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 4 × 100 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
|
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- 1997: Great Britain (Money, Devonish, Henthorn, Golding, Baillie†)
- 1999: Great Britain (Malcolm, Henthorn, Stewart, Findlay)
- 2001: Poland (Kondratowicz, , 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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