Anita Włodarczyk

Anita Włodarczyk (Polish pronunciation: [aˈɲita vwɔˈdart͡ʂɨk]; born 8 August 1985) is a Polish hammer thrower. She is the 2012, 2016 and 2020 Olympic champion, and the first woman in history to throw the hammer over 80 m; she currently holds the women's world record of 82.98 m. She is considered the greatest women's hammer thrower of all time.[2][3]

Anita Włodarczyk
Anita Włodarczyk in 2016 Rio Olympics
Personal information
NationalityPolish
Born (1985-08-08) 8 August 1985 (age 38)
Rawicz, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Height1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)[1]
Weight100 kg (220 lb)[1]
Sport
SportAthletics
EventHammer throw
ClubSkra Warszawa

She was voted the Polish Sports Personality of the Year in 2016 and received the Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta in 2021 for her outstanding achievements in sport.[4][5]

Włodarczyk (on the left) celebrating her gold medal of 2017 World Championships with teammate and bronze medalist Malwina Kopron.

Career

Early life and competition

Włodarczyk won her first national U23 championships in 2007, and went on to compete in the 2007 European Athletics U23 Championships, although she did not progress beyond the qualifying round. She finished sixth in the hammer throw competition at the 2008 Olympic Games.

Włodarczyk qualified for the 2008 World Athletics Final and won a bronze medal. The following year, she took part in the 2009 European Team Championships, winning her first gold medal at a major international competition.

Włodarczyk achieved a personal best throw of 76.20 metres (250.0 ft), achieved on 30 May 2009 in Biała Podlaska, beating her previous record by 81 cm and improve 76.59 m in Golden Spike Ostrava. Prior to the 2009 World Championships in Athletics, she produced a national record-breaking performance in Cottbus, winning the competition with a world-leading 77.20-metre (253.3 ft) throw. This was fourth longest throw by a woman in hammer throw.

First world record

On 22 August 2009, during the World Championships in Athletics in Berlin, Germany, Włodarczyk set a world record with a throw of 77.96 metres (255 ft 9 in).[6] Her season ended prematurely when she twisted her left ankle during her celebration.[7] Returning to competition at the Meeting Grand Prix IAAF de Dakar in April 2010, she easily won her event with a throw of 75.13 m.[8] She then proceeded to break her existing world record with a 78.30-metre (256.9 ft) hammer throw at the Enea Cup in Bydgoszcz on 6 June 2010.[9] She won the bronze at the 2010 European Athletics Championships and was ranked second overall for the season in the IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge, finishing behind Betty Heidler.[10] She finished outside of the medals at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics, coming fifth overall.

Olympic Games and further successes

In 2012, Włodarczyk finished third at the Ostrava Golden Spike and was the runner-up at the Prefontaine Classic.[11] At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she won the silver medal with a throw of 77.60 m.[12] On 11 October 2016, she was retroactively awarded gold after Russia's Tatyana Lysenko was stripped of the medal after testing positive in reanalysis of her stored doping samples.[13][14][15]

In 2014, Włodarczyk won the European Championship with a throw of 78.76, which was a championship and national record.[16]

On 1 August 2015 Włodarczyk set a new world record with a throw of 81.08 metres (266.0 ft) and became the first woman to throw the hammer over 80 metres (260 ft).[17] She went on to win the gold medal at the World Championships, once again throwing over 80 metres (260 ft).

On 15 August 2016 Włodarczyk won the gold medal at the Olympic Games in Rio, setting a new world record with a throw of 82.29 metres (270.0 ft).[18] On 28 August 2016, she threw 82.98 metres (272.2 ft), setting a new world record just two weeks after the Olympics at the EAA 7th Kamila Skolimowska Memorial in Warsaw. In competition, Włodarczyk uses some of the equipment that belonged to the late Skolimowska, as a tribute to her fellow hammer thrower.[19]

In 2014, 2016 and 2017 she was given Track & Field News Athlete of the Year award.

In 2017, she received Polish Sportspersonality of the Year Award for her sports achievements in the previous year. She finished the year with a 42 contests winning streak which began in July 2014.[20]

As of 2020, she holds all of the top 15 women's hammer throw results and 27 out of the top 30.[21]

Third consecutive Olympic gold medal

At the 2020 Summer Olympics, she won the hammer throw event with a throw of 78.48 m. Włodarczyk is the only woman to ever win this event three times in a row (in the men's competition, only John Flanagan did so, winning the event at the 1900, 1904 and 1908 Summer Olympics). She is also the first woman to win a specific individual athletics event three times in a row at the Olympic Games. With three Olympic gold medals, she ranks third in the all-time medal table among Polish athletes who competed at the Summer Olympics, behind racewalker Robert Korzeniowski and sprinter Irena Szewińska.

Awards and accolades

Some of the selected awards and honours she received for her sports achievements include:

International competitions

YearCompetitionVenuePositionNotes
2007European U23 ChampionshipsDebrecen, Hungary9th63.74 m
2008European Winter Throwing CupSplit, Croatia1st71.84 m
Olympic GamesBeijing, China4th71.56 m
World Athletics FinalStuttgart, Germany3rd70.97 m
2009European Team ChampionshipsLeiria, Portugal1st75.23 m
World ChampionshipsBerlin, Germany1st77.96 m
2010European ChampionshipsBarcelona, Spain3rd73.56 m
2011World ChampionshipsDaegu, South Korea5th73.56 m
2012European ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland1st74.29 m
Olympic GamesLondon, United Kingdom1st77.60 m
2013World ChampionshipsMoscow, Russia1st78.46 m
Jeux de la FrancophonieNice, France1st75.62 m
2014European ChampionshipsZürich, Switzerland1st78.76 m
Continental CupMarrakesh, Morocco1st75.21 m
2015World ChampionshipsBeijing, China1st80.85 m
2016European ChampionshipsAmsterdam, Netherlands1st78.14 m
Olympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil1st82.29 m OR
2017World ChampionshipsLondon, United Kingdom1st77.90 m
2018Athletics World CupLondon, United Kingdom1st78.74 m
European ChampionshipsBerlin, Germany1st78.94 m
2021Olympic GamesTokyo, Japan1st78.48 m
2023World ChampionshipsBudapest, Hungary13th (q)71.17 m

See also

References

External links

Records
Preceded by
Tatyana Lysenko
Betty Heidler
Women's Hammer World Record Holder
22 August 2009 – 21 May 2011
31 August 2014 –
Succeeded by
Betty Heidler
Incumbent
Awards
Preceded by Women's Track & Field Athlete of the Year
2014
2016, 2017
Succeeded by