Rowing at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's coxed four explained

Event:Men's coxed four
Games:1912 Summer
Venue:Djurgårdsbrunnsviken
Dates:17 July (heats)
18 July (quarterfinals)
19 July (semifinals, final)
Competitors:56
Nations:9
Longnames:yes
Win Value:6:59.4
Gold:Ludwigshafener Ruderverein
Goldnoc:GER
Silver:Thames Rowing Club
Silvernoc:GBR
Bronze:Polyteknisk Roklub
Bronzenoc:DEN
Bronze2:Christiania RK
Bronzenoc2:NOR
Prev:1900
Next:1920

The men's coxed four was a rowing event held as part of the Rowing at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme. It was the second appearance of the event, which had been held at the 1900 Summer Olympics but had been replaced by coxless four at the 1904 and 1908 Games. The standard coxed four event allowed for outriggers, while another event was held in 1912 for boats with inriggers. The competition was held from 17 to 19 July 1912.[1]

Fifty six rowers (11 boats) from nine nations competed. Germany replaced their coxswain, maybe the Danish Polyteknisk replaced a rower, but this possible change is not counted.

Starting list

The following boats and/or rowing clubs participated:

Background

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

At these Games, club teams competed rather than representative national sides. Ludwigshafener Ruderverein, a German club that earned bronze in 1900, was the only team to return (with an entirely new crew) from the Paris Games. Italian (1909 and 1910) and Swiss (1911 and 1912) crews had won the last four European championships, but did not compete in Stockholm. The favourites among the competing teams were Ludwigshafener and the British Thames Rowing Club, winners at Henley in 1909 and 1911.

Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Great Britain, Norway, and Sweden each made their debut in the event. France and Germany competed for the second time, having appeared at the only previous edition in 1900.

Competition format

The coxed four event featured five-person boats, with four rowers and a coxswain. It was a sweep rowing event, with the rowers each having one oar (and thus each rowing on one side). It was the first Games to use the 2000 metres distance, which has been used ever since except at the 1948 Games.[3]

The tournament featured four rounds of competition, with no repechages. Each race was head-to-head, with the winner advancing and the loser eliminated. There were 13 boats entered, so 7 heats were scheduled in the first round (including one bye); 2 boats withdrew, so 3 of the 7 heats ended up being walkovers. The quarterfinals featured 4 heats, again including one bye. There were 2 semifinals and 1 final.

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Wednesday, 17 July 1912 18:20 First round
Thursday, 18 July 1912 12:20 Quarterfinals
Friday, 19 July 1912 13:30
17:30
Semifinals
Final

Results

First round

All heats were held on Wednesday, 17 July.

Heat 1

6.20 p.m. The Danish boat raced without opponent.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Polyteknisk Mikael Simonsen[4] 7:20.0

Heat 2

6.40 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Helsinsfors R. K. 7:18.2
2 Société Nautique de Bayonne data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Heat 3

7 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Christiania RK 7:15.0
2 Leibnitz data-sort-value=9:00.0

Heat 4

7.20 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Studenternes 7:27.4
data-sort-value=2Donau colspan=5 data-sort-value=9:99.9

Heat 5

7.40 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Royal Sport Nautique de Gand Léonard Nuytens7:15.0
2 Købnhavn data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Heat 6

8 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Ludwigshafener Ruderverein 7:06.6
2 Vaxholm data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Heat 7

8.20 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Thames Rowing Club 7:27.0
data-sort-value=2Mainz colspan=5 data-sort-value=9:99.99

Quarterfinals

All quarterfinals were held on Thursday, 18 July.

Quarterfinal 1

12.20 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Polyteknisk 7:09.0
2 Helsinsfors R. K. 7:12.5

Quarterfinal 2

12.40 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Thames R.C. 7:14.5
2 Studenternes data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Quarterfinal 3

1 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Christiania RK 7:05.5
2 Royal Sport Nautique de Gand data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Quarterfinal 4

1.20 p.m. The German team had no opponent.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Ludwigshafener 7:14.4

Semifinals

Both semifinals were held on Friday, 19 July.

Semifinal 1

1.30 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Ludwigshafener 7:41.0
Polyteknisk data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Semifinal 2

2 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time Notes
1 Thames R. C. 7:04.8
Christiania RK 7:05.0

Final

The final was held on Friday, 19 July at 5.30 p.m.

Rank Boat Nation Bow Rower No.2 Rower No.3 Stroke Cox Time
Ludwigshafener 6:59.4
Thames R. C. data-sort-value=8:88.8Unknown

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rowing at the 1912 Stockholm Summer Games: Men's Coxed Fours, Outriggers . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418020722/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1912/ROW/mens-coxed-fours-outriggers.html . dead . 18 April 2020 . Sports Reference . 23 July 2018.
  2. Web site: Coxed Fours, Outriggers, Men . Olympedia . 11 May 2021.
  3. Web site: Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance . World Rowing . 1 May 2017 . 14 April 2021.
  4. The official report say, that the third rower was replaced by M. Simonsen in the quarterfinal, but it is unknown, which rower took part in the first heat.