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Femke Bol
Photo of Femke Bol with a flag draped over her shoulders and holding a gold medal
Bol with her gold 400 m hurdles medal at the 2023 World Championships in Budapest
Personal information
Born (2000-02-23) 23 February 2000 (age 24)
Amersfoort, Netherlands
Height1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Weight65 kg (143 lb)[1]
Sport
SportTrack and field
Event(s)200 m, 400 m, 400 m hurdles, 4×400 m relay
ClubAV Altis[2]
Turned pro2019[3]
Coached by
Achievements and titles
Highest world ranking
  • No. 1 (400 m hurdles, 2021)
  • No. 2 (overall, 2023)
  • No. 3 (400 m, 2023)
  • No. 167 (200 m, 2021)
Personal bests
  • 200 m: 22.88 (2023)
  • 400 m: 49.44 NR (2022)
  • 300 m hurdles: 36.86 WB (2022)
  • 400 m hurdles: 51.45 AR (2023)
  • Indoors
  • 200 m: 22.87 i NR (2023)
  • 400 m: 49.26 i WR (2023)
  • 500 m: 1:05.63 i WB (2023)
Updated on 17 September 2023

Femke Bol (pronounced [ˈfɛmkə bɔl]; born 23 February 2000) is a Dutch track and field athlete who competes in hurdling and sprinting. She specialises in the 400 metres hurdles, where she is the 2023 World Champion, and in the 400 metres, where she is the indoor world record holder. In the 4 × 400 metres relay, she is the 2023 World Champion with the Dutch women's team.

Bol holds the world record in the indoor 400 metres with a time of 49.26 seconds set on 19 February 2023; the European record in the 400 metres hurdles with a time of 51.45 seconds, making her the second-fastest woman of all time in the event; and five Dutch records in individual events and relays. She also has world best performances in the 300 metres hurdles and 500 metres indoor.

She won two gold medals at the 2023 World Championships, was champion in the 2021, 2022, and 2023 Diamond League, and won a bronze medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. She is also a four-time silver medalist at the world championships (outdoor and indoor), a seven-time gold medalist at the European championships (outdoor and indoor), and an eight-time medalist (four gold) at the Dutch championships (outdoor and indoor).

Bol's highest World Athletics Rankings were No. 1 in the 400 metres hurdles in 2021–2023, No. 3 in the 400 metres in 2023, and No. 2 of women overall in 2023. She was European Athletics Rising Star of the Year in 2021 and European Athlete of the Year in 2022 and 2023.

Early life and background

Femke Bol was born on 23 February 2000 in Amersfoort, Netherlands.[8][9] She has an older brother.[10] As a child, Bol practised judo for a year after she had broken her arm twice and her doctor had recommended the sport to help her learn how to fall.[11]

Around 2008, she started practising athletics at a local club, following her brother who was already a member there.[10][12] In an interview, Bol said about the sport: "It was always a way to clear your mind and just have fun and not think too much about other things. That's still what I like so much about it."[13] In 2014, she transferred to another local club, AV Altis, where her coach discovered her talent for longer sprints.[14]

Bol attended secondary school in Amersfoort,[14] after which she became a student of communication sciences at Wageningen University.[10] As of 2023, she was in a relationship with the Belgian pole vaulter Ben Broeders.[15]

Youth and junior career

Bol focused on the 400 metres distance in 2015, at age 15, and started winning Dutch age-group competitions.[5] She won five national youth titles in the 400 m (outdoor and indoor) between 2015 and 2017, and four junior titles in 2018 and 2019 (400 m outdoor, indoor, and hurdles).[8] In 2016, she started training with coach Bram Peters at the athletics track of Ciko'66 in Arnhem, where her parents drove her almost daily.[5]

Photo of Femke Bol in orange and blue clothing while sprinting
19-year-old Bol at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha.

