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Dwight Stones' Biography
Dwight Stones' Athletic Achievements
Multimedia Page: Pictures, Video and Links
Dwight Stones' Olympic Memoirs (click the Olympic flags below to read his personal insights on games in which he participated)
1976 Summer Montreal
1980 Summer Moscow (boycotted by the USA)
1984 Summer Los Angeles
1988 Summer Seoul
1992 Summer Barcelona
1996 Summer Atlanta
2000 Summer Sydney
2002 Winter Salt Lake
2004 Summer Athens
2006 Winter Torino
2008 Summer Beijing(scheduled)
2010 Winter Vancouver (scheduled)
2012 Summer London(scheduled)
Athletic Achievements

Twice named the World Indoor Athlete of the Year by Track & Field News, Dwight Stones was one of the world's top high jumpers from 1972 to 1984. He was just 18 when he represented the U.S. for the first time at the 1972 Olympic Games, placing third in the high jump competition. Four years later, he was again third. He returned to the Olympics in 1984, finishing fourth after setting his 13th American record at that year's Trials. A three-time world record holder in the high jump, Stones set his first world record when he cleared 7' 6 1/2" in 1973 at Munich, Germany. That jump also made him the first "flop" jumper to set a world high jump record, five years after Dick Fosbury made that jumping style famous while winning the Mexico City Olympics. Stones raised the world record to 7' 7" in 1976 and added another quarter inch to the record two months later. During his 16-year career, he won an incredible 19 national championships and remains history's all-time #1 ranked high jumper. In 1984, Stones became the first athlete to both compete and announce at the same Olympics. Since then, he has been a color analyst for all three major networks and continues to cover track and field consistently on television.

Championship Placings
Olympic Games
1972 - 2.21m (7' 3") - Bronze Medal
1976 - 2.21m (7' 3") - Bronze Medal
1984 - 2.31m (7' 7") - 4th
U.S. Olympic Trials
1972 - 2.21m (7' 3") - 1st
1976 - 2.24m (7' 4 1/4") - 2nd
1980 - 2.20m (7' 2 1/2") - 10th
1984 - 2.34m (7' 8") - 1st - American Record
1988 - 2.17m (7' 1 1/2") - DNQ
World Championships
1983 - 2.29m (7' 6") - 6th
AAU Championships
Indoor
1975 AAU Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1977 AAU Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
Outdoor
1973 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1974 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1975 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (3rd)
1976 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1977 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1978 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1980 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (3rd)
1981 AAU Outdoor Championships: High Jump (9th)
TAC Championships
Indoor
1982 TAC Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1983 TAC Indoor Championships: High Jump (3rd)
Outdoor
1982 TAC Outdoor Championships: High Jump (4th)
1983 TAC Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
USTFF Championships
Indoor
1973 USTFF Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1974 USTFF Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1975 USTFF Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
Outdoor
1973 USTFF Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1974 USTFF Outdoor Championships: High Jump (2nd)
1975 USTFF Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1976 USTFF Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
1977 USTFF Outdoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
NCAA Championships
Indoor
1976 NCAA Indoor Championships: High Jump (1st)
Outdoor
1972 NCAA Outdoor Championships: High Jump (3rd)
1976 NCAA Outdoor Championships: High Jump - 2.31 m (7' 7") (1st) - World/American Record
Records Held
World Records Set
Outdoor
World Record: High Jump - 2.30m (7' 6 1/2") - July 11, 1973 - Munich, West Germany
World Record: High Jump - 2.31m (7' 7") - June 5, 1976 - Philadelphia, PA
World Record: High Jump - 2.32m (7' 7 1/4") - Aug. 4, 1976 - Philadelphia, PA
Indoor
World Record: High Jump - 2.26m (7' 5") - Pocatello, ID
World Record: High Jump - 7' 5 1/4" - Only measured imperially - Los Angeles, CA
World Record: High Jump - 2.27m (7' 5 1/4") - Los Angeles, CA
World Record: High Jump - 7' 5 1/2" - Only measured imperially - Oklahoma City, OK
World Record: High Jump - 2.28m (7' 5 3/4") - New York, NY
World Record: High Jump - 2.29m (7' 6") - New York, NY
World Record: High Jump - 2.30m (7' 6 1/2") - San Diego, CA
American Records Set
Indoor
American Record: High Jump - 7' 4" - Only measured imperially - Los Angeles, CA
Outdoor
American Record: High Jump - 2.31m (7' 7") - Nice, France

American Record: High Jump - 2.34m (7' 8") - Los Angeles, CA

 









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