Puma Athletes Win Athlete Of The Year Honours At 2025 World Athletics Awards

Global sports brand PUMA is celebrating a landmark moment as two of its elite athletes, Mondo Duplantis and Nicola Olyslagers, both won individual honours at the 2025 World Athletics Awards in Monaco.

Pole vault sensation Mondo Duplantis secured the Men’s World Athlete of the Year title after one of the most dominant seasons in the sports history. The accolade follows a year in which the Swedish star broke the world record four times, culminating in an extraordinary 6.30m clearance at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo – the 14 th world record of his career. Throughout the season he competed in PUMA’s EvoSPEED Naio NITRO™ Elite spikes, engineered to maximise runway speed and deliver the stability and explosive energy return required for world-record vaulting.

High-jumper Nicola Olyslagers was honoured with the Women’s Field Athlete of the Year award after a season defined by consistency and power. She secured both the indoor and outdoor world high-jump crowns and capped her campaign with the Diamond League title after clearing 2.04m – the highest jump of the year and a new Australian and Oceanian
record. Throughout her winning season, Nicola competed in the PUMA EvoSPEED NITRO™ High Jump Power spikes, which she relied on to deliver precision and unwavering confidence on the field.

The success of both athletes underscores PUMA’s ongoing commitment to excellence in track and field. With Duplantis and Olyslagers now recognised as the best in the world in their disciplines, PUMA reinforces its position as a leading partner in elite performance – and both athletes prove what’s possible when talent meets cutting-edge innovation.

SA’s Relay Woes Continue as Duplantis Soars Again

South Africa’s last shot at a medal on the track at the World Athletics Championships in Budapest went up in smoke as the men’s 4x100m relay team failed to complete their race in the showpiece final on Saturday night. There was a distinct sense of déjà vu, as a similar dropped baton scenario as the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 played out on the back stretch of the track.

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This time it was the second changeover between Benjamin Richardson and Clarence Munyai that proved to be the problem, as Akani Simbine stood waiting on the home straight for the baton that never arrived. Explaining what happened, Munyai said: “It’s not nice obviously because we did quite well yesterday [in the heats], and coming into today, we were looking forward to competing.”

“Obviously, it’s my mistake, because I’m the senior guy and the change wasn’t good – he missed my hand, as my hand was moving. I was looking forward, so I didn’t see at the back, but I take the blame, it’s one of those things where it happens in sport, but you just have to bounce back and hopefully the next one we can put it together.”

Both the men’s and women’s 4x100m relay titles were won by the USA, with Noah Lyles anchoring the US men home and claiming a third gold medal to go with his winning efforts in the 100m and 200m finals. In the women’s team, Sha’Carrie Richardson added a second gold to her haul, having won the 100m and finished third in the 200m.

Earlier in the day, Irvette van Zyl “survived” the blisteringly hot conditions to finish the marathon in her first World Championship appearance. She crossed the line in 2:38:32, thus securing 45th place out of 77 starters. Having failed to finish two Olympic marathons and not even making the start of the third that she was supposed to compete in because of injury, just reaching the finish in Budapest was Van Zyl’s main mission on Saturday.

“It was just proving to myself today that I can,” she said after the race, which was won by Ethiopia’s Amane Beriso in 2:24:23. “I knew I wasn’t in the shape I wanted to be, but I just wanted to show to myself if I pitch up injury-free, I can cross the finish line. It was a bit of torture on the route, but I really enjoyed it. It’s a beautiful route, and overall I’m really pleased… I don’t think I had a plan today apart from survive and finish.”

Ischke Senekal’s best second-round throw of 16.20m in qualification was not enough to see her through to the women’s shot put final after finishing 32nd overall.

Without a doubt, one of the highlights of the day’s action was Mondo Duplantis winning the men’s pole vault, retaining the World Champs title he won in 2022 in the USA. He is thus still the reigning Olympic, World and World Indoor Champion. Having won the competition on the night in Budapest with a winning height of 6.10m, he asked the officials to push the bar up to 6.23m, so that he could try to improve his own World Record. His next three jumps saw him come very close to rewriting the record books yet again, but for now his World Outdoor Record of 6:21m and his World Indoor Record of 6.22m remain the highest marks jumped to date.

Watch All Our Athlete Interviews!

Our team on the ground at Budapest have been interviewing all South African athletes after their respective events. To get an inside view on their thoughts about their performances and the World Champs experience, click the button below!


Watch Day 8 Highlights