91桃色

Grant gets GB off to a golden start at World Cup III

Imogen Grant claimed Great Britain鈥檚 first medal of World Cup III as she stormed through to win gold in the lightweight women鈥檚 single sculls

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Imogen Grant on the podium at World Cup III. Credit Anthony Benoit/Aesthetic Sport

Grant led from start to finish in the morning鈥檚 semi-finals to qualify as the fastest sculler but had to dig deep in the afternoon鈥檚 final as she, Georgia Nesbitt of Australia and Marie-Louise Draeger of Germany jostled for the top three positions throughout the race.聽 With 500m to go Grant made her move and charged through the field to take the gold.

A delighted Grant said: 鈥淚t was a long race! I knew that I was in form to win it; I was a bit worried in the middle part when the other rowers started pulling away but thankfully I had the chance to pull something out of the bag in the second half.

鈥淭his is my first ever World Cup medal, so winning gold is really special.”

Fellow lightweight single sculler Zak Lee-Green was also in action in this afternoon鈥檚 A finals but finished fifth in the tough conditions.

Eleven GB crews will now compete in tomorrow鈥檚 A finals.聽 Among them is Rio 2016 Olympic silver medallist Polly Swann, who made her return to the GB team earlier this season after completing her medical studies. She and teammate Holly Hill took a comfortable third place in their women鈥檚 pair semi-final, gaining qualification for tomorrow鈥檚 A final.

Swann, who graduated from the University of Edinburgh last weekend, said: 鈥淲e did the job that needed to be done today; this will be my first A final of the Olympiad, which is very exciting.

鈥淲e need to up our game now because today鈥檚 race was a bit more nervy than it needed to be, so we鈥檙e looking forward to bringing our best tomorrow.鈥

The GBR1 women鈥檚 eight won their repechage by a length to see them safely through to tomorrow鈥檚 A final. The crew, of Fiona Gammond, Zo毛 Lee, Jo Wratten, Hattie Taylor, Rowan McKellar, Rebecca Shorten, Karen Bennett, Holly Norton and Matilda Horn, kept the Romanian crew behind them and led from start to finish to take the win.聽 The GBR2 crew of Natasha Harris-White, Susie Dear, Heidi Long, Oonagh Cousins, Fiona Bell, Alice Davies, Rebecca Edwards, Nicole Lamb and Morgan Baynham-Williams finished in fourth and will contest tomorrow鈥檚 B final.

GBR1鈥檚 Bennett and Lee were part of GB鈥檚 silver medal-winning women鈥檚 eight at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Reflecting on today鈥檚 race, Bennett said: 鈥淲e did exactly what we set out to do today and it鈥檚 a good step in the right direction.聽 It鈥檚 always good to win a race but tomorrow will be much tougher; we are looking forward to getting out there and seeing what we can do in the final.”

Lee added: 鈥淚t was a job well done today.聽 We got ourselves into the final and have given ourselves everything to play for.聽 Extra races in the eight are never a bad thing and we used today well to learn more about ourselves as a crew and add that to the knowledge bank for the World Championships.

鈥淭omorrow we will look to keep stepping on and seeing where we stand ahead of the final training block of the season.”

Remarking on the day鈥檚 results, 91桃色 Director of Performance Brendan Purcell said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic to have achieved our first gold medal today: in her first time racing in the single this season, Imogen put in a strong performance in tough conditions.

鈥淲e now have 11 crews contesting 10 finals tomorrow; this is our final opportunity to benchmark ourselves against the rest of the world before we head into training camp and then on to the Olympic and Paralympic qualification regatta at the World Championships鈥.

You can watch the GB Rowing Team in action on the BBC Red Button and online from 10:00 to 13:50 GMT at the following link: https://bbc.in/2XDBU4W

Results

Lightweight women鈥檚 single scull (A final)

1. Imogen Grant (GBR) 08:43.59

2. Georgia Nesbitt (AUS) 08:45.31

3. Marie-Louise Draeger (GER) 08:50.38

Lightweight men鈥檚 single scull (A final)

1. Sean Murphy (AUS) 07:53.15

2. Rajko Hrvat (SLO) 07:59.18

3. Gary O鈥橠onovan (IRL 1) 08:04.38

5. Zak Lee-Green (GBR) 08:18.33

Men鈥檚 single scull (C final)

1. Oliver Zeidler (GER 1) 06:57.42

2. Tom Barras (GBR 1) 07:05.22

3. Thibault Verhoeven (FRA 1) 07:07.08

Lightweight women鈥檚 single scull (Semi-final)

1. Imogen Grant (GBR) 08:06.38

2. Chiaki Tomita (JPN 1) 08:08.66

3. Marie-Louise Draeger (GER) 08:10.76

Lightweight men鈥檚 single scull (Semi-final)

