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词条 Tia Hellebaut
释义

  1. Career

     Retirement and comebacks 

  2. Sport consultancy

  3. Honours

  4. International achievements

  5. Statistics

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2013}}{{Infobox athlete
|name = Tia Hellebaut
|image = Tia Hellebaut 2012.jpg
|imagesize = 200px
|country = {{BEL}}
|alias =
|club =
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1978|2|16}}
|birth_place = {{flagicon|BEL}} Antwerp
|height = {{height|m=1.82|precision=0}}
|weight = {{convert|62|kg|lb|0}}
|turnedpro =
|retired =
|pb = High jump (outdoor & indoor): 2.05 m[1]
|olympics = 1st (Beijing, 2008)
|worlds =
|highestranking =
|coaching =Wim Vandeven
|updated =11 August 2012
|medaltemplates ={{MedalCountry|{{BEL}}}}{{MedalCompetition|Olympic Games}}{{MedalGold| 2008 Beijing | High jump}}{{MedalCompetition|World Indoor Championships}}{{MedalGold|2008 Valencia|Pentathlon}}{{MedalCompetition|European Championships}}{{MedalGold|2006 Gothenburg|High jump}}{{MedalCompetition|European Indoor Championships}}{{MedalGold|2007 Birmingham|High jump}}{{MedalCompetition|World Athletics Final}}{{MedalSilver |2006 Stuttgart |High jump}}{{MedalBronze |2008 Stuttgart |High jump}}
}}

Tia Hellebaut ({{IPA-nl|ˈti.aː ˈɦɛləbʌut}}; born 16 February 1978 in Antwerp) is a retired Belgian track and field athlete, as well as a chemist, who started out in her sports career in the heptathlon, and afterwards specialized in the high jump event. She has cleared 2.05 metres both indoors and outdoors.

Hellebaut was the 2008 Olympic champion in the high jump. She was previously the European Champion in 2006 and then the European Indoor Champion in 2007. She won the gold medal in the pentathlon at the 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships. In addition to these medals, she has participated at the World Championships in Athletics on four occasions.

She holds the Belgian records indoor pentathlon, indoor long jump and high jump, both indoors and outdoors.[2]

Career

Hellebaut started as a professional athlete with Atletiek Vlaanderen in the period from 2001 to October 2005. From 1 November 2006 she again became a professional athlete, this time at Bloso. During her most successful period, Hellebaut was trained by her partner, Wim Vandeven, at her club, Atletica 84.

At the 2006 European Championships and 2007 Indoor European Championships Hellebaut won the gold medal in high jump. The 2006 victory became especially notable, when just a couple of minutes later her close friend and compatriot Kim Gevaert completed a historical sprint double. The images of both athletes celebrating their victory together, wrapped in a national flag, became part of Belgian sports history.

In 2007 Hellebaut set the fourth best pentathlon score of all time, but chose not to contest the European Indoor Championships because of illness, choosing instead to compete only in the high jump, which she later won. Most of the remainder of her 2007 high jump season was hampered by an ankle injury. A shoulder injury, which made it difficult for her to throw the javelin, ended her career in heptathlon around this time.

For the 2008 indoor season, Hellebaut returned her focus to multi-events and became world champion of pentathlon at the World Indoor Championships in Valencia, where she set a secord for the best high jump result in a women's multi-event competition, clearing 1.99 m.[3]

At the 2008 Summer Olympics, held in Beijing, Hellebaut reached her pinnacle thus far by winning the gold medal in the high jump, ahead of the favorite, Blanka Vlašić of Croatia, with a new outdoor personal best of 2.05 m. Her achievement represented the first-ever athletics gold medal in the Olympics for a Belgian woman, and only the second of any color, one day after Belgium won their first (silver) medal in the 4 × 100 m relay (which later was upgraded to gold after the Russian team was disqualified because of a doping rules infraction by one of their athletes).

Retirement and comebacks

On 5 December 2008 Hellebaut announced her pregnancy and retirement from professional athletics and that she would start working for a sports marketing company. The following year, on 9 June, her daughter Lotte was born.

