Wevers returned to competition at the 2011 World Championships. In the qualification round, she competed on bars, beam, and floor to help the Dutch team finish in thirteenth.[6] This result qualified them for the 2012 Olympic Test Event, but at the Test Event, the team finished in eighth and did not qualify for the Olympics.[7][8] Afterward, Wevers had surgery on both of her wrists and missed the entire 2013 season.[3]
2014–2016
Wevers returned to competition in 2014. She competed with the Dutch team at a friendly meet where they lost to Great Britain.[9] She competed at the 2014 European Championships with her sister, and they helped the Netherlands finish ninth.[10] These European Championships marked the first time both of the Wevers twins competed together at a major international competition.[3] At the Dutch Championships, she only competed on the beam and finished fifth.[11] She then helped the Dutch team defeat France and Austria at a friendly meet in Rouen.[12] At the 2014 World Championships, Wevers helped the Dutch team finish tenth in the qualification round.[13]
Wevers began the 2015 season at the Sidikj Tournament where she won the gold medal on the balance beam.[14] Then at the FIT Challenge, she helped the Dutch team finish seventh.[15] At the 2015 European Games, she won a gold medal on the balance beam and bronze medals with the Dutch team, in the all-around, and on floor exercise.[16] She then competed at a friendly meet where the Dutch team lost to Great Britain.[17] She was selected to compete at the World Championships in Glasgow alongside her sister Sanne, Eythora Thorsdottir, Tisha Volleman, Mara Titarsolej, and Lisa Top. In the qualification round, the team beat out Brazil by less than half of a point for the eighth and final Olympic qualification spot. This marked the first time the Netherlands qualified as a team for the Olympic Games since 1976.[18][19] The team once again finished eighth in the team final.[20] Individually, she qualified for the all-around final where she finished thirteenth and for the floor exercise final where she finished eighth.[21][22]
In September 2017, Wevers competed at the Dutch Invitational and finished sixth in the balance beam final.[28] Then at the Paris World Challenge Cup, she did not qualify for the balance beam final.[29] She competed on the balance beam at the 2017 World Championships, but she did not advance to the final.[30] After the World Championships, she competed at the Toyota International and finished fourth on the balance beam.[31]
Wevers took the 2018 season off to rest her body and travel.[32][33]
Wevers returned to competition at the 2019 FIG Challenge and won the gold medal with the senior Dutch team.[34] Then at the Dutch Championships, she won the silver medal in the all-around behind Naomi Visser, and she won the gold medals on the uneven bars and floor exercise.[35] In August, she competed at the Heerenveen Friendly where she helped the Netherlands win silver in the team competition behind Italy. Individually, she finished seventh in the all-around but recorded the highest floor exercise score of the competition.[36] The following month she competed at the Second Heerenveen Friendly where she helped the Netherlands finish first, and she placed fourth in the all-around.[37] She then competed at the World Championships in Stuttgart alongside Eythora Thorsdottir, Sanne Wevers, Tisha Volleman, and Naomi Visser. The team finished sixth during the qualification round and qualified a team spot for the 2020 Olympic Games, and then in the team final, they finished eighth.[38][39]
^ ab"Athletes - Lieke Wevers". Baku 2015 1st European Games. Archived from the original on 19 June 2015. Retrieved 18 June 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)