Anouk Vetter
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Amsterdam, Netherlands | 4 February 1993
Height | 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)[2] |
Weight | 65 kg (143 lb)[1] |
Website | www |
Sport | |
Country | Netherlands |
Sport | Athletics |
Event(s) | Heptathlon, Pentathlon |
Club | AV Sprint[3] |
Medal record |
Anouk Vetter (Dutch pronunciation: [aːˈnuk ˈfɛtər]; born 4 February 1993) is a Dutch track and field athlete who competes in the combined events.
She won the silver medal in the heptathlon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Vetter claimed bronze and silver in the event at the 2017 and 2022 World Athletics Championships respectively. She took the gold medal at the 2016 European Championships.
She is the Dutch record holder for the heptathlon with a score 6867 points, and won eight national titles (mostly for the long jump).
Early life
Anouk Vetter was on born 4 February 1993 in Amsterdam in the Netherlands.[3]
Vetter was exposed to athletics at a very young age. Her father, Ronald Vetter, is a long-standing athletics coach and her mother, Gerda Vetter-Blokziel a two-time Dutch javelin champion. "I grew up on the track, running around from the age of four and five playing on the high jump mat," she recalls.[4]
Career
Her passion became the heptathlon. However, her frail body was susceptible to injury. She failed to finish a heptathlon at either the 2011 European Athletics Junior Championships, 2012 World Junior Championships in Athletics and the 2013 European Athletics U23 Championships. After replacing her coach in 2012 with her father, she decreased her training to 80 per cent compared to the other women in the combined event group to protect her fragile body.[4] She won the Multistars Firenze Trofeo Zerneri Acciai, the opening meeting of the 2013 IAAF Combined Events Challenge with 5872 points.[5]
Her breakthrough came in 2014 when she improved her previous personal best by a massive 444 points to 6316 points at that year's prestigious Hypo-Meeting in Götzis, Austria to place ninth. "Gotzis was really special," she remembered. "It is always fantastic to compete there because the crowd is so close to the track."[6] Later that year she finished seventh at the Zürich European Championships.[4]
In 2015, Vetter finished sixth at the Hypo-Meeting with a new personal best with 6458 points,[7] and won the heptathlon at the Mehrkampf-Meeting in Ratingen, Germany.[4][8] Despite an injury, she also competed in the heptathlon event at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics in Beijing, where she reached the 12th place with 6267 points.[4] "Bearing in mind I didn’t think I could even start the competition, mentally it was a really big step for me," she reflected later.[4]
European champion
She started the 2016 season with an eighth place at the Hypo-Meeting. In July, Vetter took a surprise victory at the European Championships heptathlon in her home town Amsterdam, with a score of 6626 points, an improvement of the national record of Dafne Schippers.[9][10] "To win that European title was amazing," she remembered. "Suddenly I was out of the shadow of the big girls."[4] At the 2016 Rio Olympics, however, she finished on a disappointing 10th place.[11]
She started the 2017 outdoor season with a seventh place in Götzis.[12] In August 2017, Vetter set a new national heptathlon record of 6636 points at the World Championships in London, where she won the bronze medal, behind 2016 Olympic champion Nafissatou Thiam (gold) and Carolin Schäfer (silver).[13] She concluded the season with a win at the heptathlon at the Décastar in Talence, France.[14] For the second year in a row she finished second in the IAAF Combined Events Challenge.[15]
At the 2018 Hypo-Meeting in Götzis, Vetter finished fourth behind Nafissatou Thiam, Yorgelis Rodriguez and Erica Bougard.[16] At the European Championships in Berlin she finished fifth place. The year 2019 was a difficult period in her career, due to injuries and doubts with the sport. She did not finish the combined events competitions at the European Indoor Championships in Glasgow, the Decastar in Talence and the World Championships in Doha. Depressed she did not start at the final event, the 800 meters. "I had physical injuries with my knee," she later explained. "But it was more than that. I was putting too much pressure on myself. I had a hard time enjoying athletics, and I had a battle inside my head."[17]
Come back
In 2021, Vetter made her come back winning the silver medal at the postponed 2020 Tokyo Olympics in Japan, with a new national record, behind Nafissatou Thiam who successfully defended her 2016 Olympic title.[18] She led through the first day before Thiam and after world champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson had to leave the competition due to an injury.[19]
In May 2022, she won the Hypo-Meeting in Götzis with a new national record after setting a meet record in the javelin throw of 59.81 m.[20] Later that year, she won silver at the World Championships in Eugene (USA) with yet another national record. She led the contest until the last event, when Thiam surpassed her.[21] In August at the Munich European Championships she had to withdraw from the competition due to an Achilles tendon injury.
