Nipomo High School pole vaulter Tevin Limon just keeps raising the bar on his own records.
At the Pac-7 league track and field finals on May 6, the sophomore set a new school mark by vaulting 14 feet, 4 inches, smashing his personal best by 10 inches.
āIāve been working on really shooting up in the air,ā Limon said. āOn 14, I got it on the first attempt. Then they went up to 14-4 and I never thought Iād get it, but I did. It was pretty cool.ā
Nipomo pole vaulting coach Nathan Shields credited Limonās positive attitude and off-season work at a camp in Atascadero with helping him reach new heights.
āHis work ethic is fantastic, and thatās whatās allowed him to do as well as he has,ā Shields said. āWhen you watch him, as he smiles, it looks like the Mad Magazine guy. Heāll admit it as well, and that just keeps everyone loose around him, and he helps make his teammates better because of it.ā
Limon is no stranger to the record books. Out for most of last season with an injury, he came back to set the schoolās sophomore vaulting record in his first meet this year, and later broke the previous school record of 13 feet, 3 inches in April.
āWe were saying 14 feet by the end of the year,ā Shields said of his pupil. āSome students you can just tell right away.ā
Limon is currently practicing three times a week in preparation for the CIF playoffs on May 15. In addition to his pole-vaulting exploits, Limon participates in high jump, long jump, and triple jump and has also played football the past two years for the Titans. Pole vaulting, however, is his favorite.
āI love it. Itās not the normal thing to do,ā he said. āYou have to practice a lot. Itās a time consuming thing. You canāt just get up there and be jumping 15 feet. It takes time.āĀ
This article appears in May 13-20, 2010.


