Alekna Claims Silver For Best Finish By Cal Discus Thrower
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports
21-year-old Mykolas Alekna carries the Lithuanian flag after winning the Olympic silver medal in the discus.

Alekna Claims Silver For Best Finish By Cal Discus Thrower

Lithuanian Surpasses Previous Olympic Record, Claims Nation’s Highest Medal In Paris

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PARIS – For just the second time in California track & field history and the first time since 1936, the Golden Bears claimed two Olympic medals – one gold and one silver – in the same Olympic Games, as rising redshirt junior Mykolas Alekna joined alumna Camryn Rogers (gold, hammer throw) on the podium with a second-place finish in Wednesday's men's discus final.
 
Alekna's achievement marked several historic firsts for the Bears: he is the first European medalist in program history, as well as the highest finisher by any Cal male thrower; previously, only Americans Augustus "Gus" Pope (discus, bronze) and Harry Liversedge (shot put, bronze) had ever medaled, both in 1920. His silver medal is also Lithuania's first of the 2024 Olympics – the best finish in any sport for that nation so far at this year's Games.
 
Alekna, who entered his first Olympic Games with a world-record personal best of 74.35m (243-11), was favored to medal and delivered brilliantly, leading after the first round of throws with an opening mark of 68.55m (224-11). Reigning European Champion Kristjan Čeh of Slovenia, who eventually finished fourth, threatened Alekna's lead in Round 2 with a throw of 68.41m (224-5), but it was Australian Matthew Denny who earned the first lead change of the evening, launching the discus 69.31m (227-4). The Olympic record of 69.89m (229-3), set by Virgilijus Alekna – Mykolas's father – in 2004 seemed well within reach.
 
It was the younger Alekna who was the first to break it, unleashing a second-round throw of 69.97m (229-6), but that mark lasted all of 20 minutes before Jamaica's Rojé Stona toppled it with a huge personal best of 70.00m (229-8). Although Stona failed to record a legal throw after that, his efforts were enough to win gold – Alekna's next two measured throws sailed 68.88m (226-0) and 68.49m (224-8), respectively, while Denny stayed in the bronze-medal position.
 
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