91桃色

GB Rowing Team claim a fantastic four medals at the 2019 European Rowing Championships

The Great Britain Rowing Team came away with four medals on the final day of the European Rowing Championships, claiming one gold, two silvers and a bronze

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European Champions in the men's four Sholto Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Matt Rossiter and Ollie Cook (c) Nick Middleton

Despite only having trained together for a little over a week, GB鈥檚 men鈥檚 four of Ollie Cook, Matt Rossiter, Rory Gibbs and Sholto Carnegie won their A final by clear water to take GB鈥檚 first European gold medal since 2017. The crew were yesterday鈥檚 fastest qualifiers and continued their dominance in today鈥檚 event, taking the lead at the 1,000m mark.

Speaking after the race, Gibbs said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e so pleased with how we went today – we did exactly what we set out to do, didn鈥檛 worry about anyone else and just tried to do our fastest race from A to B.鈥

The men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 eights both claimed superb silver medals in the final two races of the day. The women鈥檚 eights final saw an exhilarating race for the gold medal, with Great Britain鈥檚 Fiona Gammond, Zoe Lee, Josephine Wratten, Hattie Taylor, Rowan McKellar, Rebecca Shorten, Karen Bennett, Holly Norton and cox Matilda Horn finishing six hundredths of a second behind Romania to take the silver.

Norton said: 鈥淲e would have liked to have the cherry on top [with a gold], but as a team of athletes and coaches we鈥檙e building lots of momentum which is really powerful this early on in the season.鈥

The men鈥檚 eight, comprising of Tom Ford, James Rudkin, Tom George, Mohamed Sbihi, Jacob Dawson, Ollie Wynne-Griffith, Mat Tarrant, Josh Bugajski and cox Henry Fieldman showed they had learnt lessons from yesterday鈥檚 repechage, finishing less than a second behind the German crew to take silver.

Bugajski said: 鈥淭hat was tough, it was a really fast race. It鈥檚 a shame not to come away with the win but we鈥檝e learned a lot this weekend and know we have a lot of speed and potential left for the rest of the season.鈥

The men鈥檚 quad of Jack Beaumont, Jonny Walton, Angus Groom and Pete Lambert gave it absolutely everything and came away with a bronze medal.

Lambert said: 鈥淚鈥檓 really happy. You always have to blow a few cobwebs off at the first international regatta of the season – we鈥檒l be able to build on this through the season going forward to the World Championships.鈥

Graeme Thomas and John Collins came away with an agonising fourth in the men’s double sculls in a final which saw the top four crews separated by less than a second.

Collins said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e obviously gutted not to be on the podium today but we鈥檙e pleased with how we raced. We鈥檙e a new double so this weekend has been a great start to the season and there鈥檚 plenty we鈥檒l take back to learn from in training.鈥

Olympic silver medallist Vicky Thornley regained her powerful form in the women鈥檚 single sculls B final. She stayed cool and collected at the front of the field from start to finish, winning by two lengths.

Speaking to afterwards, she said: 鈥淭his weekend has been challenging – it鈥檚 nice to cross the line first but it鈥檚 not the race I wanted to be doing it in. I was really pleased with the race I put out today though and there鈥檚 lots to be learned for the rest of the season.鈥

In the men鈥檚 single sculls B final, Tom Barras put in a similarly powerful performance, making his move at the 1,000m mark to overtake the home favourite and push through to first place.

GB鈥檚 lightweight doubles combination of Imogen Grant and Ellie Piggott were part of a huge fight for the bronze medal in their A final, eventually missing out by less than a second.

Speaking afterwards, Grant said: 鈥淭his weekend鈥檚 been really fun and has been a great way to test out where we are against the pack. We鈥檙e really pleased with what we鈥檝e done and are going home with a nice long list of things to work on before next time.鈥

In their respective A finals, the women鈥檚 pair of Sam Courty and Annie Withers and four of Sara Parfett, Caragh McMurtry, Beccy Girling and Emily Ford gave it their all but had to settle for 6th place.

Lightweight single sculler Jamie Copus pushed hard to take 5th place in his A final, as did the women’s quad of Jess Leyden, Melissa Wilson, Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne and Charlotte Hodgkins-Byrne.

The lightweight men鈥檚 double of Zak Lee-Green and Will Fletcher put up a strong fight in an extremely close B final but finished up in 4th place.

