Mateusz Przybylko

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Mateusz Przybylko athletics

20150725 1525 DM athletics men high jump 9311.jpg
Przybylko at the German Championships 2015

nation GermanyGermany Germany
birthday 9th March 1992 (age 28)
place of birth BielefeldGermany
size 195 cm
Weight 78 kg
job Sports soldier
Career
discipline high jump
Best performance 2.30 m (hall); 2.35 m (open air)
society TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen ,
first club: LG Bielefeld
Trainer Hans-Jörg Thomaskamp ,
first trainer: Georg Cadek
Medal table
European championships 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
Indoor world championships 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
German championships 3 × gold 0 × silver 2 × bronze
German indoor championships 5 × gold 2 × silver 0 × bronze
EAA logo European championships
gold Berlin 2018 2.35 m
IAAF logo Indoor world championships
bronze Birmingham 2018 2.29 m
DLV logo German championships
bronze 2013 Ulm 2.19 m
bronze 2015 Nuremberg 2.19 m
gold 2017 Erfurt 2.30 m
gold 2018 Nuremberg 2.31 m
gold 2020 Braunschweig 2.28 m
DLV logo German indoor championships
silver 2013 Dortmund 2.15 m
silver 2014 Leipzig 2.24 m
gold 2015 Karlsruhe 2.26 m
gold 2016 Leipzig 2.29 m
gold 2017 Leipzig 2.20 m
gold 2018 Dortmund 2.30 m
gold 2019 Leipzig 2.26 m
last change: August 11, 2020

Mateusz Przybylko (born March 9, 1992 in Bielefeld ) is a German athlete who specializes in the high jump . In 2018 he became European champion .

Life

Przybylko is the eldest son of the former Polish soccer player and trained master carpenter Mariusz Przybyłko and the former Polish athlete Wioletta Przybyłko . His brother Kacper Przybyłko was also a high jumper, but then decided, like his brother Jakub Przybyłko , who plays for TuRU Düsseldorf , for a career as a professional footballer . Kacper Przybylko is currently playing for Philadelphia in the American MLS . Mateusz never wanted to play football, but tried his hand at batting, javelin and hurdles as a little boy, but got stuck with the high jump. He grew up with his family in Bielefeld .

Athletic career

Przybylko won the championship title in 2009 at the German U18 championships , in 2010 at the U20 indoors and outdoors , in 2011 at the German U20 championships and annually from 2010 to 2013 at the German U23 championships .

In 2013 he became the German vice indoor champion and came third at the German championships . In 2014 he won again the runner-up at the German Indoor Championships . In 2015 Przybylko became German indoor champion . At the European Indoor Championships in Prague and at the World Championships in Beijing , he was eliminated from the qualification. In 2016 he won the German Indoor Championships again and took part in the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro , but could not qualify for the final there.

2017 was Przybylko German champions both in the hall and in the open . At the European Indoor Championships in Belgrade , he finished seventh. He fulfilled the norm for the World Championships in London with a personal best of 2.35 meters at the NRW Gala on June 25th in Bottrop. At the World Championships, he first jumped the required qualifying height for the final of 2.31 meters. In the competition, however, he did not reach this height again and achieved fifth place with a jumped height of 2.29 meters.

In 2018 Przybylko celebrated his fourth championship title in a row at the German Indoor Championships in Dortmund, where he increased his indoor best performance by one centimeter to 2.30 meters. On March 1, he won bronze at the World Indoor Championships in Birmingham with 2.29 m . On August 11th, he won the title at the European Championships in the Berlin Olympic Stadium with a height of 2.35 m . Przybylko jumped all heights on the first try.

Club affiliations

Mateusz Przybylko has started for TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen since September 2009 and previously for LG Bielefeld .

Personal best

  • High jump: 2.35 m, June 25, 2017, Bottrop and August 11, 2018, Berlin
    • Hall: 2.30 m, February 18, 2018, Dortmund

Web links

Commons : Mateusz Przybylko  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Mateusz Przybylko , on: tsvbayer04-leichtathletik.de, accessed July 8, 2017