<Tr> <Th> Men </Th> <Td> Thiago Braz da Silva (BRA) </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> Women </Th> <Td> Ekaterini Stefanidi (GRE) </Td> </Tr> <P> The pole vault at the Summer Olympics is grouped among the four track and field jumping events held at the multi-sport event . The men's pole vault has been present on the Olympic athletics programme since the first Summer Olympics in 1896 . The women's event is one of the latest additions to the programme, first being contested at the 2000 Summer Olympics--along with the addition of the hammer throw, this brought the women's field event programme to parity with the men's . </P> <P> The Olympic records for the event are 6.03 m (19 ft 9 ​ ⁄ in) for men, set by Thiago Braz da Silva in 2016, and 5.05 m (16 ft 6 ​ ⁄ in) for women, set by Yelena Isinbayeva in 2008 . Isinbayeva's 2008 mark was a world record at the time and her 2004 victory in 4.91 m (16 ft 1 ​ ⁄ in) had been the first women's world record in the pole vault to be set at the Olympics . In spite of its longer history, the men's Olympic event has only seen two world record marks--a clearance of 4.09 m (13 ft 5 in) by Frank Foss at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics and Władysław Kozakiewicz's vault of 5.78 m (18 ft 11 ​ ⁄ in) to win at the 1980 Moscow Olympics . </P>

When was pole vault introduced in olympics games