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Rowing at the 1980 Summer Olympics – Men's single sculls

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Olympic rowing event

Men's single sculls
at the Games of the XXII Olympiad
Gold medalist Pertti Karppinen (at a different event in 1980)
VenueMoscow Canoeing and Rowing Basin
Dates18–25 July 1980
Competitors14 from 14 nations
Winning time7:09.61
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Pertti Karppinen
 Finland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Vasil Yakusha
 Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Peter Kersten
 East Germany
← 1976
1984 →
Rowing at the
1980 Summer Olympics
Single scullsmenwomen
Double scullsmenwomen
Coxless pairmenwomen
Coxed pairmen
Quadruple scullsmenwomen
Coxless fourmen
Coxed fourmenwomen
Eightmenwomen

The men'ssingle scullsrowing competition at the1980 Summer Olympics took place atKrylatskoye Sports Complex Canoeing and Rowing Basin,Moscow,Soviet Union. The event was held from 20 to 27 July.[1] There were 14 competitors from 14 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event. The event was won byPertti Karppinen of Finland, his second of three consecutive victories from 1976 to 1984. Karppinen was the eighth man to win multiple medals in the event. Silver went toVasil Yakusha of the Soviet Union, the nation's sixth medal in eight Games. East Germany took a third consecutive bronze medal, all by different rowers asPeter Kersten was the nation's men's single sculler this Games.

Background

[edit]

This was the 18th appearance of the event. Rowing had been on the programme in 1896 but was cancelled due to bad weather. The single sculls has been held every time that rowing has been contested, beginning in 1900.[2]

Two of the 15 single scullers from the 1976 Games returned: gold medalistPertti Karppinen of Finland and ninth-place finisherHans Svensson of Sweden. Karppinen (also the reigning World Champion) was favoured to repeat, especially with his biggest rival (Peter-Michael Kolbe of West Germany, who had finished second to Karppinen in 1976 and would take two more silver medals in the event in 1984 and 1988) absent due to the American-led boycott. The only rower present with a major international victory wasHugh Matheson of Great Britain, the 1979Diamond Challenge Sculls winner.[2]

For the second consecutive Games, no nations made their debut in the event. Great Britain made its 15th appearance, most among nations.

Competition format

[edit]

Thisrowing event was a single scull event, meaning that each boat was propelled by a single rower. The "scull" portion means that the rower used two oars, one on each side of the boat. The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912.[3]

The tournament used the four-round format (three main rounds and a repechage) that had been used since 1968. The competition continued to use the six-boat heat standardised in 1960 as well as the "B" final for ranking 7th through 12th place introduced in 1964.

  • Quarterfinals: Three heats of 4 or 5 boats each. The top three boats in each heat (9 total) advanced directly to the semifinals. The remaining boats (5 total) went to the repechage.
  • Repechage: One heat of 5 boats. The top three boats rejoined the quarterfinal winners in the semifinals. The other boats (2 total) were eliminated.
  • Semifinals: Two heats of 6 boats each. The top three boats in each heat (6 total) advanced to Final A, the remaining boats (6 total) went to Final B.
  • Final: Two finals. Final A consisted of the top 6 boats. Final B placed boats 7 through 12.

Schedule

[edit]

All times areMoscow Time (UTC+3)

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 20 July 198011:20Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 22 July 198011:00Repechage
Thursday, 24 July 198011:20Semifinals
Sunday, 27 July 198011:30Finals

Results

[edit]

Quarterfinals

[edit]

The three fastest rowers in each heat advanced to the semifinals. The remaining rowers competed in the repechage for the remaining spots in the semifinals.

