Paul van Winkel

Belgian wheelchair racer

Paul van Winkel (born 1953)[1] is a Belgian former wheelchair racer and multiple Paralympic gold medallist.

He is Belgium's most successful athlete at the Summer Paralympics, having won seven gold medals in athletics between 1980 and 1988.[2] In his first Paralympics in 1980, he was a gold medallist in the 4 × 100 m relay (category 2–5) and the category 3 slalom. Two further golds followed in 1984, this time in the 400 m 1500 m. He was also the silver medallist in the 100 m and 200 m sprint events, as well as taking a bronze in the category 3 slalom. Van Winkel medalled in all the events he entered in 1988: he was first in the 400 m, 800 m and 5000 m wheelchair races, and was the runner-up in the 200 m and the 1500 m. In his fourth and final Paralympic Games in 1992, he came close to further medals with a fourth place in the 800 m and fifth in the 200 m. He did not make the 400 m final and failed to finish in the 5000 m, making his last appearance one without medals.[3]

He twice medalled in the demonstration wheelchair race at the Olympics, winning the inaugural event in 1984 and coming runner-up four years later.[4][5] He has also competed outside of Olympic competition and took three consecutive victories at Grandma's Marathon in two separate streaks.[6] He encouraged fellow marathon racer Marcelo Ordaz-Cruz to enter the sport, after Ordaz-Cruz became paralysed due to a gunshot wound.[7] Van Winkel now lives in Minnesota.[8]

References

  1. ^ `Old guys' dominate Kaiser Roll; Milwaukee racer beats Plymouth's Van Winkel by 39 seconds. Minneapolis Star Tribune (1997-07-13). Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  2. ^ Belgium: Seven facts on the Sochi 2014 Paralympics . Paralympic (2014-01-31). Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  3. ^ Athlete Search Results. Paralympic. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  4. ^ Athletics at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games: Men's 1,500 metres Wheelchair. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  5. ^ Athletics at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's 1,500 metres Wheelchair. Sports reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  6. ^ Akor Going for Three Straight Archived 2014-05-13 at the Wayback Machine. Rink and Run. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  7. ^ Thorkelson, Berit (October 2013). Running Down a Dream. Minnesota Monthly. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
  8. ^ Courage Country Championships. Courage Center. Retrieved on 2014-05-12.
Awards
  • v
  • t
  • e
Trophy Victor Boin
Winners
  • 1974: Richard De Zutter
  • 1975: Alice Desal-Verhee
  • 1976: Guy Grun
  • 1977: Remi Van Ophem
  • 1978: Philippe Wouters
  • 1979: Mark De Meyer
  • 1980: Achiel Braet
  • 1981: Paul van Winkel
  • 1982: Mark Devos
  • 1983: Jef Devriese
  • 1984: Marie-Line Pollet
  • 1985: Alex Hermans
  • 1986: Mario Dorigo
  • 1987: Alain Ledoux
  • 1988: Hans Pauwels
  • 1989: Claude Van Coillie
  • 1990: Linda Hortz
  • 1991: José Rebordinos
  • 1992: Benny Govaerts
  • 1993: Robert Lorent
  • 1994: Sabrina Bellavia
  • 1995: Sébastien Xhrouet
  • 1996: Steve Orens
  • 1997: Thierry Daubresse
  • 1998: Gino De Keersmaeker
  • 1999: Carine Van Puyvelde
  • 2000: Kurt Vanraefelghem
  • 2001: Marc Ledoux
  • 2002: Belgian Lions (C.A.S. - Herent)
  • 2003: Dirk Boon
  • 2004: Mathieu Loicq
  • 2005: Dimitri Ghion
  • 2006: Koen Adriaenssens
  • 2007: Nico Vergeylen
  • 2008: Jan Boyen
  • 2009: Annick Sevenans
  • 2010: Wim Decleir
  • 2011: Sven Decaesstecker
  • 2012: Michèle George
  • 2013: Joachim Gérard
  • 2014: Marieke Vervoort
  • 2015: Peter Cilissen
  • 2016: Peter Genyn
  • 2017: Christope Hindricq
  • 2018: Eléonor Sana
  • 2019: Barbara Minneci
  • 2020: Johan De Rick
  • 2021: Laurens Devos
  • 2022: Griet Hoet & Anneleen Monsieur
  • 2023: Maxime Hordies