At the international competitions, she progressed steadily. Competing against athletes up to two years her senior, Bol did not advance from the 400 m heats at the 2015 European Youth Olympic Festival in Tbilisi, Georgia. Two years later, the 17-year-old participated in the European Under-20 Championships held in Grosseto, Italy and reached the semi-finals of the event.[8]

In 2019, her last year as a junior competitor, she claimed her first national title (indoor 400 m) in a senior competition.[8] In June, in the third hurdles race of her life, Bol broke Dutch U20/U23 records and achieved World Championship qualifying standard when winning a meet in Geneva with a time of 55.94 s.[16][17] In July, she won a gold medal in the 400 m hurdles at the European U20 Championships in Borås, Sweden.[8] In September, she ran her first professional race at the Galà dei Castelli in Bellinzona, Switzerland.[3] In October, at the Doha World Championships in Qatar, the 19-year-old reached the semi-finals with a new personal best of 55.32 s in the heats of the 400 m hurdles, becoming the second-fastest European U20 woman in history.[18][19] She also helped her national women's team place seventh in the 4 × 400 m relay.[8]

Since November 2019, she has been training at the Dutch National Sports Centre Papendal near Arnhem, coached by Switzerland's Laurent Meuwly and her previous coach Bram Peters as assistant coach.[5]

Senior career

2020: First senior Dutch record and first senior successes

Photo of Femke Bol in the air while passing a hurdle seen from her front
Bol set her first senior Dutch record on 18 July 2020 in Papendal.

Bol was forced to train on gravel paths in the woods and on grass fields when COVID-19 quarantine measures were first enacted in March 2020. Despite this, she raced in Papendal in July and broke by almost a second the national 400 m hurdles record of 54.62 s set by Ester Goossens in 1998.[20] First, running in the rain, she took almost a second off her 2019 best with a time of 54.47 s, which could not be ratified as only one other athlete competed. Two weeks later, she achieved 53.79 s, the fourth-fastest European under-23 time in history.[21]

During this pandemic season, the Dutchwoman won all her following races over the barriers: two Diamond League events staged in 2020 as one-off exhibition competitions, and three Continental Tour events. First she stayed ahead of all her competitors in Székesfehérvár, Hungary on 19 August, to repeat this achievement four days later at the Stockholm Bauhaus-galan winning her first Diamond race.[8] In September, she won in Ostrava (300 m hurdles), Bellinzona, and Rome. She reduced her open 400 metres pre-2020 best by 1.85 s down to 51.13 s.[8]

2021: Tokyo Olympic bronze medallist

Bol started her unbeaten indoor campaign on 30 January, beating her previous best in the 400 metres by more than 1.5 s to break a Dutch record in a time of 50.96 s at the Vienna Indoor Track & Field meet in Austria. The previous record was set a few minutes earlier by Lieke Klaver, who in turn broke Ester Goossens' mark which had stood at 51.82 s since 1998.[22] Bol then won all her following seven races at the distance in four events, improving in every final. Competing in the World Indoor Tour, she powered to meet records in Metz (50.81 s) and Toruń (50.66 s), then clocked 50.64 s at the Dutch Indoor Championships, and finally lowered her record to 50.63 s when winning at the European Indoor Championships in Toruń, Poland.[23][24] She took there her second gold medal anchoring the women's 4 × 400 m relay to a championship record.[25][26] Her individual mark made her the fastest European woman since 2009.[27]

Photo of Femke Bol sprinting while ahead three other competitors
Bol during the 400 metres at the 2021 European Team Championships, where she won and set one of her eleven Dutch records from 2021.

