Rowing at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Men's coxed pair explained

Event:Men's coxed pair
Games:1968 Summer
Venue:Virgilio Uribe Rowing and Canoeing Course
Dates:13–19 October
Competitors:54
Nations:18
Longnames:yes
Win Value:8:04.81
Gold:Primo Baran
Renzo Sambo
Bruno Cipolla (cox)
Goldnoc:ITA
Silver:Herman Suselbeek
Hadriaan van Nes
Roderick Rijnders (cox)
Silvernoc:NED
Bronze:Jørn Krab
Harry Jørgensen
Preben Krab (cox)
Bronzenoc:DEN
Prev:1964
Next:1972

The men's coxed pair competition at the 1968 Summer Olympics took place at Virgilio Uribe Rowing and Canoeing Course, in the Xochimilco borough of Mexico City.[1] It was held from 13 to 19 October. There were 18 boats (54 competitors) from 18 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event. The event was won by the Italian crew, rowers Primo Baran and Renzo Sambo and coxswain Bruno Cipolla; it was Italy's first victory in the event since 1920 and second overall (tying Switzerland for second-most among nations to that point). The Netherlands made the podium for the second consecutive Games, though with an all-new team: Herman Suselbeek, Hadriaan van Nes, and cox Roderick Rijnders took silver. A Danish boat medaled in the event for the first time since 1952, with Jørn Krab, Harry Jørgensen, and Preben Krab earning bronze. The American medal streak of three Games ended with the United States boat placing fifth.

Background

This was the 12th 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]

One of the 18 competitors from the 1964 coxed pair Final A returned: Igor Rudakov, the veteran coxswain from the Soviet Union's 1960 silver-medal team and 1964 fourth-place team. The favorites were Italian rowers Primo Baran and Renzo Sambo; the two had won the 1967 European championship, taken silver at the 1965 European championship, and earned bronze at the 1966 World Championship. Baran and Sambo had a different cox for each of those results, with their Olympic teammate Bruno Cipolla having been on the 1967 championship crew. Hadriaan van Nes had been on the Dutch 1966 World Championship team, but came to Mexico City with a new rowing partner and new coxswain.[2]

Bulgaria, Cuba, Mexico, and Peru each made their debut in the event; East and West Germany competed separately for the first time. France and the United States each made their 10th 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 (with the exception of 1948).[3] This rowing competition consisted of three main rounds (quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals), as well as a repechage round that allowed teams that did not win their quarterfinal heats to advance to the semifinals.

Schedule

All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6)

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 13 October 1968 10:15 Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 15 October 1968 10:15 Repechage
Thursday, 17 October 1968 12:00 Semifinals
Friday, 18 October 1968 12:00 Final B
Saturday, 19 October 1968 10:30 Final A

Results

Quarterfinals

Quarterfinal 1

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 8:13.31
2 8:19.78
3 8:33.45
4 9:02.98
5
6

Quarterfinal 2

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 8:11.13
2 8:12.48
3 8:12.88
4 8:20.38
5 8:23.39
6 8:29.98

Quarterfinal 3

The third heat featured all three eventual medalists (Italy, the Netherlands, and Denmark), though none won the heat—the East German boat that won the heat finished fourth overall.

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 8:01.82
2 8:03.00
3 8:18.78
4 8:21.42
5 8:28.41
6 8:49.26

Repechage

Repechage heat 1

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 7:52.43
2 8:01.57
3 8:03.62
4 8:08.05
5 8:11.88
6 8:24.17

Repechage heat 2

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 7:52.83
2 7:57.01
3 8:06.14
4 8:25.90
5
6

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 8:00.75
2 8:01.19
3 8:03.74
4 8:05.52
5 8:09.75
6 8:11.82

Semifinal 2

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1 7:59.95
2 8:02.78
3 8:05.49
4 8:06.39
5 8:06.41
6 8:55.81

Finals

Final B

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time
7 7:57.21
8 7:58.10
9 8:04.38
10 8:04.90
11 8:06.91
12

Final A

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time
8:04.81
8:06.80
8:08.07
4 8:08.22
5 8:12.60
6 8:41.51

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rowing at the 1968 Mexico City Summer Games: Men's Coxed Pairs . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418130302/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1968/ROW/mens-coxed-pairs.html . dead . 18 April 2020 . Sports Reference . 17 August 2018.
  2. Web site: Coxed Pairs, Men . Olympedia . 10 May 2021.
  3. Web site: Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance . World Rowing . 1 May 2017 . 19 April 2021.