Rowing at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Men's eight explained

Event:Men's eight
Games:1972 Summer
Venue:Oberschleißheim Regatta Course
Dates:27 August – 2 September
Competitors:135
Nations:15
Gold:
Silver:
Bronze:
Win Value:6:08.94
Prev:1968
Next:1976

The men's eight competition at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich took place from 27 August to 2 September at the Olympic Reggatta Course in Oberschleißheim.[1] There were 15 boats (135 competitors) from 15 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event. The event was won by New Zealand, the nation's first medal in the men's eight. Silver went to the United States. East Germany also earned its first medal in the event, with bronze.

Background

This was the 16th appearance of the event. Rowing had been on the programme in 1896 but was cancelled due to bad weather. The men's eight has been held every time that rowing has been contested, beginning in 1900.[2]

An event that for decades had been almost entirely predictable had a competitive field in 1972. The United States had won this event at eight of the last ten Olympics, but only one of the last three (1964). West Germany was the defending Olympic champion (and, as part of the United Team of Germany, had won in 1960 as well). Argentina had won the 1971 Pan American Games. East Germany were the 1969 European Rowing Championships winners, 1970 World Rowing Championships winners, and 1971 European Rowing Championships runners-up. The Soviet Union had reached the podium at the 1969 European, 1970 World, and 1971 European events.[2] New Zealand's eight had, in identical composition, won the 1971 European Rowing Championships.[3]

Austria made its debut in the event. The United States made its 14th appearance, most among nations to that point.

Competition format

The "eight" event featured nine-person boats, with eight rowers and a coxswain. It was a sweep rowing event, with the rowers each having one oar (and thus each rowing on one side). This rowing competition consisted of three main rounds (quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals; up from two main rounds in prior Games), as well as a repechage round after the quarterfinals. The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912 (with the exception of 1948).[4] Races were held in up to six lanes.

Schedule

All times are Central European Time (UTC+1)

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 27 August 1972 14:00 Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 29 August 1972 14:00 Repechage
Thursday, 31 August 1972 11:30 Semifinals
Friday, 1 September 1972 10:00 Final B
Saturday, 2 September 1972 13:00 Final A

Results

Quarterfinals

The top three of each heat qualified to the semifinal round, while the remainder went to the repechage.

Quarterfinal 1

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Paul Hoffman6:06.01
2Manfred Klein6:10.28
3Peter Wetzstein6:20.60
4Mariano Gottifredi6:21.80
5Yves Rebelle6:32.47

Quarterfinal 2

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Simon Dickie6:06.19
2Róbert Örlschléger6:17.51
3Raúl Mazerati6:20.31
4Ryszard Kubiak6:26.95
5Jadran Radovčić6:27.82

Quarterfinal 3

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Viktor Mikheyev6:12.35
2Rutger Stuffken6:13.03
3Dietmar Schwarz6:14.06
4Alan Grover6:14.75
5Jiří Pták6:17.70

Repechage

The top three finishers advanced to the semifinal round and the other teams were eliminated.

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Alan Grover6:09.75
2Jiří Pták6:14.33
3Ryszard Kubiak6:16.23
4Yves Rebelle6:19.58
5Mariano Gottifredi6:20.21
6Jadran Radovčić6:25.94

Semifinals

The top three finishers qualified for Final A, with the remainder going to Final B.

Semifinal 1

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Dietmar Schwarz6:22.47
2Viktor Mikheyev6:24.80
3Paul Hoffman6:27.53
4Róbert Örlschléger6:32.25
5Jiří Pták6:38.70
6Peter Wetzstein7:05.51

Semifinal 2

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time Notes
1Manfred Klein6:27.44
2Simon Dickie6:28.40
3Ryszard Kubiak6:31.10
4Rutger Stuffken6:31.70
5Alan Grover6:34.82
6Raúl Mazerati6:47.72

Finals

Final B

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time
7Róbert Örlschléger6:22.13
8Alan Grover6:22.45
9Rutger Stuffken6:23.55
10Jiří Pták6:24.64
11Raúl Mazerati6:26.03
12Peter Wetzstein6:27.86

Final A

Rank Rowers Coxswain Nation Time
Simon Dickie6:08.94
Paul Hoffman6:11.61
Dietmar Schwarz6:11.67
4Viktor Mikheyev6:14.48
5Manfred Klein6:14.91
6Ryszard Kubiak6:29.35

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rowing at the 1972 Munich Summer Games: Men's coxed eight . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417223501/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1972/ROW/mens-coxed-eights.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . Sports Reference . 22 August 2018.
  2. Web site: Eight, Men . Olympedia . 8 June 2021.
  3. Book: Bidwell . Peter . Reflections of Gold . 2010 . . Auckland . 978-1-86950-808-1. 58, 65.
  4. Web site: Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance . World Rowing . 1 May 2017 . 19 April 2021.