Vilagoš[5] was raised in Mali Iđoš in north Serbia, being of Hungarian descent. She started out when she was a kid by playing handball and throwing a vortex – a small, egg shaped foam missile with an aerodynamic tail.[6]
She has been coached from the beginning by her mother Đerđi, originally a handball coach and a public prosecutor. They watched YouTube videos to learn the technique (by men’s world record-holder Jan Železný among others).[4]
Career
In 2018, only 14, Adriana threw a Serbian under-18 (javelin 500 g) record of 59.69 m, which she improved to 64.73 m a year later.[6]
In March 2020, she set a world record under-18 best with a throw of 68.76 m in Sremska Mitrovica, breaking 2019 record of Elina Tzengko (65.90 m), her two years older rival from Greece.[7]
At the 2021 Balkan Athletics Championships held in Smederevo, Serbia in June, Vilagoš lost only to Tzengko to take the silver medal. This result of their competition was repeated in July at the European Athletics U20 Championships in Tallinn, Estonia.[8] On 14 August at the Balkan U18 Championships in Kraljevo, Adriana bettered her world under-18 best with a 70.10 m performance, becoming the first U18 woman in history to break the 70-metre barrier.[7] Just five days later, she beat Tzengko to gold for the first time at the World U20 Championships held in Nairobi, Kenya, setting a national U20 record.[9][10] Vilagoš also had several performances during the year which were better than Tatjana Jelača's national U23 record of 60.89 m.[11] However, for record purposes Serbian Athletics Federation (SAS) recognizes only the period following the end of athlete's junior eligibility up to the year in which the athlete turns 22-years-old,[12] making Vilagoš eligible for U23 record consideration only during the 2024–2026 period.
In 2022, the 18-year-old placed in the top three in 15 of her 16 competitions, consistently throwing beyond 60 metres and finishing ahead of experienced senior opponents. She won for the second consecutive time U23 competition of the European Throwing Cup, triumphed in the Balkan Championships, Mediterranean Games, and captured decisively her second world u20 title at the World U20 Championships staged in Cali, Colombia, setting a championship and European U20 record of 63.52 m. She placed second behind only Tzengko and ahead of great Barbora Špotáková at her first senior European Championships Munich 2022.[3] Adriana achieved 11 world's best U20 performances of the season,[13][14] and was voted World AthleticsFemale Rising Star of the Year.[15]
In 2024 alone she set new national record four times.[16] In October she was awarded the Rising Star trophy at the Golden Tracks awards by the European Athletic Association (EAA),[17] while her mother received Coaching Award.
^Tóth, Tibor (24 July 2024). "Olimpiai lázban" [In Olympic fever]. Heti Jegyzet. Hét Nap (in Hungarian). Vol. 79, no. 30. Subotica. ISSN0352-2717. Retrieved 7 August 2024.