Rowing at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's single sculls explained

Event:Men's single sculls
Games:2000 Summer
Venue:Sydney International Regatta Centre
Dates:17–23 September
Competitors:24
Nations:24
Longnames:yes
Gold:Rob Waddell
Goldnoc:NZL
Silver:Xeno Müller
Silvernoc:SUI
Bronze:Marcel Hacker
Bronzenoc:GER
Win Value:6:48.90
Prev:1996
Next:2004

The men's single sculls competition at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia took place at the Sydney International Regatta Centre. It was held from 17 to 23 September. There were 24 competitors from 24 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event. The event was won by Rob Waddell of New Zealand, the nation's first victory in the event after bronze medals in 1920 and 1988. Defending champion Xeno Müller of Switzerland placed second, becoming the 11th man to win multiple medals in the event. Marcel Hacker of Germany took bronze; it was the 11th consecutive Games with a German rower on the podium in the event (including the United Team of Germany, East Germany, West Germany, and Germany).

Background

This was the 23rd appearance of the event. Rowing had been on the programme in 1896 but was cancelled due to bad weather. The single sculls has been held every time that rowing has been contested, beginning in 1900.[1]

Seven of the 21 single scullers from the 1996 Games returned: gold medallist Xeno Müller of Switzerland, silver medallist Derek Porter of Canada, fifth-place finisher (and 1992 silver medallist) Václav Chalupa of the Czech Republic, seventh-place finisher Rob Waddell of New Zealand, eighth-place finisher Ali Ibrahim of Egypt, twelfth-place finisher Sergio Fernández González of Argentina, and eighteenth-place finisher (and 1992 fifth-place finisher) Jüri Jaanson of Estonia. Müller and Waddell were the top two scullers coming into the Games; Waddell had won the last two World Championships in 1998 and 1999 with Müller the runner-up both times. Porter was another contender, with a third-place finish at the latest World Championship (he had also won that event seven years earlier). Chalupa was also a perennial contender, with four silver and two bronze medals at the World Championships in the single sculls to go along with his 1992 Olympic silver (he would add a third bronze in 2001). Other challengers included veterans Jaanson and Fernández.[1]

Algeria, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Slovakia, and Tunisia each made their debut in the event. The United States made its 19th appearance, most among nations.

Competition format

This rowing event is a single scull event, meaning that each boat is propelled by a single rower. The "scull" portion means that the rower uses two oars, one on each side of the boat; this contrasts with sweep rowing in which each rower has one oar and rows on only one side (not feasible for singles events). The competition consists of multiple rounds. Finals were held to determine the placing of each boat; these finals were given letters with those nearer to the beginning of the alphabet meaning a better ranking. Semifinals were named based on which finals they fed, with each semifinal having two possible finals.[2] The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912.[3]

During the first round four quarterfinal heats, each with 6 boats, were held. The winning boat in each heat advanced to the semifinals, while all others were relegated to the repechages.

The repechages offered the rowers a chance to qualify for the semi-final. Placing in the repechages determined which semifinal the boat would race in. Four heats were held, with 5 boats each. The top two boats in each repechage moved on to the A/B semifinals, with the bottom three boats going to the C/D semifinals.

Four semifinals were held, two each of A/B semifinals and C/D semifinals. For each semifinal race, the top three boats moved on to the better of the two finals, while the bottom three boats went to the lesser of the two finals possible. For example, a second-place finish in an A/B semifinal would result in advancement to the A final.

The fourth and final round was the finals. Each final determined a set of rankings. The A final determined the medals, along with the rest of the places through 6th. The B final gave rankings from 7th to 12th, the C from 13th to 18th, and so on. Thus, to win a medal rowers had to finish in either the top one of their quarterfinal or top two of their repechage heat and top three of their A/B semifinal to reach the A final.

