#441 Erkenningsnummer P708816
august 3, 2016 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ rEad morE at www.flandErstoday.Eu currEnt affairs \ P2
Politics \ P4
Goodbye Quick The new owners of Quick fast-food chain are turning all the outlets into Burger King, to the dismay of some – and the delight of others \7
BusinEss \ P7
innovation \ P9
Horrors at sea
Flemish midwife Dominique Luypaers helps get refugees from rickety, overcrowded boats to safe shores: “It’s a testimony to complete inhumanity” \ 13
The road to Rio
Education \ P10
art & living \ P11
LivinG tHe dream
Owner of a French vineyard or book author? Both are fantasy jobs, but Flemish crime-fiction scribe Koen Strobbe does them both \ 14
© Courtesy team Belgium
flanders’ finest athletes set their sights on olympic glory in Brazil leo cendrowicz More articles by leo \ flanderstoday.eu
Four years ago, Flemish athletes brought home a single bronze from the Olympics. This time around, the rising stars and the medal hopefuls are looking to make their mark at the Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.
T
hey are the fittest and finest that Flanders can fling at the world. They are sailors and swimmers, athletes and archers, gymnasts and golfers, cyclists and canoeists, tennis players and taekwondo fighters. And they are in Rio de Janeiro to test their speed and strength against the greatest in the world in that four-yearly festival of sports, the Olympic Games. From cyclist Greg Van Avermaet to golfer Nicolas Colsaerts to Yanina Wickmayer in tennis to the four (count ’em all) Borlée runners, there are a plethora of real medal chances. When the 109-strong Belgian squad marches out in Rio’s Maracanã Stadium for the 5 August opening ceremony, they will be hoping to seize their moment. They know the odds are stacked against them: there is only ever one champion
in each discipline, and two other medallists on the podium. And despite its success at fostering top level footballers, tennis players and cyclists in recent years, Belgium has underperformed at the Olympics. It’s eight years since Belgium brought back a gold medal from the games, when Tia Hellebaut won the high jump in Beijing in 2008. London 2012 was a miserable experience, with only two bronzes, one for Flanders’ Evi Van Acker in the Laser Radial sailing and one for Charline Van Snick in judo, and a silver for Lionel Cox in the 50m rifle prone. Van Acker, who also competed in Beijing in 2008, took bronze in the 2014 World Championships in Santander. The other sailors with her in Rio are six-time Belgian champion Wannes Van Laer in the Laser and Yannick Lefèbvre and Tom Pelsmaekers in the 49er. Four other Belgian judokas will be in Rio this summer with Van Snick, including two Flemings: Dirk Van Tichelt, who won the 2008 European Championships and came fifth at the 2008 Olympics, and Jasper Lefevere.
One of the strongest medal contenders will be Moroccanborn, Wilrijk-trained Jaouad Achab in the taekwondo, who won the 2014 European Championships and the 2015 World Championships. Iranian-born Raheleh Asemani, a bronze medallist in this year’s European Championships, is also in with a chance in the women’s taekwondo. In cycling, the road race includes Greg Van Avermaet, who came eighth in this year’s Tour de France green jersey ranking for sprinters, won stage five and led the race for three days. He is supported by Serge Pauwels, who was sixth in the polka-dot climbing ranking and 13th in the points. Recent Tour of Poland winner Tim Wellens and 20-yearold Laurens De Plus will also be in the road race team, with Wellens competing in the time trial as well. Three Flemish women are competing in the road race: Ann-Sophie Duyck, Lotte Kopecky and Anisha Vekemans, with Duyck and Kopecky also going for the time trial. But those are far from the only Flemish riders in Rio. In track racing there are two in the omnium, a six-race event over two continued on page 5