Statistics
International competitions
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | European Youth Olympic Festival | Tampere, Finland | – (f) | 4 × 100 m relay | DNF |
– (f) | Javelin throw | DNS | |||
2011 | European Junior Championships | Tallinn, Estonia | – | Heptathlon | DNF |
2012 | World Junior Championships | Barcelona, Spain | – | Heptathlon | DNF |
2013 | European U23 Championships | Tampere, Finland | – | Heptathlon | DNF |
2014 | European Championships | Zürich, Switzerland | 7th | Heptathlon | 6281 pts |
2015 | European Indoor Championships | Prague, Czech Republic | 8th | Pentathlon | 4548 pts |
World Championships | Beijing, China | 12th | Heptathlon | 6267 pts | |
2016 | European Championships | Amsterdam, Netherlands | 1st | Heptathlon | 6626 pts NR |
Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 10th | Heptathlon | 6394 pts | |
2017 | World Championships | London, United Kingdom | 3rd | Heptathlon | 6636 pts NR |
2018 | European Championships | Berlin, Germany | 5th | Heptathlon | 6414 pts |
2019 | European Indoor Championships | Glasgow, United Kingdom | – | Pentathlon | DNF |
World Championships | Doha, Qatar | – | Heptathlon | DNF | |
2021 | Olympic Games | Tokyo, Japan | 2nd | Heptathlon | 6689 pts NR |
2022 | World Championships | Eugene, OR, United States | 2nd | Heptathlon | 6867 pts NR |
European Championships | Munich, Germany | – | Heptathlon | DNF | |
2023 | World Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 3rd | Heptathlon | 6501 pts |
2024 | Olympic Games | Paris, France | – | Heptathlon | DNF |
Detailed heptathlon scores
Key: Current lifetime best
Competition | 100 m hurdles | High jump | Shot put | 200 metres | Long jump | Javelin throw | 800 metres | Heptathlon |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 Hypo-Meeting | 13.56 PB | 1.78 m | 14.63 m PB | 23.91 PB | 5.90 m | 52.18 m | 2:23.53 | 6316 pts PB |
2014 European Championships | 13.68 | 1.79 m | 14.16 m | 24.61 | 6.04 m | 52.49 m | 2:22.27 PB | 6281 pts |
2015 Hypo-Meeting | 13.53 PB | 1.77 m | 15.41 m PB | 23.82 PB | 6.21 m | 50.09 m | 2:21.18 | 6458 pts PB |
2015 Erdgas Mehrkampf-Meeting | 13.55 | 1.72 m | 15.50 m PB | 24.12 | 6.07 m | 52.75 m | 2:20.38 PB | 6387 pts |
2015 World Championships | 13.61 | 1.77 m | 14.24 m | 24.53 | 6.11 m | 51.78 m | 2:23.71 | 6267 pts |
2016 Hypo-Meeting | 13.36 | 1.71 m | 15.05 m | 23.70 PB | 6.15 m | 45.30 m | 2:21.39 | 6282 pts |
2016 European Championships | 13.29 PB | 1.74 m | 15.69 m PB | 23.89 | 6.38 m w | 55.76 m PB | 2:21.50 | 6626 pts NR |
2016 Olympic Games | 13.47 | 1.77 m | 14.78 m | 23.93 | 6.10 m | 48.42 m | 2:17.71 PB | 6394 pts |
2017 Hypo-Meeting | 13.32 | 1.71 m | 15.54 m | 24.21 | 6.19 m | 55.43 m | 2:20.20 | 6497 pts |
2017 World Championships | 13.31 | 1.77 m | 15.09 m | 24.36 | 6.32 m | 58.41 m PB | 2:19.43 | 6636 pts NR |
2017 Décastar-meeting | 13.60 | 1.73 m | 14.86 m | 24.21 | 6.18 m | 52.49 m | 2:20.99 | 6363 pts |
2018 Hypo-Meeting | 13.46 | 1.71 m | 15.91 m | 23.89 | 6.25 m | 51.27 m | 2:23.41 | 6426 pts |
2018 European Championships | 13.55 | 1.76 m | 14.79 m | 23.97 | 6.30 m | 51.25 m | 2:22.84 | 6414 pts |
2019 Décastar-meeting | 13.59 | 1.72 m | 15.29 m | 24.35 | 6.15 m | — | — | — |
2019 World Championships | 13.55 | 1.74 m | 14.10 m | 24.43 | 6.20 m | 54.17 m | — | — |
2021 Hypo-Meeting | 13.35 | 1.74 m | 15.28 m | 23.65 PB | 6.23 m | 54.77 m | 2:22.33 | 6536 pts |
2021 Olympic Games | 13.09 PB | 1.80 m | 15.29 m | 23.81 | 6.47 m | 51.20 m | 2:18.72 | 6689 pts NR |
2022 Hypo-Meeting | 13.28 | 1.74 m | 14.88 m | 23.76 | 6.47 m | 59.81 m PB | 2:21.56 | 6693 pts |
2022 World Championships | 13.30 | 1.80 m | 16.25 m PB | 23.73 | 6.52 m PB | 58.29 m | 2:20.09 | 6867 pts NR |
2022 European Championships | 13.37 | 1.71 m | 15.68 m | 24.00 | 6.27 m | — | — | — |
2023 Hypo-Meeting | 13.29 | 1.71 m | 14.88 m | 23.71 | — | — | — | — |
2023 World Championships | 13.42 | 1.71 m | 15.72 m | 24.28 | 5.99 m | 59.57 m | 2:20.49 | 6501 pts |
2024 Hypo-Meeting | 13.64 | 1.74 m | 15.37 m | 23.73 | 6.47 m | 57.91 m | 2:21.37 | 6642 pts |
2024 Olympic Games | 13.49 | 1.74 m | 15.07 m | 24.36 | 6.12 m | — | — | — |
Personal bests
