Career
On 13 July 1957 he set a new world record in the high jump at 2.16 m (7 ft 1 in), breaking a 44-year-long dominance of American athletes in this event. Stepanov started training in the high jump in 1950, aged 17, and by 1954 had a personal best at 1.98 m. He was selected for the 1956 Olympics, but was replaced due to a leg injury.
He was the gold medallist at both the 1957 World University Games and the World Festival of Youth and Students.
He twice competed at the European Athletics Championships, finishing fifth in 1954 and sixth in 1958. In 1957 he set a world record at a Leningrad-Helsinki athletic meet.
A close-up photograph taken during the event showed that Stepanov used shoes with thick porous soles that acted as a trampoline. While not forbidden by the rules, the use of such shoes was criticized by the foreign media, but was countered by the Soviets that the thick sole was added merely to reduce the risk of injury.
After this event, the thickness of the sole was limited to 12 mm by the IAAF. As a result of excessive media attention to the validity of his results, around 1959 Stepanov developed a depression that resulted in his hospitalization in 1959, alcoholism, divorce in 1961 and suicide in 1963.