The 21-year-old started the 2021 outdoor season by competing at the World Athletics Relays to set a 400 m national record of 50.56 s on 29 May at the IFAM meeting in Oordegem. She then started improving her own Dutch hurdling record when winning Diamond League meetings, beginning with a time of 53.44 s on 10 June in Florence. At the time it was also European U23 record, breaking a 37-year-old mark.[28] On 19 June, she returned to the 400 m flat event during the European Team Championships in Romania and bettered her record with a 50.37 s performance.[29] On 1 July in Oslo, she lowered her hurdles record in a time of 53.33 s. She then took almost a second off with a Diamond League record of 52.37 s on 4 July in Stockholm, where she beat Shamier Little by 0.02 s. This race was only the second in history, after the 2017 USATF Championships, in which three women recorded times below 53 seconds as third-placed Anna Ryzhykova finished in 52.96 s.[30] Bol, meanwhile, became the fourth fastest woman of all time with the sixth-fastest result ever, missing the European record by just 0.03 s.[31][32] On 6 July, she won the event at the Continental Tour meet in Székesfehérvár with a time of 52.81 s, edging out Little in 52.85 s again.[33] Having won the Diamond race in Gateshead, England on 13 July, she extended her unbeaten streak in her specialist event to 12 races in total. It was her third consecutive victory over Little, but this time Bol dominated, running away by about 10 metres.[34]

Photo of Femke Bol in the air while passing a hurdle seen on her right side
Bol hurdles in the semi-final at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games during heavy rain.

At the delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics in July and August 2021, Bol ran six 400 m races with hurdles and flat, including three under 50 seconds relay legs. In the 400 m hurdles final, Bol finished third after Sydney McLaughlin (51.46 s – world record) and Dalilah Muhammad (51.58 s – inside previous world record).[35] With her time of 52.03 s, she broke the European record and became the third-fastest woman of all time at the event with the fourth-fastest result ever.[35][31][36] It was the first ever Olympic medal for the Netherlands at the event.[37] Before Bol's individual final on 4 August, she helped the mixed 4 × 400 m relay team set a national record in the final with her 49.74 s split, and later she anchored the women's 4 × 400 m relay to consecutive Dutch records in the heat and in the final, clocking splits of 49.14 s and 48.97 s respectively.[38] On 8 August, she reached a 400 metres hurdles ranking of No. 1 in the World Athletics Rankings for the first time.[39]

After the Games, in August and September, she continued her Diamond League dominance over the barriers, winning in Lausanne and the Zürich final with meet records of 53.05 s and 52.80 s respectively to claim her first Diamond trophy.[40][41] At the former, she finished clear ahead of Shamier Little and Dalilah Muhammad, while in Zürich Bol held off Little again.[42][43] Having skipped the USA's event in Eugene and ran 400 m flat in Paris (50.59 s, 4th),[8] she remained unbeaten in the Diamond race with six wins out of six races. While still in Switzerland, on 14 September, she ended her breakthrough season with another meet record in Bellinzona, staying unbeaten in 11 of her 12 hurdles races in 2021.[44]

In 2021, Bol gradually improved her personal bests, setting eleven national records with five more as a member of relay teams.[45][46][47][48][49] Bol also set a Diamond League record,[50] three Diamond League circuit's meet records,[50][51][52] and five meet records at the World Athletics Indoor Tour[23][24] and Continental Tour events.[53][54][44] She broke the 53-second barrier in the 400 m hurdles four times that season, had an individual win-loss record of 16–4, and was voted European Athletics Rising Star of the Year.[8][55]

2022: World indoor and outdoor silver medallist and triple European champion

Photo of Femke Bol sprinting in second position with five other competitors
Bol (second from the left) at the 2022 World Indoors in Belgrade, where she finished second in the 400 m.

Bol opened her indoor season returning to Metz, France, where she bested her previous meeting record in the 400 m (50.72 s), and also won her 200 metres heat with a new personal best (23.37 s). Then she returned to Toruń, Poland, to beat her local meet record again (50.64 s). On 27 February, at the Dutch Indoor Championships, she improved her own national record with a 50.30 s clocking which was also faster than her outdoor best, and putting her 12th on the world indoor all-time list.[56][57] At the World Indoor Championships in Belgrade about three weeks later, Bol won the silver medal, after she fell at the finish line during the semi-finals, in a time of 50.57 s behind Miller-Uibo who ran 50.31 s.[58] Bol also anchored the Dutch women's 4 × 400 m relay to silver thanks to her closing surge from fourth into second, with the fastest split of the race of 50.26 s.[59][60]

