi | 1st | 1.80 m | [171] | |
2018 | Ukrainian U18 Indoor Championships | Sumy | 1st | 1.80 m | [172] |
2019 | Ukrainian Championships | Lutsk | 2nd | 1.96 m | [173] |
2020 | Ukrainian Indoor Championships | Sumy | 1st | 2.01 m | [174] |
2021 | Ukrainian Indoor Championships | Sumy | 1st | 2.00 m | [175] |
Ukrainian Championships | Lutsk | 1st | 2.00 m | [176] |
Personal bests
editEvent | Best | Venue | Date |
---|---|---|---|
High jump (outdoor) | 2.10 m (6 ft 10+1⁄2 in) | Paris, France | 7 July 2024 |
High jump (indoor) | 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) | Banská Bystrica, Slovakia | 2 February 2021 |
Sources:[8][177] |
Personal life
editShe is currently dating Nazar Stepanov, a Ukrainian hurdler and their national record holder, who is the son of Mahuchikh's coach Tetiana Stepanova.[178] In November 2023, Mahuchikh said in her interview that she was engaged to Nazar.[179] In October 2024, Yaroslava told Obozrevatel, a Ukrainian publishing house, in an interview that she didn't plan a wedding with Nazar because she wanted to be married in Ukraine, where it was impossible to hold a wedding ceremony because of the Russian invasion.[180]
Mahuchikh picked up the hobby of reading since young. She read Harry Potter books by J.K. Rowling to improve her english. Besides fantasy, she read other genres such as science fiction, romance and crime fiction. Besides novels, she liked books that chronicled successful companies such as Netflix and Starbucks as well as biographies of successful people such as Will Smith and Coco Chanel.[181] One of her favourite read was “Pour Your Heart Into It: How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time” by Howard Schultz.[13]
Mahuchikh is also an ambassador of Puma and Omega SA.[182][183][184] She modelled occasionally for her brand sponsors and for various fashion and lifestyle magazines such as Elle[185] and Vogue Ukraine.[186] She appeared in New York Fashion Week before.[181][187]
In October 2024, Mahuchikh called Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis the best male athlete of the world because of his breaking world records.[188]
Recognitions
edit- World Athletics Awards
- Female Rising Star of the Year (2019)[37]
- European Athletics Awards
- European Female Athlete of the Year (2024)[111]
- Female Rising Star of the Year (2019)[36]
- European Athlete of the Month
- Balkan Athletics Awards
- Ukrainian Athletic Federation Awards
- The EOC Piotr Nurowski Prize for Best European Young Athlete (2019)[195]
- Ukrainian Civil Decoration
- Member 1st Class of the Order of Princess Olga (2024)[196]
- Member 2nd Class of the Order of Princess Olga (2023)[197]
- Member 3rd Class of the Order of Princess Olga (2021)[198]
- National Olympic Committee of Ukraine Awards
- Sports Title conferred by Ministry of Youth and Sports, Government of Ukraine
- Ukraine Sports Press Association Awards
- "Treasure of the Nation" National Award (2024) by NGO "Guardian of Humanity"[212][213]
- Other Recognitions
- Top 15 of the greatest teenage athletes in the world by Business Insider (2019)[214]
- Top 10 World Female Athletes by Making of Champions (2022)[215]
- Forbes 30 Under 30
- Top 100 most influential Ukrainians according to The New Voice of Ukraine[218] and Focus (2024)[219]
- Top 100 Ukrainian leaders according to Ukrainska Pravda (2024)[220]
Nominations
editYear | Award | Announced by | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2019 | World Rising Star of the Year | World Athletics | Won |
European Rising Star of the Year | European Athletics Association | Won | |
2022 | World Athlete of the Year | World Athletics | Nominated |
World Athlete of the Year | Track and Field News | Nominated | |
International Female Athlete of the Year | Athletics Weekly | Nominated | |
European Athlete of the Year | European Athletics Association | Finalist | |
2023 | World Athlete of the Year | World Athletics | Nominated |
World Athlete of the Year | Track and Field News | Nominated | |
International Female Athlete of the Year | Athletics Weekly | Nominated | |
European Athlete of the Year | European Athletics Association | Finalist | |
2024 | World Athlete of the Year (Field) | World Athletics | Finalist |
International Female Athlete of the Year | Athletics Weekly | Nominated | |
AIPS Best Female Athlete | International Sports Press Association | Nominated | |
European Athlete of the Year | European Athletics Association | Won |
Notes
edit- ^ This event took place in two stages, and these results were added for the final placing.
- ^ a b Award is presented at Ukraine's Heroes of Sports Year annual awards ceremony
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d "Yaroslava Mahuchikh". Olympedia. OlyMADmen. Retrieved 15 February 2023.
- ^ "Tilastopaja Oy Track and field statistics | Yaroslava Mahuchikh". tilastopaja.eu. Tilastopaja. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
- ^ "Президент України Володимир Зеленський відзначив нашу олімпійську чемпіонку Ярославу Магучіх орденом княгині Ольги І ступеня". dnipro.tv (in Ukrainian). 24 August 2024. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
- ^ a b c ""I don't know how terrorists can be allowed to participate in the Olympic Games," an interview with Olympic Champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh :: Svidomi". svidomi.in.ua. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
- ^ "World Rankings | Women's High Jump 2022".
- ^ "World Rankings | Women's High Jump 2023".
- ^ "World Rankings | Women's High Jump 19 November 2024".
- ^ a b c "Yaroslava Mahuchikh". World Athletics. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ a b "Лети как Ласточка – Стремительное Восхождение Ярославы Магучих". sports4world.com (in Russian). 9 February 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2024.
- ^ "Ukraine's Olympians will compete with fury for more than medals". NBC. 13 July 2024. Retrieved 25 August 2024.
- ^ a b "20 under 20: Yaroslava Mahuchikh | SERIES | World Athletics". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
- ^ "Магучих не просто фаворит Олимпиады – она нацелена на мировой рекорд". isport.ua (in Russian). 4 August 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d "11 things you might not know about Yaroslava Mahuchikh". European Athletics. 30 October 2019. Retrieved 25 August 2024.
- ^ a b "Ескіз олівцем. Яка вона, Ярослава Магучих, 18-річна сенсація з України". glavcom.ua (in Ukrainian). 1 April 2019. Retrieved 25 August 2024.
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