Sanne Wevers

[4][5] Wevers competed in her first major international competition at the 2004 Junior European Championships in Amsterdam where the Dutch team finished sixth.

[8] At the European Championships in Amsterdam, she competed on the uneven bars, balance beam, and floor exercise but did not qualify for any event finals.

[21] Wevers tied for the balance beam gold medal at the 2009 Glasgow World Cup with Spanish gymnast Ana María Izurieta.

[29] On the balance beam, Wevers successfully performed a new element, a double full turn with free leg at horizontal, and the skill was named after her in the Code of Points.

[5][26] She returned to competition at the 2012 Ostrava World Cup in November, where she won the silver medal on the balance beam behind Czech gymnast Kristýna Pálešová.

[31] Wevers began the 2013 season at the Dutch Invitational where she finished fourth on the uneven bars and won the bronze medal on the balance beam behind Diana Bulimar and Becky Downie.

[5] Then in June, she competed at the Dutch Championships, winning gold on beam and silver on bars and placing ninth in the all-around.

[37] Wevers began the 2015 season at the Ljubljana World Cup in April and finished fourth in the balance beam final with a fall.

[40][41] In the uneven bars final, she scored 14.200 and won her first European medal, a bronze behind Russia's Daria Spiridonova and Great Britain's Becky Downie.

[44] Wevers was selected to compete at the World Championships in Glasgow alongside her sister Lieke, Eythora Thorsdottir, Tisha Volleman, Mara Titarsolej, and Lisa Top.

[51][52] This marked the first time a Dutch woman won a medal at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in ten years.

[51] At the Cottbus World Challenge Cup, Wevers fell off the balance beam but still captured the bronze medal behind Katarzyna Jurkowska-Kowalska and Sophie Scheder.

[60] On 15 August, she won the gold medal in the balance beam final with a score of 15.466 ahead of Americans Laurie Hernandez and Simone Biles.

[65] After the Olympic Games, Wevers returned to competition in February at the Melbourne World Cup with a new balance beam routine due to changes in the Code of Points.

[67] She was chosen to represent the Netherlands at the European Championships in Cluj-Napoca alongside Eythora Thorsdottir, Tisha Volleman, and Kirsten Polderman.

[70] Wevers competed at the World Championships and did not qualify for the balance beam final due to missing a required backward acrobatic element in her routine, an automatic 0.5 point deduction from her difficulty score.

[82] Wevers was named to the team to compete at the World Championships in Doha, Qatar alongside Vera van Pol, Kirsten Polderman, Naomi Visser, and Tisha Volleman.

[84] In February, Wevers announced that she would spend the majority of the year recovering from leg and hip injuries and would miss the European Championships in Szczecin.

[86] She then competed at the World Championships in Stuttgart alongside Eythora Thorsdottir, Lieke Wevers, Tisha Volleman, and Naomi Visser.

[90] Then in the final, she performed a clean routine and won the silver medal behind Mélanie de Jesus dos Santos.

[94] In 2022, Wevers left the Dutch national team due to an ongoing dispute with teammate Vera van Pol.

Individually Wevers was initially the first reserve for the balance beam final but was substituted in when Jessica Gadirova withdrew due to injury.

[97] In July Wevers was selected to represent the Netherlands at the 2024 Summer Olympics for the third time alongside her twin sister Lieke, Vera van Pol, Naomi Visser, and Sanna Veerman.

Wevers at the 2016 Olympic Games
Wevers on uneven bars at the 2015 European Championships
Wevers on balance beam at the 2015 European Championships