Schedule

All times are Australian Time (UTC+10)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 17 September 2000 9:10 Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 19 September 2000 9:10 Repechage
Thursday, 21 September 2000 8:50
10:30
Semifinals A/B
Semifinals C/D
Friday, 22 September 2000 10:20
11:30
11:50
Final B
Final C
Final D
Saturday, 23 September 2000 8:50Final A

Results

Quarterfinals

The winner of each heat advanced to the A/B semifinals, remainder went to the repechage.

Quarterfinal 1

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Derek Porter7:02.24
2Matthew Wells7:07.76
3Anderson Nocetti7:09.08
4Mattia Righetti7:24.80
5Jesús Huerta7:29.64
6Vladimir Belonogov7:34.66

Quarterfinal 2

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Rob Waddell6:54.20
2Ivo Yanakiev7:03.24
3Andris Reinholds7:06.28,
4Ján Žiška7:26.21
5Benjamin Tolentino7:29.86
6Riadh Ben Khedher7:59.75

Quarterfinal 3

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Marcel Hacker6:58.31
2Václav Chalupa7:04.00
3Jüri Jaanson7:06.58
4Sergio Fernandez7:20.65
5Rafik Amrane7:44.48
6Muhammad Akram7:54.71

Quarterfinal 4

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Xeno Müller6:57.38
2Gerard Egelmeers7:05.48
3Don Smith7:10.34
4Ali Ibrahim7:21.32
5Félipe Leal7:39.43
6Lee In-su7:53.84

Repechage

The first two in each heat qualified for semifinals A/B, with the remainder going to semifinals C/D.

Repechage heat 1

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Andris Reinholds7:06.40,
2Matthew Wells7:08.19
3Sergio Fernández González7:13.68
4Félipe Leal7:34.56
5Vladimir Belonogov7:36.42

Repechage heat 2

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Jüri Jaanson7:05.16
2Ivo Yanakiev7:09.22
3Ali Ibrahim7:13.10
4Jesús Huerta7:31.93
5Riadh Ben Khedher7:53.05

Repechage heat 3

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Don Smith7:11.83
2Václav Chalupa7:17.53
3Mattia Righetti7:21.20
4Benjamin Tolentino7:29.03
5Muhammad Akram7:51.50

Repechage heat 4

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Gerard Egelmeers7:04.25
2Ján Žiška7:14.31
3Anderson Nocetti7:22.13
4Rafik Amrane7:42.19
5Lee In-su7:45.76

Semifinals

The semifinals were held on 21 September 2000. For the C/D semifinals, the first three in each heat qualified for Final C, with the remainder going to Final D. Similarly, for the A/B semifinals, the top three went to Final A and the bottom three to Final B.

Semifinal C/D 1

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Anderson Nocetti7:12.97
2Sergio Fernández González7:21.46
3Vladimir Belonogov7:24.44
4Benjamin Tolentino7:29.86
5Jesús Huerta7:36.06
6Lee In-su7:40.03

Semifinal C/D 2

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Ali Ibrahim7:17.06
2Mattia Righetti7:20.78
3Félipe Leal7:28.78
4Rafik Amrane7:38.51
5Muhammad Akram7:45.12
6Riadh Ben Khedher7:47.86

Semifinal A/B 1

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Rob Waddell6:58.01
2Derek Porter7:00.82
3Ivo Yanakiev7:03.89
4Gerard Egelmeers7:07.14
5Matthew Wells7:09.68
6Don Smith7:10.69

Semifinal A/B 2

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
1Xeno Müller7:01.86
2Marcel Hacker7:03.47
3Jüri Jaanson7:06.70
4Andris Reinholds7:15.04,
5Ján Žiška7:26.51
6Václav Chalupa7:30.28

Finals

Final D

RankRowerNationTime
18Benjamin Tolentino7:22.31
19Jesús Huerta7:29.68
20Rafik Amrane7:35.66
21Lee In-su7:37.31
22Riadh Ben Khedher7:54.45
data-sort-value=23Muhammad Akramdata-sort-value=9:99.99