Event | Performance | Points | Venue | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 m hurdles | 13.09 s (w. -0.8) | 1111 | Tokyo, Japan | 4 August 2021 | |
High jump | 1.81 m | 991 | Tampere, Finland | 13 July 2013 | |
Shot put | 16.25 m | 945 | Eugene, OR, United States | 17 July 2022 | |
200 metres | 23.65 s (w. +0.5) | 1015 | Götzis, Austria | 29 May 2021 | |
Long jump | 6.52 m (w. +0.3) | 1014 | Eugene, OR, United States | 18 July 2022 | |
Javelin throw | 59.81 m | 1051 | Götzis, Austria | 29 May 2022 | |
800 metres | 2:17.71 min | 855 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 13 August 2016 | |
Heptathlon | 6867 pts | PB total: 6982 | Eugene, OR, United States | 18 July 2022 | NR |
100 metres | 11.61 s (w. +0.9) | — | Mannheim, Germany | 9 June 2016 |
Event | Performance | Points | Venue | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
60 m hurdles | 8.15 s | 1095 | Apeldoorn , Netherlands | 27 February 2022 | |
High jump | 1.77 m | 941 | Prague, Czech Republic | 6 March 2015 | |
Shot put | 15.45 m | 891 | Apeldoorn, Netherlands | 27 February 2016 | |
Long jump | 6.42 m | 981 | Apeldoorn , Netherlands | 20 February 2021 | |
800 metres | 2:24.48 min | 764 | Prague, Czech Republic | 6 March 2015 | |
Pentathlon | 4548 pts | PB total: 4672 | Prague, Czech Republic | 6 March 2015 | |
60 metres | 7.46 s | — | Amsterdam, Netherlands | 6 February 2016 |
Circuit wins
- World Athletics Combined Events Tour
- 2013: Multistars
- 2015: Mehrkampf-Meeting
- 2017: Décastar
- 2022: Hypo-Meeting (NR)
National titles
- Dutch Athletics Championships
- Long jump: 2017, 2019, 2020, 2021
- Javelin throw: 2019
- Dutch Indoor Athletics Championships
- Long jump: 2016, 2021, 2022
References
- ^ a b Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Anouk Vetter". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ "VETTER Anouk". Paris 2024 Olympics. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
- ^ a b (in Dutch) Anouk Vetter, Atletiek.nl. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g Patience reaps dividends in Vetter's rise through the heptathlon ranks, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 19 December 2017
- ^ Krauchanka and Vetter triumph in Florence – IAAF Combined Events Challenge, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 3 May 2013
- ^ That moment when… Vetter broke through, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 7 October 2017
- ^ (in Dutch) Brons voor meerkampster Broersen in Götzis, NOS News, 31 May 2015
- ^ Schrader and Vetter take the honours in Ratingen, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 28 June 2015
- ^ Vetter betters Schippers with third Dutch gold of the Championships, European Athletics, 9 July 2016
- ^ Vetter claims European heptathlon title with Dutch record, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 9 July 2016
- ^ (in Dutch) Vetter tiende op zevenkamp, Team NL, 14 August 2016
- ^ IAAF Combined Events Challenge Gotzis, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 28 May 2017
- ^ (in Dutch) Mark van Driel, "WK-brons mét Nederlands puntenrecord voor zevenkamper Anouk Vetter", de Volkskrant, 6 August 2017
- ^ Vetter concludes season with heptathlon victory in Talence, European Athletics, 18 September 2017
- ^ Freimuth and Schäfer win 2017 IAAF Combined Events Challenge, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 20 September 2017
- ^ World leads for Thiam and Warner in Gotzis, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 27 May 2018
- ^ Vetter: little goals, big results, World Athletics, 14 March 2021
- ^ Thiam cements legendary status by retaining Olympic heptathlon title, World Athletics, 5 August 2021
- ^ Athletics-World champion Johnson-Thompson out injured, Vetter leads heptathlon, Reuters, 4 August 2021
- ^ Warner wins again, Vetter victorious in Götzis, World Athletics, 29 May 2022
- ^ Thiam regains world heptathlon title in Oregon, World Athletics, 18 July 2022
External links
- Official website
- Anouk Vetter at World Athletics
- Anouk Vetter at European Athletics
- Anouk Vetter at the Royal Dutch Athletics Federation (in Dutch)
- Anouk Vetter at Olympics.com
- Anouk Vetter at Olympedia
- Anouk Vetter at TeamNL (archive) (in Dutch)