The 22-year-old started her outdoor season on 31 May at the Golden Spike meeting in Ostrava, where she ran a world best over the 300 m hurdles. She clocked a time of 36.86 s, which was 1.3 s faster than the previous best set by Zuzana Hejnová in 2013.[61] She continued with Diamond League wins in Rome, Oslo, and Stockholm, breaking a meet record in Oslo before posting 52.27 s in Stockholm to improve her own Diamond League record with 0.10 s which she set the previous year.[62][63][64]

Photo of Femke Bol with a Dutch flag draped over one shoulder and holding a silver medal
After her Olympic bronze Bol went one better in the 400 m hurdles at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene.

At the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon in July, Bol first ran the final leg of the mixed 4 × 400 m relay. After taking the baton a distant third, she anchored the Dutch team to a silver and a national record thanks to her split of 48.95 s, the second-fastest female split of the entire race.[65] In the 400 m hurdles, she equalled her season's best (52.27 s) to finish behind McLaughlin (who lowered her world record to 50.68 s) and ahead of Muhammad in third (53.13 s).[66] The Dutch women's 4 × 400 m squad lost the baton in the heats and was disqualified despite a qualifying position. After the championships in August, she broke for the first time the 50-second barrier in the 400 m flat and set a national and meet record with a time of 49.75 s at the Silesia Diamond League.[67]

The same month, she completed the gold hat-trick at the European Championships in Munich, becoming the first female sprinter to complete a 400 m double at a major championships as she won one-lap events both with and without hurdles. Her time for the open 400 m of 49.44 s was the fastest at a Europeans since Stuttgart 1986 and a new national record, while over the barriers Bol set a championship record.[68][69] She rounded off her Munich campaign by producing a 48.52 s anchor leg to land the Netherlands gold and a national record in the 4 × 400 m relay, moving from third to first around the final bend; their result was also the fastest at a Europeans since 1986.[70] Bol became only the second Dutch athlete after Fanny Blankers-Koen in 1950 to win three gold medals at the event.[71]

In her return to the Diamond League, Bol set another meet record over the barriers in Lausanne, and then concluded her third senior season with a victory at the Zürich final, successfully defending her Diamond League title.[72] She achieved six marks under 53 seconds that year, staying unbeaten in 11 out of her 12 hurdles races, posted an individual win-loss record of 13–4, and was crowned European Female Athlete of the Year.[8][73][74]

2023: World indoor 400 m record and double world champion

Photo of Femke Bol crouching next to an electronic score board that indicates a time of 49.26 seconds
On 19 February 2023, Bol set a world indoor 400 m record, breaking the longest-standing track world record.

On 4 February, Bol improved by nearly 0.7 s the indoor world best performance in the less frequently run distance of 500 metres with 1:05.63 min, also faster than the outdoor record (1:05.9 min), at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix in Boston, USA.[75] Competing again in Metz, France, she set new Dutch indoor records in both the 200 m and 400 m. Bol clocked a lifetime best in the former (22.87 s), and was the fourth woman in history to break the 50-second barrier with 49.96 s in the latter.[76] She next triumphed with a meet record in Liévin (50.20 s).[77]

On 19 February at the Dutch Indoor Championships in Apeldoorn, she sliced 0.7 s off her best with a landmark 49.26 s, breaking the longest-standing world record in a track race. This was at the time the 49.59 s indoor 400 m record, set by Jarmila Kratochvílová back in 1982.[78][79] After setting an outright lifetime best, Bol said, "this was almost a perfect race".[80]

Photo of Femke Bol holding one hand in the air while finishing ahead of the other competitors
Bol caps her 2023 indoor campaign with a 49.85 s run at Istanbul 2023. She broke the 50-second barrier a record three times that year.

