| Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Born | (1995-04-26)26 April 1995 (age 30) Brussels, Belgium | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sport | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Country | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sport | Para athletics | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Disability | Spina bifida | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Disability class | T54 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Event(s) | 100 metres 400 metres 800 metres 1500 metres | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Club | Royal White Star Athletic Club | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team | Red Velvet Racing Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Coached by | Arno Mul | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Léa Bayekula (born 26 April 1995) is a Belgian wheelchair racer who competes in international track and field competitions. She is reigningParalympic 100m and 400m champion inT54 racing, after previously breaking through with aEuropean bronze medal in 2021.[1][2][3]
Léa Bayekula was born withspina bifida in a family of 8 where she and her twin sister are the oldest children. She was 6 years old when, after years of training, she finally mastered how to walk. Her parents always made it a point of honor that she should join a traditional school and not an institution for children with disabilities.[4]
First coming to public attention by reaching the final ofBelgium's Got Talent with her gospel choir in 2013, Bayekula discoveredparasports by chance at the age of 15 during a general public day organised in Brussels by the Ligue handisport francophone. She first practicedwheelchair basketball for three years.[5] Then, after seeing a demonstration byBelgianParalympic athleteMarieke Vervoort of what she could do with her wheelchair, she switched topara-athletics at age 18, specializing in 100 to 400 metres.[6]
Bayekula's first success came in 2017 when she became Belgian national champion for the first time in the T54 200 metres.[7] From there on, there followed more national titles: in 2020 and 2021 in the 100 metres and 400 metres T54,[8][9] in 2023 in the 100 metres T54,[10] in 2024 in the 100 and 400 metres T54.[11]
Her first international success came in 2021 when she won the bronze medal in the 100 metres T54 at theEuropean Championships inBydgoszcz, Poland.[12]
Moving to Dutch coach Arno Mul, Bayekula finished fourth in the 400 metres at the2023 World Para Athletics Championships in Paris and seventh in the 1500 metres, but missed out on the 100 metres final by finishing third in her semi-final behindNoemi Alphonse of Mauritius and China's Luo Shuimei, ranking her ninth overall. Skipping the2024 World Championships in Kobe, Bayekula broke an international record for the first time when she set a new European record of 51.89 seconds in the 400 metres T54 at the Sharjah 2024 International Open Para Athletics Meeting in February 2024, finishing second behind world record holderTatyana McFadden of the USA.[13] The following June, Bayekula went on to break McFadden's world record at the Mémorial Daniela Jutzeler inArbon, Switzerland, posting a time of 51.13 seconds, and then broke her own record at the Grand Prix de Paris atStade Charléty, making history in becoming the first 400 metres T54 athlete under 51 seconds posting a time of 50.91 seconds,[14] putting her on the road to claim both the 100 metres and 400 metres titles at the2024 Paralympic Games at theStade de France.
Bayekula started the first Paralympics of her career with a win in the heats of the 800 metres, progressing her through to the final, where after leading for a long time she eventually finished fifth, with gold won byManuela Schaer of Switzerland.[15][16]
In the 100 metres, Bayekula again won her semi-final heat in a time of 15.87 seconds, ahead of Alphonse andHannah Dederick of the US, beaten only by Tatyana McFadden's Paralympic record of 15.55 seconds from the other semi-final.[17] The two fastest performers from the morning semis would again outperform the rest of the field in the final held that evening, with Bayekula breaking McFadden's new Paralympic record by 0.05 seconds, for a new Paralympic mark of 15.50. McFadden herself won silver in 15.67 with training colleagueAmanda Kotaja of Finland third in 15.77, and Alphonse fourth.[18][19][20]
By holding the 400 metres world record, Bayekula was considered among the medal favourites at the one-lap distance in Paris the following night. The Belgian winning her semi-final as she had previously done in the 100m and 800m, clocking the fastest time in the round by almost a second-and-a-half. Her mark of 52.25 seconds was well clear of Schaer's winning time in the other semi-final of 53.69.[21]
A tight sprint in the final saw Bayekula hold off Schaer to claim her second gold medal of the week in a time of 53.05 seconds, with Schaer second in 53.14, and China'sZhou Zhaoqian third in 54.01.[22][23]
Bayekula was among the Belgian Olympic and Paralympic medallists honoured at theMemorial Van DammeDiamond League meeting at theKing Baudouin Stadium after the Paris Games.
Bayekula joined thegospel choir, Voice of Angels, when she was 6. She enjoyed going to concerts with the choir. With the choir she even reached the finals of "Belgium's got Talent" in 2013 onRTL-TVI, a french-language channel in Belgium.[24]
She practiced contemporary dance since the age of 17, modeled and dreamed of becoming an actress[4] She was an ambassador of Unrun (42/54), the Belgian activewear label founded by Belgium's2024 Summer Olympic Games gold medal winnersElodie Ouedraogo andOlivia Borlée.[25]
She became aHandicap International Ambassador in 2021.[5]
She has appeared in multiple TV documentaries: "Croire malgré tout" (Believe in Spite of Everything),[26] EX AEQUO! (Ten inspiring stories of professional athletes facing discrimination based on race, gender, sexual orientation and disability)[27] and "Paralympique".[28]
Her idol and role model, and good friend, is Belgium's 400 metres runnerCynthia Bolingo who she first met in the bath rooms at one of her first competitions in 2016.[29]