In their B finals, the men鈥檚 pair of Harry Glenister and George Rossiter had a sprint to the line finishing in second place behind the Belgian pair and ahead of the Onfroy twins of France; while the lightweight double of Maddie Arlett and Emily Craig, racing in the B final of the openweight category, had an outstanding race closing down France鈥檚 lead and pushing them hard all the way to the line, finishing a foot behind them in third place.

Brendan Purcell, 91桃色 Director of Performance, said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic to have four crews on the podium today and to have a gold medal-winning crew in the men鈥檚 four. Our two big sweep boats, the men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 eight, laid down great performances to push for silver medals which shows the strength and depth in the squad.

鈥淭he priority for this European Championships was for us to get a benchmark of how we鈥檙e doing in relation to Olympic qualification at the World Championships in August; we now have real clarity and focus which we can take away and use over the next couple of months.鈥

Results

Men鈥檚 pair (B final)

1. Dzmitry Furman & Siarhei Valadzjko (BLR) 6:32.49

2. Harry Glenister & George Rossiter (GBR) 6:34.00

3. Valentin Onfroy & Theophile Onfroy (FRA) 6:34.35

 

Women鈥檚 double (B final)

1. Elsbeth Beeres & Laila Youssifou (NED) 7:01.52

2. Helene Lefebvre & Elodie Ravera-Scaramozzino (FRA) 7:02.12

3. Maddie Arlett & Emily Craig (GBR) 7:02.25

 

Lightweight men鈥檚 double sculls (B final)

1. Jerzy Kowalski & Milosz Jankowski (POL) 6:23.22

2. Marek Reznak & Peter Zelinka (SVK) 6:24.54

3. Pedro Fraga & Afonso Costa (POR) 6:24.77

4. Zak Lee-Green & Will Fletcher (GBR) 6:27.14

 

Men鈥檚 single sculls (B final)

1. Tom Barras (GBR) 6:59.54

2. Mihai Chiruta (ROU) 7:00.71

3. Kjetil Borch (NOR) 7:00.87

 

Women鈥檚 single sculls (B final)

1. Vicky Thornley (GBR) 7:40.33

2. Diana Dymchenko (UKR) 7:45.81

3. Jovana Arsic (SRB) 7:49.32

 

Lightweight men鈥檚 single sculls (A final)

1. Peter Galambos (HUN) 6:57.00

2. Artur Mikolajczewski (POL) 6:58.98

3. Martino Goretti (ITA) 7:02.27

5. Jamie Copus (GBR) 7:08.79

 

Lightweight women鈥檚 double sculls (A final)

1. Anastasiia Ianina & Alena Furman (BLR) 6:58.69

2. Laura Tarantola & Claire Bove (FRA) 7:00.29

3. Patricia Merz & Frederique Mol (SUI) 7:02.63

4. Ellie Piggott & Imogen Grant (GBR) 7:03.18

 

Women鈥檚 pair (A final)

1. Aina Cid & Virginia Diaz Rivas (ESP) 7:14.14

2. Adriana Ailincai & Maria Tivodariu (ROU) 7:15.52

3. Kiri Tontodonati & Aisha Rocek (ITA) 7:16.22

6. Sam Courty & Annie Withers (GBR) 7:21.73

 

Men鈥檚 double sculls (A final)

1. Miroslaw Zietarski & Fabian Baranski (POL) 6:13.51

2. Barnarbe Delarze & Roman Roeoesli (SUI) 6:13.60

3. Ioan Prundeanu & Marian-Florian Enache (ROU) 6:13.96

4. John Collins & Graeme Thomas (GBR) 6:14.71

 

Women鈥檚 four (A final)

1. Netherlands 6:24.84

2. Romania 6:27.92

3. Poland 6:32.37

6. Great Britain (Sara Parfett, Caragh McMurtry, Beccy Girling, Emily Ford) 6:37.69

 

Men鈥檚 four (A final)

1. Great Britain (Ollie Cook, Matt Rossiter, Rory Gibbs, Sholto Carnegie) 5:51.01

2. Poland 5:53.90

3. Germany 5:56.08

 

Women鈥檚 quadruple sculls (A final)

1. Germany 6:16.69

2. Netherlands 6:17.08

3. Ukraine 6:18.82

5. Great Britain 6:26.71

 

Men鈥檚 quadruple sculls (A final)

1. Netherlands 5:35.75

2. Italy 5:40.19

3. Great Britain 5:41.89

 

Women鈥檚 eight (A final)

1. Romania 6:03.49

2. Great Britain 6:03.55

3. Russia 6:06.38

 

Men鈥檚 eight (A final)

1. Germany 5:25.68

2. Great Britain 5:26.55

3. Netherlands 5:27.97