She capped her record-breaking indoor campaign by successfully defending her European 400 m title at Istanbul 2023 with the third mark under 50 seconds in the that season (49.85 s), a global record. She added her seventh European title anchoring the Netherlands to a 4 × 400 m relay victory with a new Dutch and championship record, making them the third-fastest national women's team in history.[81][82]

Training for the 2023 outdoor season, Bol practiced a different stride pattern for the 400 m hurdles in an effort to become faster. Previously, she took fifteen steps between the hurdles throughout the race, which meant she could jump over each hurdle with the same leg leading. Now, she tried out fourteen steps between the first few hurdles, which made her alternate between her legs for the jump, only to change it to fifteen steps for the last hurdles.[83] Bol tried this new setup in competition for the first time in Oordegem, Belgium on 27 May, where she ran sixteen steps after hurdle seven instead of fifteen and nonetheless set a world lead of 53.12 s.[84] Bol continued to win three Diamond League races over hurdles in Rome, Oslo, and Lausanne, setting meet records in all three of them.[85][86][87]

On 23 July, Bol made her first ever appearance at the London Diamond League. After leading from the first barrier, Bol continued to widen her lead throughout the entire race. At the finish line, she stopped the clock at a time of 51.45 s, which was a 0.58 s improvement of her personal best in the 400 hurdles.[88] With her performance in London, Bol became the third woman in history to run the 400 metres hurdles under 52 seconds. Her time of 51.45 s was the third-fastest time ever and made her the second-fastest woman of all time, as only world record holder McLaughlin-Levrone had run faster. This time also further lowered her own European and Diamond League records.[89] On 25 July, she reached a women's overall ranking of No. 2 in the World Athletics Rankings for the first time, with only Faith Kipyegon ranking higher.[90]

Photo of Rushell Clayton, Femke Bol, and Shamier Little posing with medals around their necks while holding their countries' flags
Bol with her individual gold medal, together with silver medalist Shamier Little (right) and bronze medalist Rushell Clayton (left) in Budapest.

On 19 August, during the 4 × 400 m mixed relay at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Bol fell within metres of the finish line, while vying with Alexis Holmes of the USA for first place. Landing face first, Bol lost the relay baton over the finish line, making it impossible for the Netherlands team to legitimately finish the race and resulting in a DNF.[91] On 24 August, she gained her first world title when she won the final of the 400 m hurdles in 51.70 s.[92] She then continued her success on 27 August with her anchor leg in the women's 4 × 400 metres relay, passing Nicole Yeargin of Great Britain and Stacey-Ann Williams of Jamaica shortly before the finish line, earning her a second gold medal at these World Championships, together with team members Eveline Saalberg, Lieke Klaver, and Cathelijn Peeters.[93]

After the world championships, Bol won her 400 metres hurdles races at the Galà dei Castelli in Bellinzona, Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, and Prefontaine Classic in Eugene,[8] setting meeting records on all three occasions and becoming the 2023 Diamond League champion in 51.98 s, her third time under 52 seconds of the season, on 17 September.[8][94] In 2023, Bol won all of her twenty individual 400 m flat and hurdles races[8] and became European Athlete of the Year for a second time.[95]

Personal bests

Information from her World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.[8]

Individual events

Personal best times for individual events
Type Event Time (min:)s Venue Date Record Notes
Outdoor 200 metres 22.88 Breda, Netherlands 29 July 2023 (Wind: +0.8 m/s)
400 metres 49.44 Munich, Germany 17 August 2022 NR[68]
300 metres hurdles 36.86 Ostrava, Czech Republic 31 May 2022 WB[61]
400 metres hurdles 51.45 London, United Kingdom 23 July 2023 AR[89] Second-fastest woman of all time[96]
Indoor 60 metres 7.73 i Apeldoorn, Netherlands 1 February 2020
200 metres 22.87 i Metz, France 11 February 2023 NR[76]
400 metres 49.26 i Apeldoorn, Netherlands 19 February 2023 WR[78]
500 metres 1:05.63 i Boston, MA, United States 4 February 2023 WB[75]

