Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

2.9.12

Eton Dorney, 2012, Again: Final Medal and Point Standings in Paralympic Rowing

Medal Chart:

China 2-0-0
Ukraine 1-0-1
Great Britain 1-0-0
France 0-2-0
Australia 0-1-0
Germany 0-1-0
United States 0-0-1
Belarus 0-0-1
Russia 0-0-1

19.8.12

České veslování má juniorského mistra světa na skifu

ENGLISH TITLE: Czech Rowing Has a Junior World Champion in Single Sculls

Veslař Michal Plocek z Uherského Hradiště dnes na juniorském mistrovství světa suverénně vyhrál finále skifu. Na umělé dráze v bulharském Plovdivu ujel dvoukilometrovou závodní trať ve velmi rychlém čase 7:03,47. Druhý Slovinec Jernej Markovc v cíli zaostal o 5,54 sekundy. Bronz získal Číňan Kang-kang Li (Ganggang Li).

1.8.12

Eton Dorney, 2012: Final Olympic Medal Standings in Rowing

Great Britain 4-2-3
New Zealand 3-0-2
Germany 2-1-0

Denmark 1-1-1
Czech Republic 1-1-0
United States 1-0-2

Ukraine 1-0-0
South Africa 1-0-0

Australia 0-3-2
Canada 0-2-0

China 0-1-0
Croatia 0-1-0
France 0-1-0
Italy 0-1-0

Greece 0-0-1
Poland 0-0-1
Netherlands 0-0-1
Slovenia 0-0-1

(To check predictions for Olympic rowing finals, please click here.)

20.7.12

U.S. Newspaper's Olympic Medal Predictions: Only Two Nations Due to Retain Their Rowing Titles from Beijing

The American daily USA Today has been putting together projections of the expected results of each sport event at the London 2012 Summer Olympics. With the latest updated version released 11 June 2012, it comes out that Eton Dorney regatta venue may witness significant changes when compared to Beijing 2008. According to USA Today's expectations, only two countries will be able to retain their Olympic rowing titles: the host country, Great Britain, in men's four, and the United States in women's eight, respectively.

Fast-motion video of a new bridge construction at Eton Dorney Lake, the venue of rowing and canoeing events in the 2012 Summer Olympic Games

A total of 20 countries are likely to be represented in the Olympic rowing A-finals, and out of these, 16 national teams should earn medals. The following medal table prediction can thus be summarised (with details on each boat event following further below):

Great Britain 3-5-2
New Zealand 3-2-1
Germany 3-1-0
Greece 1-1-1
Czech Republic 1-1-0
United States 1-0-1
Croatia 1-0-0
Belarus 1-0-0
Australia 0-1-3
Canada 0-1-2
Denmark 0-1-0
Ukraine 0-1-0
France 0-0-1
Italy 0-0-1
Poland 0-0-1
Romania 0-0-1

19.11.10

China Dominates Rowing at Asian Games

The Asian Games in Guangzhou, China saw final races in 14 rowing events on 18 and 19 November. The host country has earned most medals (10 gold medals), followed by Japan (2 gold, 2 silver, and 1 bronze medal), India (1-3-1), Iran (1-0-1), South Korea (0-3-3), Vietnam (0-2-0), Uzbekistan (0-1-4), Hong Kong (0-1-1), Kazakhstan (0-1-1), Chinese Taipei (i.e. Taiwan; 0-1-0), Iraq (0-0-1), and Thailand (0-0-1). The medal standings and results have been posted on the official website of the Asian Games and selectively re-published by some media outlets around the world.



Screenshot from the official website of the Asian Games.


As obvious from the results, rowers competed on the standard two kilometres’ distance. Men’s lightweight single saw the victory of Iran’s under-23 world champion, Mohsen Shadi Naghadeh (Persian: محسن شادی نقده) ahead of Japan’s Olympian and the world champion of 2000 in lightweight quad, Daisaku Takeda (Japanese: 武田 大作). The Iranian finished in a remarkable 6:55.62 while the Japanese’s time was 7:00.43.

9.9.10

First Full-Fledged European Championships... Finally

The upcoming European Rowing Championships in Montemor-o-Velho, Portugal are due to be much different from the previous years: for the first time since the championships were restored in 2007, Europeans get the opportunity to compete in all rowing events (not just the fourteen Olympic ones) and, unlike the past years again, most of the European rowing elite will really be present.



Rowing is a part of Europe's history. Source: Wikipedia.


The new history of the European Rowing Championships is problematic: the regatta was always held after the World Championships or Olympic Games and thus remained overshadowed by the real peak of the season. Many of the best European rowers did not bother to come – either because they already wanted to relax, or because they knew their main rivals would also stay home, or because they had anyway accomplished success on the world level for that season (European countries won 57% of rowing events at the 2008 Olympics and 70% of all events at the 2009 World Championships). Take Great Britain, one of the superpowers of rowing: two years ago, they sent seven boats to the European championships; last year, there was only one British boat.


In their current shape, the European Rowing Championships have largely become a regatta for: 1) reserve crews, 2) hopeful juniors, 3) experimental lineups, and 4) consolation prize seekers, i.e. those who might not be satisfied with their performance in the preceding World Championships or Olympic Games (see below for examples).

22.6.10

Světový pohár v Mnichově: česká radost, vzestup Číny, pád Polska

ENGLISH TITLE: World Cup in Munich: Czech Joy, Rise of China, Fall of Poland


Mnichov pravidelně hostí druhý díl veslařského Světového poháru před jeho tradičním finále v Lucernu. V Mnichově už na rozdíl od prvního závodu Světového poháru (kam spousta posádek nejezdí) bývá nabitá konkurence.



Oberschleissheim severně od Mnichova, místo konání mezinárodních veslařských soutěží. Závodní kanál je vidět západně od obce. Zdroj: Google Maps.

Osobní výběr zajímavých momentů z Mnichova:

Skif mužů lehkých vah: Slovák Babač minule (ve slovinském Bledu) čtvrtý, v Mnichově až jedenáctý. Podobně Brazilec da Silva (loňský vicemistr světa v kategorii do 23 let) byl ve Slovinsku těsně před Babačem bronzový, nyní těsně za ním dvanáctý. Toto vše možná jen ilustruje zmíněné obohacení konkurence v Mnichově, kde startovalo 26 skifařů lehkých vah (v Bledu to bylo 13).