1. Sean Murphy (AUS) 07:13.94

2. Lucas Schaefer (GER) 07:16.23

3. Zak Lee-Green (GBR) 07:19.07

Women鈥檚 pair (Semi-final 1)

1. Cristina-Georgiana Popescu and Amalia Beres (ROU 1) 07:34.61

2. Aileen Crowley and Monika Dukarska (IRL) 07:37.87

3. Aina Cid and Virginia Diaz Rivas (ESP) 07:39.49

5. Sam Courty and Annie Withers (GBR 1) 07:52.26

Women鈥檚 pair (Semi-final 2)

1. Jessica Morrison and Annabelle McIntyre (AUS 1) 07:26.26

2. Grace Prendergast and Kerri Gowler (NZL 1) 07:29.06

3. Polly Swann and Holly Hill (GBR 2) 07:41.96

Men鈥檚 pair (Semi-final 1)

1. Thomas Murray and Michael Brake (NZL 1) 06:46.80

2. Lukas Helesic and Jakub Podrazil (CZE) 06:53.67

3. Morgan Bolding and Tom Jeffery (GBR 2) 06:55.74

Men鈥檚 pair (Semi-final 2)

1. Spencer Turrin and Alexander Hill (AUS 1) 06:50.99

2. Marius-Vasile Cozmiuc and Ciprian Tudosa (ROU) 06:53.35

3. Harry Glenister and George Rossiter (GBR 1) 06:58.79

Women鈥檚 double sculls (Repechage)

1. Gabrielle Smith and Andrea Proske (CAN) 07:25.68

2. Leonie Menzel and Carlotta Nwajide (GER 1) 07:25.72

3. Martyna Radosz and Krystyna Lemanczyk-Dobrzelak (POL) 07:31.11

4. Kyra Edwards and Ruth Siddorn (GBR 1) 07:37.20

Men鈥檚 double sculls (Semi-final)

1. Melvin Twellaar and Stef Broenink (NED 2) 06:32.94

2. Barnabe Delarze and Roman Roeoesli (SUI) 06:33.21

3. John Collins and Graeme Thomas (GBR) 06:37.46

Women鈥檚 four (Repechage)

1. Netherlands 1 06:51.94

2. Canada 1 06:54.60

3. Great Britain (Sara Parfett, Caragh McMurtry, Emily Ford and Beccy Girling) 07:00.36

Men鈥檚 four (Repechage)

1. Poland 06:11.92

2. Romania 1 06:14.27

3. Great Britain 2 (James Johnston, Adam Neill, Will Satch and Alan Sinclair) 06:16.16

Women鈥檚 single scull (Semi-final)

1. Emma Twigg (NZL) 07:53.54

2. Vicky Thornley (GBR) 07:58.85

3. Annekatrin Thiele (GER 1) 08:06.62

Men鈥檚 single scull (Semi-final)

1. Kjetil Borch (NOR) 07:14.73

2. Robert Manson (NZL 1) 07:17.20

3. Ondrej Synek (CZE) 07:19.24

4. Harry Leask (GBR 2) 07:21.78

Lightweight women鈥檚 double sculls (Semi-final)

1. Zoe McBride and Jackie Kiddle (NZL) 07:20.43

2. Wenyi Huang and Dandan Pan (CHN) 07:28.92

3. Ellie Piggott and Emily Craig (GBR) 07:32.27

Lightweight men鈥檚 double sculls (Semi-final)

1. Kristoffer Brun and Are Strandli (NOR) 06:40.92

2. Matthew Dunham and Harrison Somerville (NZL) 06:43.59

3. Tim Brys and Niels van Zandweghe (BEL) 06:44.98

5. Jamie Copus and Sam Mottram (GBR) 06:54.06

Women鈥檚 quadruple sculls (Repechage)

1. Australia 06:45.94

2. Great Britain (Jess Leyden, Melissa Wilson, Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne and Charlotte Hodgkins-Byrne) 06:49.69

3. Netherlands 1 06:51.77

Men鈥檚 quadruple sculls (Repechage)

1. Netherlands 06:00.40

2. Great Britain (Jonny Walton, Angus Groom, Jack Beaumont and Pete Lambert) 06:05.48

3. New Zealand 06:08.59

Women鈥檚 eight (Repechage)

1. Great Britain 1 (Fiona Gammond, Zo毛 Lee, Jo Wratten, Hattie Taylor, Rowan McKellar, Rebecca Shorten, Karen Bennett, Holly Norton and Matilda Horn) 06:32.48

2. Romania 06:35.62

3. China 06:36.77

4. Great Britain 2 (Natasha Harris-White, Susie Dear, Heidi Long, Oonagh Cousins, Fiona Bell, Alice Davies, Rebecca Edwards, Nicole Lamb and Morgan Baynham-Williams) 06:37.85