Stephen Mark HawkinsOAM (born 14 January 1971) is an Australian former national champion, World Champion and Olympic gold medal winninglightweight rower.
Hawkins' senior rowing was from the Lindisfarne Rowing Club near Hobart. He commenced contesting the national lightweight single sculls title at theAustralian Rowing Championships in 1990, coached by his father Stephen Hawkins Snr.[1] In 1991 he beat out his Tasmanian rivalSimon Burgess and claimed his first national lightweight championship in the single sculls.[2] He won that same title atAustralian Rowing Championships in 1993 and 1994.[3] In 1992 he placed second behindPeter Antonie in the heavyweight single sculls Australian championship.[4]
From 1989 to 1994 he was the Tasmanian state representative picked to race the President's Cup – the open heavyweight single scull – at the Interstate Regatta within theAustralian Rowing Championships. He won the interstate championship for Tasmania in 1993.[5]
Hawkins first competed at a FISA event at the1990 World Rowing Championships in his home state of Tasmania – in a lightweightquad scull withBurgess,Gary Lynagh andBruce Hick. They won the bronze medal.[6] The following year atVienna 1991 that same crew won gold and a World Championship title. They rowed through the field and won by 0.23 seconds.[7]
In 1992 Hawkins was selected in the Olympic heavyweight double scull withPeter Antonie to compete atBarcelona 1992. Antonie, a veteran of 15 years of international competition was, like Hawkins a lightweight and they were respectively Australia's #1 and #2 ranked scullers ahead of the heavyweights Richard Powell and Jason Day. The selectors felt that Antonie would be unlikely to win the single scull event but using a weight corrected ergo score methodology determined that Antonie and Hawkins together could be competitive in the double. They prepared perfectly, raced superbly and won the Olympic gold.[8][9]
ForRoudnice 1993 andIndianapolis 1994 Hawkins was selected as Australia's lightweight single sculler. He rowed to second place and a silver medal in 1993 behind Great Britain'sPeter Haining. In 1994 he finished in twelfth place.[8][10]
Hawkins was inducted into the Tasmanian Sporting Hall of Fame in 2003.[11]