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Sri Lanka’s Rumesh Pathirage rewrites Asian javelin history with 92.62m throw in Rome

Rumesh Pathirage produced a sensational 92.62-metre effort at the Rome Diamond League, becoming the second-best Asian javelin thrower in history behind Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem.

By Shaptadeep Saha

Jun 05, 2026 23:26 IST

Sri Lankan javelin thrower Rumesh Pathirage announced himself on the global stage with a stunning performance at the Rome Diamond League, producing a mammoth throw of 92.62 metres to register one of the greatest achievements in Asian athletics history. The effort not only secured him his maiden Diamond League title but also elevated him to second place on the all-time Asian list, behind only Pakistan’s Olympic champion Arshad Nadeem.

The throw marked the best distance recorded anywhere in the world since the Paris Olympics in 2024 and established Pathirage as one of the leading contenders in men's javelin. It also pushed him ahead of India’s double Olympic medallist Neeraj Chopra and Chinese Taipei’s Cheng Chao-Tsun in the Asian rankings.

A throw that changed Asian athletics

According to NDTV, Pathirage entered the competition carrying impressive form after registering 89.37m in a domestic meet earlier this year. However, few expected the Sri Lankan to produce a throw of such magnitude against a strong international field.

After opening with 84.49m, a mark that would eventually have been enough to secure victory, Pathirage unleashed a sensational second-round effort of 92.62m. The throw fell just 35 centimetres short of Nadeem’s Asian record of 92.97m, set during his gold medal-winning performance at the Paris Olympics.

The distance also shattered the long-standing Rome meeting record of 90.34m established by Norwegian great Andreas Thorkildsen two decades ago.

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Joining an exclusive club

According to NDTV, the achievement made Pathirage only the fourth Asian athlete to breach the coveted 90-metre barrier. The exclusive list includes Arshad Nadeem, Neeraj Chopra and Cheng Chao-Tsun.

Globally, he became only the 28th athlete in history to cross the mark. His throw also propelled him to eighth place on the all-time world rankings, underlining the significance of the performance.

Speaking after the competition, Pathirage said he had arrived in Rome hoping to improve his national record and was delighted to exceed expectations. He credited the favourable conditions and his calm mindset for helping him achieve the career-defining result.

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Mixed fortunes for India

According to NDTV, while Pathirage celebrated a historic triumph, India’s Sachin Yadav endured a difficult Diamond League debut. Competing in his first major international meet since last year’s World Championships, the 26-year-old managed a best throw of 79.18m to finish eighth in a field of ten competitors.

Yet the bigger story belonged to Pathirage, whose remarkable effort has altered the landscape of Asian javelin throwing and signalled the emergence of a new continental force in the discipline.

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