Rowing at the 1980 Summer Olympics

Rowing at the 1980 Summer Olympics was represented by 14 events.[1] It took place in the Man-made Basin, located at the Trade Unions Olympic Sports Centre (Krylatskoye district, Moscow).[2] The rowing schedule began on 20 July and ended on 27 July.[1]

Rowing
at the Games of the XXII Olympiad
VenueKrylatskoye Rowing Canal
Dates20–27 July
Competitors470 (313 men, 150 women) from 25 nations

Due to the Western boycott some strong rowing nations were not present. In that situation East Germany dominated the competition: they won 14 medals, including 11 golds, from 14 events.[2]

The quadruple sculls events, introduced in 1976, were again held without coxswain for men and with coxswain for women.[3][4]

Medal summary

Men's events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Single sculls
 Pertti Karppinen (FIN)  Vasil Yakusha (URS)  Peter Kersten (GDR)
Double sculls
 Joachim Dreifke
and Klaus Kröppelien (GDR)
 Zoran Pančić
and Milorad Stanulov (YUG)
 Zdeněk Pecka
and Václav Vochoska (TCH)
Quadruple sculls (coxless)
 East Germany (GDR)
Frank Dundr
Carsten Bunk
Uwe Heppner
Martin Winter
 Soviet Union (URS)
Yuriy Shapochka
Evgeniy Barbakov
Valeriy Kleshnyov
Mykola Dovhan
 Bulgaria (BUL)
Mincho Nikolov
Lyubomir Petrov
Ivo Rusev
Bogdan Dobrev
Coxless pairs
 Bernd Landvoigt
and Jörg Landvoigt (GDR)
 Yuriy Pimenov
and Nikolay Pimenov (URS)
 Charles Wiggin
and Malcolm Carmichael (GBR)
Coxed pairs
 East Germany (GDR)
Harald Jährling
Friedrich-Wilhelm Ulrich
Georg Spohr (cox)
 Soviet Union (URS)
Viktor Pereverzev
Gennadi Kryuçkin
Aleksandr Lukyanov (cox)
 Yugoslavia (YUG)
Duško Mrduljaš
Zlatko Celent
Josip Reić (cox)
Coxless fours
 East Germany (GDR)
Siegfried Brietzke
Andreas Decker
Stefan Semmler
Jürgen Thiele
 Soviet Union (URS)
Aleksey Kamkin
Valeriy Dolinin
Aleksandr Kulagin
Vitali Eliseev
 Great Britain (GBR)
John Beattie
Ian McNuff
David Townsend
Martin Cross
Coxed four
 East Germany (GDR)
Dieter Wendisch
Walter Dießner
Ullrich Dießner
Gottfried Döhn
Andreas Gregor (cox)
 Soviet Union (URS)
Artūrs Garonskis
Dimants Krišjānis
Dzintars Krišjānis
Žoržs Tikmers
Juris Bērziņš (cox)
 Poland (POL)
Grzegorz Stellak
Adam Tomasiak
Grzegorz Nowak
Ryszard Stadniuk
Ryszard Kubiak (cox)
Eights
 East Germany (GDR)
Bernd Krauß
Hans-Peter Koppe
Ulrich Kons
Jörg Friedrich
Jens Doberschütz
Ulrich Karnatz
Uwe Dühring
Bernd Höing
Klaus-Dieter Ludwig (cox)
 Great Britain (GBR)
Duncan McDougall
Allan Whitwell
Henry Clay
Chris Mahoney
Andrew Justice
John Pritchard
Malcolm McGowan
Richard Stanhope
Colin Moynihan (cox)
 Soviet Union (URS)
Viktor Kokoshyn
Andriy Tishchenko
Oleksandr Tkachenko
Jonas Pinskus
Jonas Narmontas
Andrey Luhin
Oleksandr Mantsevych
Ihar Maystrenka
Hryhoriy Dmytrenko (cox)

Women's events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Single sculls
 Sanda Toma (ROM)  Antonina Zelikovich (URS)  Martina Schröter (GDR)
Double sculls
 Yelena Khloptseva
and Larisa Popova (URS)
 Cornelia Linse
and Heidi Westphal (GDR)
 Olga Homeghi
and Valeria Răcilă (ROM)
Quadruple sculls (coxed)
 East Germany (GDR)
Sybille Reinhardt
Jutta Ploch
Jutta Lau
Roswietha Zobelt
Liane Buhr
 Soviet Union (URS)
Antonina Pustovit
Yelena Matiyevskaya
Olga Vasilchenko
Nadezhda Lyubimova
Nina Cheremisina
 Bulgaria (BUL)
Mariana Serbezova
Rumelyana Boncheva
Dolores Nakova
Anka Bakova
Anka Georgieva
Coxless pairs
 Ute Steindorf
and Cornelia Klier (GDR)
 Małgorzata Dłużewska
and Czesława Kościańska (POL)
 Siika Barboulova
and Stoyanka Kubatova (BUL)
Coxed four
 East Germany (GDR)
Ramona Kapheim
Silvia Fröhlich
Angelika Noack
Romy Saalfeld
Kirsten Wenzel
 Bulgaria (BUL)
Ginka Gyurova
Mariyka Modeva
Rita Todorova
Iskra Velinova
Nadiya Filipova
 Soviet Union (URS)
Mariya Fadeyeva
Galina Sovetnikova
Marina Studneva
Svetlana Semyonova
Nina Cheremisina
Eights
 East Germany (GDR)
Martina Boesler
Christiane Knetsch
Gabriele Kühn
Karin Metze
Kersten Neisser
Ilona Richter
Marita Sandig
Birgit Schütz
Marina Wilke
 Soviet Union (URS)
Nina Frolova
Mariya Payun
Olga Pivovarova
Nina Preobrazhenskaya
Nadezhda Prishchepa
Tatyana Stetsenko
Elena Tereshina
Nina Umanets
Valentina Zhulina
 Romania (ROM)
Angelica Aposteanu
Elena Bondar
Florica Bucur
Maria Constantinescu
Elena Dobrițoiu
Rodica Frîntu
Ana Iliuță
Rodica Pușcatu
Marlena Zagoni

Participating nations

A total of 470 rowers from 25 nations competed at the Moscow Games:

Medal table

All events took place at the Moscow Canoeing and Rowing Basin in Krylatskoye
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany (GDR)111214
2 Soviet Union (URS)19212
3 Romania (ROM)1023
4 Finland (FIN)1001
5 Bulgaria (BUL)0134
6 Great Britain (GBR)0123
7 Poland (POL)0112
 Yugoslavia (YUG)0112
9 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0011
Totals (9 nations)14141442
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References

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