Luiz Maurício da Silva

Luiz Maurício Dias da Silva (born 17 January 2000) is a Brazilian javelin thrower.[1]

Luiz Maurício da Silva
Personal information
Full nameLuiz Maurício Dias da Silva
Born (2000-01-17) 17 January 2000 (age 26)
Juiz de Fora, Brazil
Sport
SportTrack and field
Event
Javelin throw
Achievements and titles
Personal bests91 m AR NR (2025)

Career

edit

Luiz represented his country at the 2023 World Championships without qualifying for the final.

On June 30, 2024, competing in the Brazil Trophy, held in São Paulo, he achieved a mark of 85.57 m, breaking the South American record for the event and also beating the Olympic index, which was 85.50 m. With this, he obtained a place for the 2024 Summer Olympics.[2]

At the 2024 Summer Olympics, he achieved a mark of 85.91m in the qualification, breaking the South American record again and qualifying for the final in sixth place. It was the first time that a Brazilian qualified for the javelin throw final at the Olympics - in the 1932 Games, Heitor Medina finished in 11th place, when there were no qualifiers for this event. In the final, he did not achieve the same performance as in the qualifying phase, but finished in 11th place with a mark of 80.67m, equaling the best mark in Brazil's history at the Olympics.[3][4][5][6]

At the end of May 2025, while participating in the Kip Keino Classic 2025, in Kenya, he broke a new South American record for the javelin throw, with a mark of 86.34 meters.[7][8]

On June 20, 2025, at the Paris stage of the Diamond League, he broke the South American record for the javelin throw for the fourth time, with a mark of 86.62 m, finishing in 3rd place in the event.[9]

At the Brazilian Athletics Trophy in August 2025, he achieved a historic feat by smashing his own South American record and becoming the first South American thrower to exceed 90m. He became the second-best javelin thrower in the history of the Americas, behind only Breaux Greer. He achieved a mark of 91m, which would have been a gold medal at every Olympic Games in history except Paris 2024, where he would have won a silver medal. This mark placed him among the 20 best javelin throwers of all time, in 18th position.[10][11]

At the 2025 World Athletics Championships, he was unable to perform well and finished in 19th place with a mark of 81.12m.[12]

His personal best in the event is 91.00 metres set in São Paulo in Brazilian Athletics Trophy, a South American record,.[13]

International competitions

edit
YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Brazil
2018 World U20 Championships Tampere, Finland 24th (q) Javelin throw 60.74 m
2019 South American U20 Championships Cali, Colombia 1st Javelin throw 71.17 m
Pan American U20 Championships San José, Costa Rica 2nd Javelin throw 74.51 m
2021 South American Championships Guayaquil, Ecuador 5th Javelin throw 70.74 m
South American U23 Championships Guayaquil, Ecuador 1st Javelin throw 70.73 m
Junior Pan American Games (U23) Cali, Colombia 2nd Javelin throw 71.35 m
2022 Ibero-American Championships La Nucía, Spain 3rd Javelin throw 80.41 m
South American U23 Championships Cascavel, Brazil 1st Javelin throw 78.92 m
South American Games Asunción, Paraguay 1st Javelin throw 76.90 m
2023 South American Championships São Paulo, Brazil 3rd Javelin throw 77.17 m
World Championships Budapest, Hungary 20th (q) Javelin throw 77.70 m
Pan American Games Santiago, Chile 9th Javelin throw 68.20 m
2024 Ibero-American Championships Cuiabá, Brazil 3rd Javelin throw 82.02 m
Olympic Games Paris, France 11th Javelin throw 80.67 m
2025 World Championships Tokyo, Japan 19th (q) Javelin throw 81.12 m

References

edit