Quarterfinal 1

[edit]
RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Hugh Matheson Great Britain7:53.22Q
2Konstatinos Kontomanolis Greece7:55.61Q
3Paulo César Dworakowski Brazil8:01.38Q
4Didier Gallet France8:04.41R
5Arturo Salfran Cuba8:25.09R

Quarterfinal 2

[edit]
RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Pertti Karppinen Finland7:43.80Q
2Peter Kersten East Germany7:49.01Q
3Vladek Lacina Czechoslovakia7:53.24Q
4Bernard Destraz Switzerland7:59.81R
5Chavdar Radev Bulgaria8:04.96R

Quarterfinal 3

[edit]
RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Vasil Yakusha Soviet Union7:47.15Q
2Hans Svensson Sweden7:57.33Q
3Raimund Schmidt Austria8:07.02Q
4Lajos Ódor Hungary8:14.24R

Repechage

[edit]

The three fastest rowers in the repechage advanced to the semifinals.

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Bernard Destraz Switzerland7:25.97Q
2Lajos Odor Hungary7:27.49Q
3Chavdar Radoev Bulgaria7:28.96Q
4Didier Gallet France7:32.81
5Arturo Salfran Cuba7:51.84

Semifinals

[edit]

The three fastest rowers in each semifinal advanced to Final A, while the others went to Final B.

Semifinal 1

[edit]
RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Peter Kersten East Germany7:11.99QA
2Vasil Yakusha Soviet Union7:15.14QA
3Hugh Matheson Great Britain7:21.05QA
4Lajos Odor Hungary7:32.94QB
5Raimund Schmidt Austria7:38.50QB
6Paulo Cesar Dvorawski Brazil7:39.28QB

Semifinal 2

[edit]
RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Pertti Karppinen Finland7:15.90QA
2Vladek Lacina Czechoslovakia7:18.66QA
3Hans Svensson Sweden7:19.66QA
4Konstatinos Kontomanolis Greece7:23.15QB
5Bernard Destraz Switzerland7:33.87QB
6Chavdar Radoev Bulgaria7:34.21QB

Finals

[edit]

Final B

[edit]
RankRowerNationTime
7Bernard Destraz Switzerland7:19.90
8Konstatinos Kontomanolis Greece7:20.29
9Lajos Odor Hungary7:23.30
10Chavdar Radoev Bulgaria7:23.50
11Raimund Schmidt Austria7:29.16
12Paulo Cesar Dvorawski Brazil7:32.00

Final A

[edit]
RankRowerNationTime
1st place, gold medalist(s)Pertti Karppinen Finland7:09.61
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Vasil Yakusha Soviet Union7:11.66
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Peter Kersten East Germany7:14.88
4Vladek Lacina Czechoslovakia7:17.57
5Hans Svensson Sweden7:19.38
6Hugh Matheson Great Britain7:20.28

Results summary

[edit]
RankRowerNationQuarterfinalsRepechageSemifinalsFinals
1st place, gold medalist(s)Pertti Karppinen Finland7:43.80Bye7:15.907:09.61
Final A
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Vasil Yakusha Soviet Union7:47.15Bye7:15.147:11.66
Final A
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Peter Kersten East Germany7:49.01Bye7:11.997:14.88
Final A
4Vladek Lacina Czechoslovakia7:53.24Bye7:18.667:17.57
Final A
5Hans Svensson Sweden7:57.33Bye7:19.667:19.38
Final A
6Hugh Matheson Great Britain7:53.22Bye7:21.057:20.28
Final A
7Bernard Destraz Switzerland7:59.817:25.977:33.877:19.90
Final B
8Konstatinos Kontomanolis Greece7:55.61Bye7:23.157:20.29
Final B
9Lajos Odor Hungary8:14.247:27.497:32.947:23.30
Final B
10Chavdar Radoev Bulgaria8:04.967:28.967:34.217:23.50
Final B
11Raimund Schmidt Austria8:07.02Bye7:38.507:29.16
Final B
12Paulo Cesar Dvorawski Brazil8:01.38Bye7:39.287:32.00
Final B
13Didier Gallet France8:04.417:32.81Did not advance
14Arturo Salfran Cuba8:25.097:51.84

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Rowing at the 1980 Moscow Summer Games: Men's Single Sculls".Sports Reference. Archived fromthe original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved27 August 2018.
  2. ^ab"Single Sculls, Men".Olympedia. Retrieved3 May 2021.
  3. ^"Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance". World Rowing. 1 May 2017. Retrieved19 April 2021.

Sources

[edit]
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