Lucienne Velu Explained

Lucienne Velu-Chapillon, Mrs Odoul (born Lucienne Antoinette Velu; 28 January 1902  - 12 June 1998) was a French athlete and basketball player. She was inducted into the French Basketball Hall of Fame, in 2011. She was born Paris[1] and died in Quincy-sous-Senart.

Biography

Athletics

Velu held the world record in the discus throw in September 1924 at Paris with a throw of 30.225 m, and she was 14 times champion of France for 7 national records (her last record stood for 22 years).[2] Her rivals were two other Frenchwomen, Lucie Petit-Diagre, a double world record holder in the summer of 1924, with throws of 27.70 m and 28.325 m, and Yvonne Tembouret, who was the world record holder in September 1923 at Paris with a throw of 27.39 m. In the shot put Velu was 8 times champion of France; her rival was Violette Morris. She was also the holder of three national records for 10 years and participated in the Olympic Games 1924, 1928 and 1936. She participated in the 1928 Olympic Games at Amsterdam and placed fourth in the 4 x 100 metres relay (alongside Yolande Plancke, Georgette Gagneux and Marguerite Radideau).[3]

Finally, selected 24 times from 1923 to 1939 for French national teams, she won 43 titles as champion of France, including 33 senior championships for 47 podium visits. The events she won championships at were 80 (very close to the world record in 9 s 4), 100 and 200 meters, the discus, the shot put, relay (gold medal in the relay 4 × 200 m at the Women's World Games. In basketball (from 1928 to 1938) she won championships with the team Linnets (who won the first national championship). She was also part of the group that introduced handball into France before the war.

Prize list

Records

Basketball

Later, Velu was captain of the French basketball team that became the first women's team to be world champions in French sport, beating United States 34–23 on 11 August 1934 at the 4th Women's World Games in London at White Hall. The winning team was Gilberte Flouret-Picot, Yvonne Santais, Velu, Simone Richalot de Reims and Jeannine Garnier from Strasbourg. In 1930 during the 3rd World Games, Velu had already won the bronze medal in basketball.

French team

Linnet's Saint-Maur

Distinctions

External links

Notes and References

  1. Archives numérisées de l'état civil de Paris, acte de naissance no 12/342/1902, date et lieu du décès mentionnés en marge de l'acte (accessdate 3 January 2013)
  2. DocAthlé 2003, p.434, Fédération française d'athlétisme, 2003
  3. Web site: Athletics at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games:Women's 4 × 100 metres Relay Final. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417173338/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1928/ATH/womens-4-x-100-metres-relay-final.html. dead. 17 April 2020. sports-reference.com. 5 March 2016.
  4. Web site: VELU ép. . 19 May 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180814232725/http://www.athle.com/dev/ffa/ResultsFrance.aspx . 14 August 2018 . dead .
  5. actuellement prix Monique Berlioux
  6. Web site: Prix Monique Berlioux | Académie des Sports . 2015-09-05 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150626223946/http://www.academie-sports.com/prix/prix-monique-berlioux . 26 June 2015 . dmy-all . Prix féminin de l'Académie des Sports
  7. Web site: Promotion 2012. ffbb.com. 23 June 2012. 26 June 2012. dead. https://archive.today/20121208143215/http://www.ffbb.com/_actu/page_m.php?d=actu&p=actu&id=8657. 8 December 2012. dmy-all.