Elite height jumpers take the center of the stage in ‘What Gravity Challenge’ of Doha

The second edition of the ‘What Gravity Challenge’ takes place today at the Katara Air Air Anfitheater, where some of the best high savors in the world will rise, fall and rise again.

The man is Mutaz Barshim, who is a national hero in Qatar and three times world champion and Olympic gold medista. The 32 -year -old has seen everything in the largest internships, but at home, he is building something personal. Something durable. “This event begins to honor and empower athletes,” Barshim told journalists on the eve of the event. “It’s about creating a movement, challenging limits, celebrating talents and doing it in the heart of Qatar and beyond.”

What is the high jump showcase in 2023 has quickly become a bold experiment in how can the sport be presented? Gone are the qualification rounds, the long breaks and the half -empty stages. This is a single discipline event, under the lights, with music, production and an audience that comes just to see athletes fly.

Mutaz Essa Barshim, HJ, World Athletics Championship
Eugene, Oregon, USA.
July 15-26, 2022
Barshim, Qatar, Height Salto, Photo by Kevin Morris

This year, Barshim is once again on the start list, but he is not alone. The male field includes the Silver Medista Shelby Mcewen from the United States and Hamish Kerr in New Zealand, who claimed bronze at the Tokyo Olympic Games. All eyes, however, can change to a new and very welcome addition of women.

For the first time, What Gravity Challenge will have a female competition, and the organizers did not stop. Yaroslava Mahuchikh from Ukraine, the recent Olympic champion crowned in Paris and head of the women’s world record, heads the countryside. It will join Eleanor Patterson from Australia and Christina Honsel de Germany, who are classified among the best in the world.

Yaroslava Mahuchikh, WR, Bronze in Wic, photo of Dan Vernon for world athletics

Mahuchikh spoke with confidence before his first game of the season in Doha. “I am in a strong physical and mental state, and I am excited to start my season here,” he said. “This competition sacrifices a unique atmosphere and a platform to overcome the limits of what we can achieve.”

This mixture of art and athletics is not just for show. The event has an award-winning bag of $ 155,000, and the winner receives a trophy designed to measure the Qatar Ahmed al-Bahrani sculptor. His work, rooted both in modern art and in the local tradition, adds another layer of identity to competition, connecting sport with culture in a way that feels earned.

The format is designed for intensity. A condensed field, a compact place and an energized crowd means that athletes must be in the first jump. That urgency is what Barshim believes that he will keep people return, not just fans.

The Katara amphitheater, typically reserved for concerts and cultural events, provides a film environment. Roman inspiration steps of the place and the coastal backdrop sacrifice something that television cannot always capture: intimacy. Fans sit at just meters from the jumpers, close enough to listen to their exhalation before a race.

Mutaz Essa Barshim, 2018 Birmingham World Champs, photo of Mike Deering/The Shoe Addicts

As Global Athletics seeks ways to connect with younger audiences, What Gravity Challenge is a bold swing. And although it may not carry the weight of an important championship, it has something that must be missing, clarity of purpose. It is short, sharp and built around the child of moments that become viral.

Hope, of course, is that it inspires not only fans but the next generation of athletes. “When I was a child, I never imagined doing something like this,” Barshim said. “Now we have the opportunity to show the future of our sport here in Doha.”

  • Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s main athletics journalists, since he has worked on various capabilities as a writer, content creator and reporter for radio and television stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered various degrees of sports competitions inside and outside Nigeria, which includes African championships and Junior World Championships. In addition, it found one of the main sports and brand sports companies in Nigeria in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how the athletes are perceived in Nigeria while seeking to increase their image level.

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