Inspired by fellow Belgian Kim Clijsters' comeback to the WTA as a young mother, she unexpectedly announced her return to athletics on 16 February 2010, her 32nd birthday. Hellebaut also announced that she would be concentrating exclusively on the high jump and aimed to participate in the 2012 Summer Olympics.[4]

Shortly after placing fifth at the 2010 European Athletic Championships in Barcelona by clearing 1.97 metres, her first major championships after her comeback, it was reported that Hellebaut was pregnant again. During a press conference on 17 August she confirmed that she had been pregnant for three months already, and that this had been a conscious choice. Although Hellebaut did not participate in any further 2010 events, she never officially announced that the new pregnancy would definitively end her career.[5]

On 16 June 2011, 4 months after the birth of her second daughter Saartje, Hellebaut announced her second return, confirming that she aimed to defend her title at the London Games.[6] She was the flag bearer of Belgium during the 2012 Summer Olympics Parade of Nations. She ended fifth in the high jump competition.

On 6 March 2013, after the European Indoor Championships in Gothenburg, she announced her second retirement, saying that she could no longer challenge herself mentally in competition.{{citation needed|date=June 2013}}

Sport consultancy

In March 2019, Belgian football club Beerschot Wilrijk announced the take-over of amateur side Rupel Boom and lifetime Beerschot supporter Hellebaut was appointed advisor at Rupel Boom's football academy.[7]

Honours

  • 2009 : Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown, by Royal Decree of H.M. King Albert II.[8]

International achievements

Representing {{BEL
1995European Youth Olympic FestivalBath, United Kingdom9thHigh jump1.75 m
1997European Junior ChampionshipsLjubljana, Slovenia11thHeptathlon5157 pts
1999European U23 ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden 6thHeptathlon5548 pts
2000European Indoor ChampionshipsGhent, BelgiumPentathlonDNF
2001World ChampionshipsEdmonton, Canada14thHeptathlon5680 pts
2003World ChampionshipsParis, FranceHeptathlonDNF
2004World Indoor ChampionshipsBudapest, Hungary5thPentathlon4526 pts
Olympic GamesAthens, Greece12thHigh jump1.85 m (o)
2005World ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland6thHigh jump1.93 m
2006World Championships IndoorMoscow, Russia6thHigh jump1.96 m (xo)
European ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden1stHigh jump2.03 m (o)
World Athletics FinalStuttgart, Germany2ndHigh jump1.98 m
IAAF World CupAthens, Greece2ndHigh jump1.97 m
2007European Indoor ChampionshipsBirmingham, England1stHigh jump2.05 m (o)
World ChampionshipsOsaka, Japan14thHigh jump1.90 m (xo)
2008World Indoor ChampionshipsValencia, Spain1stPentathlon4867 pts
Olympic GamesBeijing, China1stHigh jump2.05 m (o)
World Athletics FinalStuttgart, Germany3rdHigh jump1.97 m
2010European ChampionshipsBarcelona, Spain5thHigh jump1.97 m (xxo)
2012World Indoor ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey5thHigh jump1.95 m (o)
Olympic GamesLondon, United Kingdom5thHigh jump1.97 m (o)
2013European Indoor ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden8thHigh jump1.87 m (xo)

