Ilse Heylen

Belgian judoka (born 1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ilse Heylen

Ilse Heylen (born 21 March 1977, Edegem) is a Belgian judoka. She won the bronze medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece.[1]

Quick Facts Personal information, Born ...
Ilse Heylen
Personal information
Born (1977-03-21) 21 March 1977 (age 47)
OccupationJudoka
Websitewww.ilseheylen.be
Sport
CountryBelgium
SportJudo
Weight class52 kg
Achievements and titles
Olympic Games (2004)
World Champ.9th (2007)
European Champ. (2005)
Medal record
Women's judo
Representing  Belgium
Olympic Games
2004 Athens 52 kg
European Championships
2005 Rotterdam 52 kg
2004 Bucharest 52 kg
2006 Tampere 52 kg
2007 Belgrade 52 kg
2009 Tbilisi 52 kg
2010 Vienna 52 kg
World Masters
2012 Almaty 52 kg
IJF Grand Slam
2012 Moscow 52 kg
2009 Rio de Janeiro 52 kg
2010 Paris 52 kg
2012 Rio de Janeiro 52 kg
IJF Grand Prix
2013 Almaty 52 kg
2013 Tashkent 52 kg
2009 Abu Dhabi 52 kg
2013 Rijeka 52 kg
2015 Tbilisi 52 kg
2015 Samsun 52 kg
2016 Havana 52 kg
2010 Düsseldorf 52 kg
2012 Abu Dhabi 52 kg
2012 Qingdao 52 kg
2013 Miami 52 kg
Summer Universiade
1999 Palma de Mallorca 48 kg
Profile at external databases
IJF325
JudoInside.com167
Updated on 31 May 2023
Close

At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Heylen competed in the Half-lightweight (52 kg). She won her first two bouts against Madagascar's Naina Ravaoarisoa and Kazakhstan's Sholpan Kaliyeva before losing to Cuba's Amarilis Savón, the eventual bronze medal winner, she advanced to the repechage however. She won all of her repechage bouts over Sanna Askelöf of Sweden and Georgina Singleton of Great Britain before winning her bronze medal bout over France's Annabelle Euranie.

Heylen also became the 2005 European Champion (in Rotterdam) and won a silver medal in 2004 and a bronze medal at the 2006, 2007, 2009 and 2010 European Championships.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

Heylen also competed at the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics.[8] At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she reached the semi-finals, where she was defeated by the eventual silver medalist, Yanet Bermoy.[9]

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.