Amanda Bateman

Amanda Bateman (born 3 July 1996) is an Australian representative rower. She is a national champion, has represented at underage world championships and in 2019 was twice a medallist at World Rowing Cups in the international representative season.

Amanda Bateman
Personal information
Born3 July 1996 (1996-07-03) (age 24)
Years active2013-current
Sport
SportRowing
ClubMercantile Rowing Club
Achievements and titles
National finalsQueen's Cup 2018

Club and state rowing

Bateman's senior club rowing has been from the Mercantile Rowing Club in Melbourne.[1] She is the younger sister of Katrina Bateman who is also an elite rower who has competed for Mercantile, her state of Victoria and Australia.

Her state representative debut for Victoria came in 2016 in the women's youth eight which contested and placed second in the Bicentennial Cup at the Interstate Regatta.[2] In 2018 she rowed in the four seat of the Victorian women's eight which won the Queen's Cup at the Interstate Regatta. [3]

Bateman raced in Mercantile colours contesting the open women's coxed eight event at the 2017 Australian Rowing Championships.[4] In 2018 and 2019 she raced in Mercantile quad sculls for the open women's quad scull title.[5]

International representative rowing

Bateman made her Australian representative debut at the 2013 Junior World Rowing Championships in Trakai Lithuania where she rowed in the Australian quad scull to a seventh placing.[6] In 2014 she again raced at the Junior World Rowing Championships in Hamburg where she rowed the single scull to a sixteenth placing.[6]

In 2017 she was picked for the U23 World Rowing Championships in Plovdiv where she rowed in the three seat of the coxless four to an eighth placing.[6]

In 2019 Bateman moved into Australia's senior women's squad for the international season. Rowing with Genevieve Horton she rowed the Australian women's double scull to a bronze medal at the World Rowing Cup II in Poznan and to a silver medal at WRC III in Rotterdam.[6] Bateman and Horton were selected to race Australia's double scull at the 2019 World Rowing Championships in Linz, Austria.[7] The double were looking for a top eleven finish at the 2019 World Championships to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics.[8] They won their heat and placed fourth in their semi-final. [6] They finished fifth in the B-final for an overall eleventh world place and qualified the boat for Tokyo 2020.[6]

References

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