Men's coxed pair
at the Games of the XXI Olympiad
Harald Jährling, Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich, and Georg Spohr (left) earn their place on the East German Olympic team by beating reigning Olympic champion rowers Wolfgang Gunkel and Jörg Lucke in May 1976; the trio would win the gold medal in Montreal
VenueNotre Dame Island Olympic Basin
Date18–25 July
Competitors40 from 13 nations
Winning time7:58.99
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Harald Jährling
Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich
Georg Spohr (cox)
 East Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dmitry Bekhterev
Yuriy Shurkalov
Yuriy Lorentsson (cox)
 Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Oldřich Svojanovský
Pavel Svojanovský
Ludvík Vébr (cox)
 Czechoslovakia

The men's coxed pair competition at the 1976 Summer Olympics took place at Notre Dame Island Olympic Basin, Canada.[1] It was held from 18 to 25 July.[2] There were 13 boats (40 competitors, with West Germany making one substitution) from 13 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event.[2] The event was won by Harald Jährling, Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich, and Georg Spohr of East Germany, the nation's second consecutive victory in the event (with an entirely different crew than in 1972). The Soviet Union (Dmitry Bekhterev, Yuriy Shurkalov, and cox Yuriy Lorentsson) earned that nation's first medal in the event since 1960 with their silver. The Czechoslovakian brothers Oldřich Svojanovský and Pavel Svojanovský became the 8th and 9th men to win multiple medals in the event, adding a bronze to 1972 silver with new cox Ludvík Vébr.

Background

This was the 14th appearance of the event. Rowing had been on the programme in 1896 but was cancelled due to bad weather. The men's coxed pair was one of the original four events in 1900, but was not held in 1904, 1908, or 1912. It returned to the programme after World War I and was held every Games from 1924 to 1992, when it (along with the men's coxed four) was replaced with the men's lightweight double sculls and men's lightweight coxless four.[2]

Three of the 18 competitors from the 1972 coxed pair Final A returned: Oldřich Svojanovský and Pavel Svojanovský, the rowers from the silver-medal Czechoslovakia boat, and Yuriy Lorentsson, the coxswain of the fifth-place Soviet Union crew. East Germany had won the 1972 Olympics and 1975 World Championship, but sent a different crew after Harald Jährling, Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich, and Georg Spohr defeated the reigning champions in Grünau in May. Similarly, the Soviet Union had won the 1974 World Championship, but sent a different crew. Primo Baran, a member of the 1968 Italian gold medalist team, returned after not being selected for the coxed pair in 1972.[2]

No nations made their debut in the event. France and the United States each made their 12th appearance, tied for most among nations to that point.

Competition format

The coxed pair event featured three-person boats, with two rowers and a coxswain. It was a sweep rowing event, with the rowers each having one oar (and thus each rowing on one side). The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912.[3] The competition consisted of three main rounds (quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals) as well as a repechage after the quarterfinals.

  • The 13 boats were divided into three heats for the quarterfinals, with 4 or 5 boats in each heat. The top 3 boats in each heat advanced directly to the semifinals (9 boats total). The remaining 4 boats competed in a single-heat repechage.
  • The top 3 boats in the repechage advanced to the semifinals; the last-place boat was eliminated.
  • The semifinals consisted of two heats of 6 boats each. The top 3 boats in each semifinal advanced to the "A" final (1st through 6th place). The 4th through 6th place boats were placed in the "B" final (7th through 12th place).[4]

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 18 July 197613:00Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 20 July 197611:00Repechage
Friday, 23 July 197612:00Semifinals
Sunday, 25 July 197612:20Finals

Results

Quarterfinals

Quarterfinal 1

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Todor Kishev Bulgaria7:24.44Q
2Georg Spohr East Germany7:26.03Q
3Yuriy Lorentsson Soviet Union7:29.19Q
4Ryszard Kubiak Poland7:43.45R
5Ken Dreyfuss United States7:49.00R

Quarterfinal 2

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Antoine Gambert France7:35.91Q
2Nilton Alonço Brazil7:39.20Q
3Siniša Rutešić Yugoslavia7:40.70Q
4Michel Riendeau Canada7:45.77R

Quarterfinal 3

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Ludvík Vébr Czechoslovakia7:34.03Q
2Franco Venturini Italy7:37.15Q
3David Webb Great Britain7:40.22Q
4Holger Hocke West Germany8:04.22R

Repechage

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Ryszard Kubiak Poland7:23.17Q
2Ken Dreyfuss United States7:25.58Q
3Holger Hocke West Germany7:26.90Q
4Michel Riendeau Canada7:28.81

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Todor Kishev Bulgaria7:01.10QA
2Yuriy Lorentsson Soviet Union7:03.89QA
3Franco Venturini Italy7:05.60QA
4Antoine Gambert France7:06.70QB
5Siniša Rutešić Yugoslavia7:17.02QB
6Holger Hocke West Germany7:23.93QB

Semifinal 2

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Georg Spohr East Germany7:05.76QA
2Ludvík Vébr Czechoslovakia7:08.00QA
3Ryszard Kubiak Poland7:09.33QA
4David Webb Great Britain7:11.67QB
5Nilton Alonço Brazil7:21.81QB
6Ken Dreyfuss United States7:24.78QB

Finals

Final B

RankRowersCoxswainNationTime
7David Webb Great Britain8:06.93
8Holger Hocke West Germany8:09.02
9Antoine Gambert France8:12.66
10Nilton Alonço Brazil8:14.44
11Ken Dreyfuss United States8:15.65
12Siniša Rutešić Yugoslavia8:16.22

Final A

RankRowersCoxswainNationTime
1st place, gold medalist(s)Georg Spohr East Germany7:58.99
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Yuriy Lorentsson Soviet Union8:01.82
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Ludvík Vébr Czechoslovakia8:03.28
4Todor Kishev Bulgaria8:11.27
5Franco Venturini Italy8:15.97
6Ryszard Kubiak Poland8:23.02

Final classification

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation
1st place, gold medalist(s) Harald Jährling
Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich
Georg Spohr  East Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dmitry Bekhterev
Yuriy Shurkalov
Yuriy Lorentsson  Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Oldřich Svojanovský
Pavel Svojanovský
Ludvík Vébr  Czechoslovakia
4 Rumen Khristov
Tsvetan Petkov
Todor Kishev  Bulgaria
5 Primo Baran
Annibale Venier
Franco Venturini  Italy
6 Ryszard Stadniuk
Grzegorz Stellak
Ryszard Kubiak  Poland
7 Neil Christie
James MacLeod
David Webb  Great Britain
8 Winfried Ringwald (final)
Klaus Jäger
Thomas Hitzbleck (quarters, semis)
Holger Hocke  West Germany
9 Yves Fraisse
Jean-Claude Coucardon
Antoine Gambert  France
10 Atalibio Magioni
Wandir Kuntze
Nilton Alonço  Brazil
11 John Matthews
Darrell Vreugdenhil
Ken Dreyfuss  United States
12 Stanko Miloš
Milan Butorac
Siniša Rutešić  Yugoslavia
13 Robert Bergen
Walter Krawec
Michel Riendeau  Canada

References

  1. "Rowing at the 1976 Montreal Summer Games: Men's Coxed Pairs". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Coxed Pairs, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  3. "Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance". World Rowing. 1 May 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  4. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 103.
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