Rowing at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's coxed pair

The men's coxed pair competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics took place at took place at Lake Casitas, California, United States of America.[1]

Men's coxed pair
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
Date31 July – 5 August
Competitors36 from 12 nations
Medalists
Carmine Abbagnale
Giuseppe Abbagnale
Giuseppe Di Capua
 Italy
Dimitrie Popescu
Vasile Tomoiagă
Dumitru Răducanu
 Romania
Kevin Still
Robert Espeseth
Doug Herland
 United States

Competition format

The competition consisted of two main rounds (heats and finals) as well as a repechage. The 12 boats were divided into two heats for the first round, with 6 boats in each heat. The winner of each heat advanced directly to the "A" final (1st through 6th place). The remaining 10 boats were placed in the repechage. The repechage featured two heats, with 5 boats in each heat. The top two boats in each repechage heat went to the "A" final. The remaining 6 boats (3rd, 4th, and 5th placers in the repechage heats) competed in the "B" final for 7th through 12th place.[2]

All races were over a 2000 metre course.

Results

Heats

The heats were held on July 31. It was a warm day (23 °C) with a 1 m/s east-northeast wind. The winner of each heat advanced to the A final, with all others going to the repechage. No boats were eliminated in this round.[2]

Heat 1

Romania led throughout, taking a five second lead by the halfway mark and winning by over five and a half seconds. The Yugoslav, American, and West German boats (in that order) were close together through 1000 metres (less than half a second between second and fourth), but separated over the second half of the race. France and Peru were close neither to the lead group nor to each other throughout the course of the contest.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Dumitru Răducanu Romania7:12.18QA
2Doug Herland United States7:17.80R
3Rudolf Ziegler West Germany7:25.02R
4Mirko Ivančić Yugoslavia7:27.28R
5Christophe Chevrier France7:32.20R
6Arturo Valentín Peru7:44.73R

Heat 2

As with the first heat, there was little question which boat would win the second heat. Italy led early and finished with a five-second win. Indeed, the final positions of the boats were established by 500 metres; the order did not change at the 1000 metre mark, 1500 metre mark, or the finish.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Giuseppe Di Capua Italy7:13.83QA
2Nilton Alonço Brazil7:18.96R
3Alan Inns Great Britain7:20.51R
4Tan Barkley Canada7:24.52R
5Joaquín Sabriá Spain7:29.30R
6Philippe Cuelenaere Belgium7:32.93R

Repechage

The repechage was held on August 2. It was a warm day (24 °C for the first heat, 23 °C for the second) with no wind. The top two boats in each heat advanced to the "A" final, with all others going to the "B" final (out of medal contention).[2]

Repechage heat 1

The British boat started off strong, leading at the quarter-mark. By halfway, however, the two teams from North America had moved into the lead, with Canada edging the United States by 0.2 seconds at 1000 metres. At 1500 metres, it was clear that the two teams from the Americas would advance, as they opened a five-second lead over the Europeans. The United States took the lead from Canada in the third 500 metres and held it over the fourth. France passed Great Britain in the fourth quarter, as well. Peru had been close over the first 500 metres but fell well behind all others by halfway, finishing 12 seconds out of fourth place.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Doug Herland United States7:22.88QA
2Tan Barkley Canada7:23.74QA
3Christophe Chevrier France7:26.98QB
4Alan Inns Great Britain7:38.20QB
5Arturo Valentín Peru7:50.40QB

Repechage heat 2

The second repechage heat was a three-way race for the two advancement spots through the first three-quarters of the contest. Brazil took a close lead at the 500 metre mark, followed by West Germany and Yugoslavia. That order reversed at the 1000 metre point, and Yugoslavia looked to have an advancement place when they opened the lead over third-place Brazil to 2.5 seconds at 1500 metres. But the Yugoslav rowers could not keep the pace and faltered in the final quarter, Brazil came charging ahead, and the final order flipped back to the first-quarter order: Brazil, West Germany, Yugoslavia. The final 500 metres was so poor for Yugoslavia that they finished 8 seconds out of second place. Spain and Belgium battled for fourth place over the first half, but Spain took a significant lead by the 1500 metre mark and Belgium was unable to close.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Nilton Alonço Brazil7:19.40QA
2Rudolf Ziegler West Germany7:20.75QA
3Mirko Ivančić Yugoslavia7:28.26QB
4Joaquín Sabriá Spain7:42.23QB
5Philippe Cuelenaere Belgium7:46.67QB

Final B

The consolation or "B" final, for 7th through 12th place, took place on August 3. It was a warm day (23 °C) with a 0.5 m/s east wind. Yugoslavia, which had come close to joining the "A" final, led from wire to wire, winning the race to take 7th place overall. Great Britain pressed them closely for a while, but fell further behind over the middle 1000 metres and finished 8th overall about 2 seconds behind Yugoslavia. France, Spain, and Belgium followed in a small group well behind the two leaders. Peru stayed with that group over the first 500 metres but could not keep pace and fell behind to finish in last place by 17 seconds.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTime
7Mirko Ivančić Yugoslavia7:25.60
8Alan Inns Great Britain7:27.56
9Christophe Chevrier France7:32.48
10Joaquín Sabriá Spain7:34.38
11Philippe Cuelenaere Belgium7:35.67
12Arturo Valentín Peru7:52.59

Final A

Italy, just as it did in the second heat, led early and finished with a five-second win. The Americans and Romanians battled for silver and bronze, with the latter team holding the lead the whole way; the United States was within a second of Romania at 1500 metres but fell behind in the final 500 to a 1.6 second defeat. The race for fourth place was also close, with West Germany leading Brazil and Canada at the 500, 1000, and 1500 metre marks but unable to keep pace over the last quarter and falling to sixth. Brazil pulled away from Canada as well in the last 500 metres.[2]

RankRowerCoxswainNationTime
Giuseppe Di Capua Italy7:05.99
Dumitru Răducanu Romania7:11.21
Doug Herland United States7:12.81
4Nilton Alonço Brazil7:17.07
5Tan Barkley Canada7:18.98
6Rudolf Ziegler West Germany7:25.16

Final classification

Rank Rowers Country
Carmine Abbagnale
Giuseppe Abbagnale
Giuseppe Di Capua
 Italy
Dimitrie Popescu
Vasile Tomoiagă
Dumitru Răducanu
 Romania
Kevin Still
Robert Espeseth
Doug Herland
 United States
4 Walter Soares
Ángelo Roso Neto
Nilton Alonço
 Brazil
5 Harold Backer
Tony Zasada
Tan Barkley
 Canada
6 Hermann Greß
Dieter Göpfert
Rudolf Ziegler
 West Germany
7 Dario Vidošević
Zlatko Celent
Mirko Ivančić
 Yugoslavia
8 Adrian Genziani
Bill Lang
Alan Inns
 Great Britain
9 Charles Imbert
Jean-Pierre Bremer
Christophe Chevrier
 France
10 Isidro Martín
José Manuel Bermúdez
Joaquín Sabriá
 Spain
11 William Defraigne
Guy Defraigne
Philippe Cuelenaere
 Belgium
12 Alfredo Montenegro
Francisco Viacava
Arturo Valentín
 Peru

References

  1. "Rowing at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's Coxed Pairs". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  2. Official Report, vol. 2, p. 526.
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