Łukasz Chyła
Polish sprinter (born 1981)
Łukasz Chyła (born 31 March 1981 in Dziemiany) is a track and field sprint athlete who competes internationally for Poland.[1][2]
Chyła represented Poland at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He competed at the 4x100 metres relay together with Marcin Jędrusiński, Dariusz Kuć and Marcin Andrzej Nowak. In their qualification heat they did not finish due to a mistake in the baton exchange and they were eliminated.[1]
Competition record
Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
|
Representing Poland
|
1999
|
European Junior Championships
|
Riga, Latvia
|
11th (h)
|
200 m
|
21.51
|
2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.67
|
2000
|
World Junior Championships
|
Santiago, Chile
|
10th (sf)
|
100 m
|
10.58 (wind: -0.3 m/s)
|
3rd (h)[3]
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.61
|
2001
|
European U23 Championships
|
Amsterdam, Netherlands
|
2nd
|
200 m
|
20.99 (wind: 0.1 m/s)
|
1st
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.41
|
World Championships
|
Edmonton, Canada
|
6th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.71
|
2002
|
European Championships
|
Munich, Germany
|
2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
38.71
|
2003
|
European U23 Championships
|
Bydgoszcz, Poland
|
4th
|
100 m
|
10.35 (wind: 1.2 m/s)
|
1st (h)[3]
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.63
|
World Championships
|
Paris, France
|
5th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
38.96
|
2004
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Budapest, Hungary
|
17th (sf)
|
60 m
|
6.73
|
Olympic Games
|
Athens, Greece
|
20th (qf)
|
100 m
|
10.23
|
5th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
38.54
|
2005
|
European Indoor Championships
|
Madrid, Spain
|
6th
|
60 m
|
6.66
|
World Championships
|
Helsinki, Finland
|
23rd (h)
|
100 m
|
10.39
|
2006
|
European Championships
|
Gothenburg, Sweden
|
8th (sf)
|
100 m
|
10.30
|
2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.05
|
2007
|
European Indoor Championships
|
Birmingham, United Kingdom
|
17th (h)
|
60 m
|
6.75
|
World Championships
|
Osaka, Japan
|
7th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
DNF
|
2008
|
Olympic Games
|
Beijing, China
|
–
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
DNF
|
References
External links
|
---|
- 1997: Great Britain (Money, Devonish, Henthorn, Golding, Baillie†)
- 1999: Great Britain (Malcolm, Henthorn, Stewart, Findlay)
- 2001: Poland (Kondratowicz, Chyła, Płacheta, Rogowski)
- 2003: Great Britain (Edgar, Lambert, Chin, Grant, Abeyie†)
- 2005: France (Kankarafou, M'Barke, De Lépine, Alerte)
- 2007: Great Britain (Scott, Pickering, Fifton, Ellington)
- 2009: Great Britain (Scott, Sandeman, Pierre, Yearwood)
- 2011: Italy (Tumi, Basciani, Manenti, Obou)
- 2013: Great Britain (Tobais, Talbot, Walker-Khan, Gemili, Bolarinwa†, Osewa†)
- 2015: France (Anouman, Zézé, Romain, Dutamby, Chalus†)
- 2017: Germany (Roger Gurski, Köllmann, Trutenat, Hoffmann, Almas†)
- 2019: Germany (Kranz, Schulte, Almas, Trutenat)
- 2021: Germany (Wolf, Brandner, Skupin-Alfa, Hartmann)
- 2023: Italy (Marek, Melluzzo, Ricci, Tardioli, Ulisse†)
| † denotes athletes who took part in heats only |
|
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