Kim Gevaert Explained

Birth Place:Leuven, Belgium
Height:170 cm
Weight:60 kg
Spouse:Djeke Mambo
Club:V. A. C. Steenokkerzeel
CA Valencia Terra i Mar[1]
Coach:Rudi Diels
Retired:2008
Olympics:2004, 2008
Pb:100 m – 11.04 (2006)
200 m – 22.20 (2006)

Kim Gevaert (born 5 August 1978 in Leuven) is a former sprint athlete and Olympic champion from Belgium.[2]

Career

Her closest brush with a world title came in running 4/100 of a second behind three-time champion Gail Devers at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics. At the next World Indoor Championships, in 2006, she won the bronze medal in a national record time of 7.11 seconds.

On 9 August 2006 Gevaert won the 100 metres at the European Championships in 11.06 seconds. Two days later, she also won the final of the 200 metres, which was celebrated together with fellow Belgian athlete Tia Hellebaut, who had won gold in the high jump final only minutes before Kim Gevaert. With her first medal, Gevaert became the first Belgian gold medalist at the European Championships in 35 years and the first woman to win the sprint double since 1994.

At the 2007 World Championships she won a bronze medal in the 4 × 100 metres relay, together with teammates Hanna Mariën, Olivia Borlée and Élodie Ouédraogo. With 42.75 seconds the team set a new Belgian record. A few days earlier as best European athlete she had finished 5th in a thrilling 100 m final.

On her 30th birthday, three days before the opening of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Gevaert announced that she would retire at the end of the 2008 season.[3] At the 2008 Summer Olympics, Gevaert was in the best condition of her life. She reached the 100 m semifinals by ending 3rd in her quarterfinals, but after missing her start she finished sixth and failed to proceed to the finals.[2] In the finals of the 4×100 m for women a couple of days later, Gevaert ran the final leg for the Belgian team and finished in second behind the Russians to bring home the silver medal in a new Belgian record of 42.54 seconds. On 16 August 2016, it was announced that the IOC had officially disqualified the Russian 4 x 100 metres relay team after Yuliya Chermoshanskaya's re-tested samples revealed two illegal substances, awarding the gold medal to the Belgian team.[2] She was awarded the gold medal eight years late on September 10, 2016.[4]

On 5 September 2008, Kim Gevaert ended her career running the 100 m at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, Belgium, a race which she won in 11.25.

Personal life

Gevaert has two brothers, Marlon and John, and a sister Sigrid. Marlon competed in sprint at the national level in Belgium before becoming a national sprint coach in New Zealand.[5] In 2010 Gevaert married her long-time partner and a fellow athlete Djeke Mambo. They have two sons and one daughter, who are bilingual, as the principal language of their father is French and of their mother is Flemish.[6]

Honours and awards

Major achievements

Representing
1996World Junior ChampionshipsSydney, Australia100m10th (sf)11.74
200m7th23.88 (wind: -2.2 m/s)
1999European U23 ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden100m3rd11.39 (wind: -0.2 m/s)
200m5th23.08 (wind: -0.5 m/s)
2002Vienna, Austria60 m 1st 7.16
Munich, Germany100 m 2nd 11.22
200 m 2nd 22.53
2003 Monte Carlo, Monaco 200 m 4th 22.95
2004 Budapest, Hungary 60 m 2nd 7.12 NR
Athens, Greece 200 m 6th 22.84
2005 Madrid, Spain 60 m 1st 7.16
2006 Moscow, Russia 60 m bgcolor=CC9966 align="center" 3rd 7.11 NR
European ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden 100 m 1st 11.06
(First Belgian woman to win a gold medal in this event.)
200 m 1st 22.68
2007Birmingham, England60 m 1st 7.12
(7.10 in the semi-final NR)
Osaka, Japan100 m 5th 11.05
(First European woman)
4 × 100 m3rd 42.75 NR
2008 Beijing Olympic Stadium, Beijing, China 4 × 100 m1st 42.54 NR
Brussels, Belgium 100 m1st 11.25
(last event before her retirement)

Personal best

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kim Gevaert . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418070439/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ge/kim-gevaert-1.html . 2020-04-18.
  2. Web site: Athlete biography: Kim Gevaert . https://web.archive.org/web/20080828040926/http://results.beijing2008.cn/WRM/ENG/BIO/Athlete/7/241027.shtml . 2008-08-28 . dead . . 27 August 2008.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20080810100716/http://www.iaaf.org/OLY08/news/kind%3D100/newsid%3D46419.html Gevaert to retire at end of season
  4. Web site: Coe and Hansen hail belated Olympic gold for Belgian women's 4x100m team following Russian doping positive.
  5. http://www.nieuwsblad.be/cnt/cc1ghl2g Marlon Gevaert is trainer van Nieuw-Zeeland maar supporter van Kim
  6. De Bruycker, Gerlinde (29 February 2016) Kim Gevaert: "Ik hoef niet per se bekend te blijven". De Morgen
  7. News: 2023 . Palmares Gouden Spike . nl . www.atletiek.be .
  8. Web site: Kim Gevaert is Vlaamse Reus 2007 . . nl . 7 December 2007.
  9. Web site: 11 December 2002 . Kim Gevaert wint Vlaams Sportjuweel 2002 . . nl.
  10. Web site: 22 September 2022 . Kim Gevaert wordt ereburger . . nl.
  11. Web site: 14 December 2008 . Sportpersoonlijkheid van het jaar . sportgala.be/nl . nl.
  12. Web site: 21 May 2015 . Uitreiking Gouden Erepenningen 2014 Vlaams-Parlement . belg.be . nl.
  13. Web site: Red Lions volgen Nina Derwael op met winst van Nationale Trofee voor Sportverdienste . . nl . 7 November 2019.
  14. Web site: 11 December 2007 . Vlaams Sportjuweel 2007 voor aflossingsteam 4x100 meter . . nl.
  15. Web site: 12 February 2008 . Aflossingsploeg 4x100m krijgt Trofee voor Sportverdienste 2007 . . nl.
  16. Web site: Gevaert en Hellebaut bekroond met Grootkruis .