Season's bests

Season's best times for individual events
Year 200 m 200 m
indoor
400 m 400 m
indoor
400 m
hurdles
2015 56.14
2016 25.56 54.95 55.95 i
2017 25.18 25.15 i 54.39 54.47 i
2018 25.09 54.33 54.58 i
2019 23.79 52.98 53.24 i 55.32
2020 23.40 51.13 52.47 i 53.79
2021 23.16 23.52 i 50.37 50.63 i 52.03
2022 23.00 23.37 i 49.44 50.30 i 52.27
2023 22.88 22.87 i 49.82 49.26 i 51.45

Key:   Lifetime best (in bold)

Team events

Personal best times for team events
Type Event Time min:s Venue Date Record Notes
Outdoor 4 × 400 m relay women 3:20.72 Budapest, Hungary 27 August 2023 NR[97] Teamed with Eveline Saalberg, Lieke Klaver, and Cathelijn Peeters.[98] Bol's split time for the anchor leg was 48.75 s.[98][99]
4 × 400 m relay mixed 3:09.90 Eugene, OR, United States 15 July 2022 NR[100] Teamed with Liemarvin Bonevacia, Lieke Klaver, and Tony van Diepen.[100] Bol's split time for the anchor leg was 48.95 s.[101]
Indoor 4 × 400 m relay women 3:25.66 i Istanbul, Turkey 5 March 2023 NR[102] Third national team of all time.[102] Teamed with Lieke Klaver, Eveline Saalberg, and Cathelijn Peeters.[103] Bol's split time for the anchor leg was 49.58 s.[103]

Competition results

Information from her World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.[8]

World Athletics Rankings

Highest WA rankings per year
Year 200 m 400 m 400 m
hurdles
Overall
2019 180[104] 43[105] 867[106]
2020 39[107] 737[108]
2021 167[109] 8[110] 1[39] 4[111]
2022 4[112] 1[113] 5[114]
2023 3[115] 1[116] 2[90]

Key:   Lifetime best (in bold)

International competitions

Representing the  Netherlands
Year Competition Venue Position Event Time Notes
2015 European Youth Olympic Festival Tbilisi, Georgia 11th[117] (h) 400 m 57.41
2017 European U20 Championships Grosseto, Italy 12th[118] (sf) 400 m 54.74
2019 World Relays Yokohama, Japan 7th[119][120] 4 × 400 m relay 3:29.03 1st in Final B[120] (52.9 split)[121]
European U20 Championships Borås, Sweden 1st 400 m hurdles 56.25
European Team Championships, 1st League Sandnes, Norway 2nd 400 m hurdles 56.97
World Championships Doha, Qatar 22nd[122] (sf) 400 m hurdles 56.37 (NU20R in heat)[123]
7th 4 × 400 m relay 3:27.89 (52.1 split)[124][note 1]
2021 European Indoor Championships Toruń, Poland 1st 400 m 50.63 i NR
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:27.15 i CR NR (49.99 i split)[126]
World Relays Chorzów, Poland 4th 4 × 400 m relay 3:30.12 (50.58 split)[127][note 2]
8th 4 × 400 m mixed 3:18.04 NR (50.72 split)[129][note 3]
European Team Championships, 1st League Cluj-Napoca, Romania 1st 400 m 50.37 CR NR
Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan 4th 4 × 400 m mixed 3:10.36 NR (49.74 split)[131]
3rd 400 m hurdles 52.03 AR[36]
6th 4 × 400 m relay 3:23.74 NR (48.97 split)[132]
2022 World Indoor Championships Belgrade, Serbia 2nd 400 m 50.57 i
2nd 4 × 400 m relay 3:28.57 i (50.26 i split)[60]
World Championships Eugene, OR, United States 2nd 4 × 400 m mixed 3:09.90 NR (48.95 split)[101]
2nd 400 m hurdles 52.27
– (h) 4 × 400 m relay DQ TR24.6
European Championships Munich, Germany 1st 400 m 49.44 NR
1st 400 m hurdles 52.67 CR
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:20.87 NR (48.52 split)[74]
2023 European Indoor Championships Istanbul, Turkey 1st 400 m 49.85 i
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:25.66 i CR NR (49.58 i split)[103]
European Games Chorzów, Poland 1st 400 m 49.82 CR
European Team Championships First Division
World Championships Budapest, Hungary – (f) 4 × 400 m mixed DNF
1st 400 m hurdles 51.70
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:20.72 NR[97] (48.75 split)[99]