Final C

RankRowerNationTime
12Ali Ibrahim7:01.44
13Anderson Nocetti7:01.89
14Mattia Righetti7:08.16
15Sergio Fernández González7:09.43
16Vladimir Belonogov7:21.44
17Félipe Leal7:44.48

Final B

RankRowerNationTimeNotes
7Gerard Egelmeers6:55.29
8Don Smith6:59.82
9Matthew Wells7:00.22
10Ján Žiška7:06.96
data-sort-value=11Václav Chalupadata-sort-value=8:88.88
data-sort-value=99Andris Reinholdsdata-sort-value=9:99.996:56.33

Final A

RankRowerNationTime
Rob Waddell6:48.90
Xeno Müller6:50.55
Marcel Hacker6:50.83
4Derek Porter6:51.10
5Ivo Yanakiev6:57.32
6Jüri Jaanson6:59.15

Results summary

RankRowerNationQuarterfinals Repechage Semifinals Finals Notes
Rob Waddell6:54.20 6:58.01
Semifinals A/B
6:48.90
Final A
Xeno Müller6:57.38 7:01.86
Semifinals A/B
6:50.55
Final A
Marcel Hacker6:58.31 7:03.47
Semifinals A/B
6:50.83
Final A
4Derek Porter7:02.24 7:00.82
Semifinals A/B
6:51.10
Final A
5Ivo Yanakiev7:03.24 7:09.22 7:03.89
Semifinals A/B
6:57.32
Final A
6Jüri Jaanson7:06.58 7:05.16 7:06.70
Semifinals A/B
6:59.15
Final A
7Gerard Egelmeers7:05.48 7:04.25 7:07.14
Semifinals A/B
6:55.29
Final B
8Don Smith7:10.34 7:11.83 7:10.69
Semifinals A/B
6:59.82
Final B
9Matthew Wells7:07.76 7:08.19 7:09.68
Semifinals A/B
7:00.22
Final B
10Ján Žiška7:26.21 7:14.31 7:26.51
Semifinals A/B
7:06.96
Final B
11Václav Chalupa7:04.00 7:17.53 7:30.28
Semifinals A/B
data-sort-value=8:88.88
Final B
12Ali Ibrahim7:21.32 7:13.10 7:17.06
Semifinals C/D
7:01.44
Final C
13Anderson Nocetti7:09.08 7:22.13 7:12.97
Semifinals C/D
7:01.89
Final C
14Mattia Righetti7:24.80 7:21.20 7:20.78
Semifinals C/D
7:08.16
Final C
15Sergio Fernández González7:20.65 7:13.68 7:21.46
Semifinals C/D
7:09.43
Final C
16Vladimir Belonogov7:34.66 7:36.42 7:24.44
Semifinals C/D
7:21.44
Final C
17Félipe Leal7:39.43 7:34.56 7:28.78
Semifinals C/D
7:44.48
Final C
18Benjamin Tolentino7:29.86 7:29.03 7:29.86
Semifinals C/D
7:22.31
Final D
19Jesús Huerta7:29.64 7:31.93 7:36.06
Semifinals C/D
7:29.68
Final D
20Rafik Amrane7:44.48 7:42.19 7:38.51
Semifinals C/D
7:35.66
Final D
21Lee In-su7:53.84 7:45.76 7:40.03
Semifinals C/D
7:37.31
Final D
22Riadh Ben Khedher7:59.75 7:53.05 7:47.86
Semifinals C/D
7:54.45
Final D
23Muhammad Akram7:54.71 7:51.50 7:45.12
Semifinals C/D
data-sort-value=9:99.99
Final D
data-sort-value=99Andris Reinholds7:06.28 7:06.40 7:15.04
Semifinals A/B
data-sort-value=9:99.996:56.33
Final B

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Single Sculls, Men . Olympedia . 5 May 2021.
  2. Rowing at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games: Men's Single Sculls. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418025208/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/2000/ROW/mens-single-sculls.html. dead. 18 April 2020. 6 November 2012.
  3. Web site: Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance . World Rowing . 1 May 2017 . 19 April 2021.