Anouk Vetter

Anouk Vetter (Dutch pronunciation: [aːˈnuk ˈvɛtər]; born 4 February 1993) is a Dutch athlete who specialises in the heptathlon. She holds the Dutch record in heptathlon of 6636 points. In 2016, she won a gold medal at the heptathlon at the 2016 European Athletics Championships.[4]

Anouk Vetter
Anouk Vetter in 2014
Personal information
NationalityDutch
Born (1993-02-04) 4 February 1993
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Height1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Weight62 kg (137 lb)[1]
Websitewww.anoukvetter.nl
Sport
CountryNetherlands
SportTrack and field
Event(s)Heptathlon[2]
ClubAV Sprint[3]

Early life

Anouk Vetter was on born 4 February 1993 in Amsterdam in the Netherlands.[3] Anouk 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.[5]

Career

Vetter at the 2016 European Championships, where she won a gold medal at the heptathlon

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, he decreased her training to 80 per cent compared to the other women in the combined event group to protect her fragile body.[5] She won the Multistars Firenze Trofeo Zerneri Acciai, the opening meeting of the 2013 IAAF Combined Events Challenge with 5872 points.[6]

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 Gotzis (Austria) to place 9th.[7] "Gotzis was really special," she remembered. "It is always fantastic to compete there because the crowd is so close to the track."[7] Later that year she finished 7th at the 2014 European Championships in Zurich.[5]

In 2015 she finished 6th at that in Gotzis with a new personal best with 6458 points,[8] and won the heptathlon at the Mehrkampf-Meeting in Ratingen (Germany).[5][9] Despite an injury, Vetter also competed in the heptathlon event at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics in Beijing, China, where she reached the 12th place with 6267 points.[5] “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.[5]

She started the 2016 season with an 8th place in Gotzis. In July 2016, she won a surprise victory at the 2016 European Athletics Championships heptathlon in her home town Amsterdam, with a score of 6626 points, an improvement of the national record of Dafne Schippers.[4][10] "To win that European title was amazing," she remembered. "Suddenly I was out of the shadow of the big girls."[5] At the 2016 Summer Olympics, however, she finished on a disappointing 10th place.[11]

She started the 2017 outdoor season with a 7th place in Gotzis.[12] In August 2017, she 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 2nd in the IAAF Combined Events Challenge.[15]

At the 2018 Hypo Meeting in Gotzis she finished 4th behind Nafissatou Thiam, Yorgelis Rodriguez and Erica Bougard.[16]

International competitions

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing the  Netherlands
2011 European Junior Championships Tallinn, Estonia Heptathlon DNF
2012 World Junior Championships Barcelona, Spain Heptathlon DNF
2013 Multistars Florence, Italy 1st Heptathlon 5872 pts
European U23 Championships Tampere, Finland Heptathlon DNF
2014 Hypo Meeting Gotzis, Austria 9th Heptathlon 6316 pts
European Championships Zürich, Switzerland 7th Heptathlon 6281 pts
2015 European Indoor Championships Prague, Czech Republic 8th Pentathlon 4548 pts
Hypo Meeting Gotzis, Austria 6th Heptathlon 6458 pts
Mehrkampf-Meeting Ratingen, Germany 1st Heptathlon 6387 pts
World Championships Beijing, China 12th Heptathlon 6267 pts
2016 Hypo Meeting Gotzis, Austria 8th Heptathlon 6282 pts
European Championships Amsterdam, Netherlands 1st Heptathlon 6626 pts (NR)
Olympic Games Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 10th Heptathlon 6394 pts
2017 Hypo Meeting Gotzis, Austria 7th Heptathlon 6497 pts
World Championships London, United Kingdom 3rd Heptathlon 6636 pts (NR)
Décastar Talence, France 1st Heptathlon 6363 pts
2018 Hypo Meeting Gotzis, Austria 4th Heptathlon 6428 pts
European Championships Berlin, Germany 5th Heptathlon 6414 pts
2019 European Indoor Championships Glasgow, United Kingdom Pentathlon DNF
World Championships Doha, Qatar Heptathlon DNF

Personal bests

EventResultVenueDateRecordsNotes
100 metres11.63 s (wind +0.7)Leiden13 June 2015[2]
200 metres23.70 s (wind +1.0)Mösle Stadium, Götzis28 May 2016[2]
800 metres2:17.71 minOlympic Stadium, Rio de Janeiro13 August 2016[2]
60 metres hurdles8.25 sOmnisport, Apeldoorn28 februari 2016[2]
100 metres hurdles13.29 s (wind -0.7)Olympic Stadium, Amsterdam8 July 2016[2]
High jump1.81 mTampere13 July 2013[2]
Long jump6.34 m (wind +0.3)Hoorn16 May 2015[2]
Shot put16.00 mLisse13 May 2017[2]
Javelin throw58.41 mOlympic Stadium, London6 August 2017[2]
Pentathlon4548 pointsO2 Arena, Prague6 March 2015[2]
Heptathlon6636 pointsOlympic Stadium, London6 August 2017National record[2][13]

References

  1. Anouk Vetter, Eurosport. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  2. "Anouk Vetter Athlete Profile", IAAF, 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  3. (in Dutch) Anouk Vetter, Atletiek.nl. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  4. Vetter betters Schippers with third Dutch gold of the Championships, European Athletics, 9 July 2016
  5. Patience reaps dividends in Vetter's rise through the heptathlon ranks, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 19 December 2017
  6. Krauchanka and Vetter triumph in Florence – IAAF Combined Events Challenge, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 3 May 2013
  7. That moment when… Vetter broke through, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 7 October 2017
  8. (in Dutch) Brons voor meerkampster Broersen in Götzis, NOS News, 31 May 2015
  9. Schrader and Vetter take the honours in Ratingen, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 28 June 2015
  10. Vetter claims European heptathlon title with Dutch record, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 9 July 2016
  11. (in Dutch) Vetter tiende op zevenkamp, Team NL, 14 August 2016
  12. IAAF Combined Events Challenge Gotzis, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 28 May 2017
  13. (in Dutch) Mark van Driel, "WK-brons mét Nederlands puntenrecord voor zevenkamper Anouk Vetter", de Volkskrant, 6 August 2017
  14. Vetter concludes season with heptathlon victory in Talence, European Athletics, 18 September 2017
  15. Freimuth and Schäfer win 2017 IAAF Combined Events Challenge, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 20 September 2017
  16. World leads for Thiam and Warner in Gotzis, International Association of Athletics Federations - IAAF, 27 May 2018
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