Circuit wins and titles

400 metres hurdles champion (3): 2021,[41] 2022,[73] 2023[94]
400 metres hurdles wins, other events and times (in seconds) specified in parentheses:
400 metres hurdles wins, other events and times (in seconds) specified in parentheses:
400 metres indoor wins, other events and times (in seconds or minutes:seconds) specified in parentheses:

National championships

Year Competition Venue Position Event Time Notes
2015 Dutch U18 Championships Breda 1st 400 m 56.14
2016 Dutch U18 Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 56.74 i
Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 6th 400 m 55.95 i
Dutch Championships Amsterdam 4th 400 m 55.82
Dutch U18 Championships Breda 1st 400 m 54.95
2017 Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 6th 400 m 54.47 i
Dutch U20/U18 Indoor Championships, U18 events Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 55.48 i
Dutch U20/U18 Championships, U18 events Vught 1st 400 m 54.39
2018 Dutch U20 Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 54.93 i
Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 5th 400 m 54.58 i
Dutch U20 Championships Emmeloord 1st 400 m 54.91
Dutch Championships Utrecht 6th 400 m 54.40
2019 Dutch U20 Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 54.34 i
Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 53.24 i NU20R[137]
Dutch U20 Championships Alphen aan den Rijn 1st 400 m hurdles 57.87
2nd 200 m 23.79
Dutch Championships The Hague 7th 200 m 24.41
2020 Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 2nd 400 m 52.78 i
Dutch Championships Utrecht 3rd 200 m 23.40
2021 Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 50.64 i
Dutch Championships Breda 4th 200 m 23.16
2022 Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 50.30 i NR[56]
Dutch Championships Apeldoorn 2nd 200 m 23.05 (23.00 in heat)
2023 Dutch Indoor Championships Apeldoorn 1st 400 m 49.26 i WR[78]
Dutch Championships Breda 2nd 200 m 23.05 (22.88 in heat)

Recognition

2020
2021
2022
2023

Notes

  1. ^ Dutch team ran 3:27.40 min in the heats, where Bol also had a split time 52.1 s.[125]
  2. ^ Dutch team ran 3:28.40 min in the heats.[128]
  3. ^ Time and split from the heats; Bol was replaced in the final in which Dutch team clocked 3:21.02 min.[130]

References

  1. ^ a b "Femke Bol". eurosport.com. Archived from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  2. ^ Leseman, Dick (5 March 2021). "De Arnhemse jaren van Femke Bol; 'Slungelig meisje' is nu wereldtopper". De Gelderlander (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 5 March 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b Diego Sampaolo, "Bol and Dos Santos among winners as meeting records fall in Bellinzona Archived 7 September 2023 at the Wayback Machine", World Athletics, 5 September 2023. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
  4. ^ "Werner Andrea trainde een jonge Femke Bol: ‘Ik zag vrij snel dat ze bijzonder was’ Archived 16 August 2023 at the Wayback Machine" (in Dutch), DeStadAmersfoort.nl, 14 August 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
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Records
Preceded by Women's 400 m hurdles European U23 record holder
1 July 2021 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by Women's 400 m hurdles European record holder
4 August 2021 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by Women's 400 m indoor world record holder
19 February 2023 – present
Incumbent
Achievements
Preceded by Women's season's best performance, 400 m hurdles
2020
2023
Succeeded by
Preceded by Most recent
Awards
Preceded by Women's European Athletics Rising Star of the Year
2021
Succeeded by
Preceded by Women's European Athlete of the Year
2022, 2023
Most recent
Preceded by Dutch Athlete of the Year
2022, 2023
Most recent