Statistics

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}
Personal records
EventResultYearExtra
100 metres hurdles13.91 seconds2006
60 metres hurdles8.50 seconds2006
Triple jump13.05 metres2001
Shot put13.85 metres2008
Javelin throw44.37 metres2001
200 metres24.65 seconds2006
800 metres2:14.75 seconds2006
Long jump (indoor)6.42 metres2007NR
Long jump (outdoor)6.44 metres2007
High jump (indoor)2.05 metres2007NR
High jump (outdoor)2.05 metres2008NR
Heptathlon6201 points2006
Pentathlon4877 points2007NR
{{col-2}}
Belgian record marks
EventResultYearLocation
Pentathlon indoor4268 points17 February 1999Ghent, Belgium
4436 points25 February 2001Ghent, Belgium
4560 points1 February 2004Zuidbroek, the Netherlands
4589 points21 February 2004Aubière, France
4877 points11 February 2007Ghent, Belgium
High jump (outdoor)1.95 metres20 June 2004Plovdiv, Bulgaria
1.95 metres27 August 2004Athens, Greece
1.98 metres2 June 2006Oslo, Norway
2.00 metres8 July 2006Paris, France
2.00 metres15 July 2006Rome, Italy
2.01 metres11 August 2006Gothenburg, Sweden
2.03 metres11 August 2006Gothenburg, Sweden
2.05 metres23 August 2008Beijing, China
Long jump indoor6.36 metres19 February 2006Ghent, Belgium
6.42 metres11 February 2007Ghent, Belgium
High jump indoor1.96 metres26 February 2006Ghent, Belgium
1.97 metres28 February 2006Tallinn, Estonia
2.00 metres27 January 2007Brussels, Belgium
2.05 metres3 March 2007Birmingham, England
Heptathlon outdoor6201 points28 May 2006Götzis, Austria
{{col-end}}

References

1. ^Tia Hellabaut's IAAF profile
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.flanderstoday.eu/jahia/Jahia/cache/offonce/pid/2259;jsessionid=B15062831BF52DCC3D7468E195118529 |title=Great Expectations |newspaper=Flanders Today |date=6 August 2008 }}{{dead link|date=May 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}
3. ^iaaf.org – Gevaert on top of the world in Gent – PREVIEW
4. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.european-athletics.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=8278&Itemid=2 | title=Tia Hellebaut to return to the High Jump | date=16 February 2010 | publisher=European Athletics | accessdate=6 November 2010 }}{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
5. ^{{cite news | url=http://www.standaard.be/artikel/detail.aspx?artikelid=DMF20100818_047 | title=Tia Hellebaut al drie maanden zwanger | date=18 August 2010 | newspaper=De Standaard | accessdate=6 November 2010 }}
6. ^{{cite web | url=https://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2011-06-14-1478135302_x.htm | title=Olympic champ Hellebaut to defend high jump title | date=17 June 2011 | publisher=USAToday | accessdate=17 June 2011 }}
7. ^[https://sporza.be/nl/2019/03/26/beerschot-wilrijk-neemt-rupel-boom-over/ Beerschot Wilrijk neemt Rupel Boom over, Hellebaut wordt jeugdadviseur: "Mentale begeleiding"] - Sporza {{nl|icon}}
8. ^http://www.gva.be/cnt/aid846788/gevaert-en-hellebaut-bekroond-met-grootkruis

External links

  • Official website
  • Tia Hellebaut Interview
  • {{Commonscat-inline}}
{{s-start}}{{s-sports|oly}}{{succession box
| before = Sébastien Godefroid
| title = Flagbearer for {{BEL}}
| years = London 2012
| after = Olivia Borlée
}}{{s-end}}{{Navboxes colour
|bg=gold
|fg=navy
|title= Awards
|list1={{Golden Spike Belgium}}{{Belgian National Sports Merit Award}}{{Flemish Sportsjewel}}{{S-start}}{{Succession box
| before=Justine Henin
| title=Belgian Sports Personality of the Year
| after=Incumbent
| years=2008}}{{S-end}}{{Belgian Sportsperson of the Year}}
}}{{Footer Olympic Champions High Jump Women}}{{Footer Olympic Champions Belgium Women}}{{Footer Olympic Medalists Belgium Athletics Women}}{{Footer World Indoor Champions Pentathlon Women}}{{Footer European Champions High Jump Women}}{{Footer European Champions Indoor High Jump Women}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Hellebaut, Tia}}

16 : 1978 births|Living people|Belgian heptathletes|Belgian female high jumpers|Flemish sportspeople|Sportspeople from Antwerp|Olympic athletes of Belgium|Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics|Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer Olympics|Olympic gold medalists for Belgium|Grand Crosses of the Order of the Crown (Belgium)|Athletes (track and field) at the 2012 Summer Olympics|Belgian sportswomen|European Athletics Championships medalists|Medalists at the 2008 Summer Olympics|Olympic gold medalists in athletics (track and field)

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