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Rowing at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's single sculls

The men's single sculls competition at the 2004 Summer Olympics took place at Schinias Olympic Rowing and Canoeing Centre, Greece. The event was held from 14 to 21 August and was one of six events for male competitors in Rowing at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.[1] There were 29 competitors from 29 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event.[2] The event was won by Olaf Tufte of Norway. Silver went to Jüri Jaanson of Estonia, with bronze to Ivo Yanakiev of Bulgaria. It was the first medal in the men's single sculls for all three nations. Marcel Hacker's failure to make the final made this the first men's single sculls race since 1956 without a German rower on the podium; between the United Team of Germany, East Germany, West Germany, and Germany, the German medal streak in the event had been 11 Games long.

Men's single sculls
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
Schinias venue
VenueSchinias Olympic Rowing and Canoeing Centre
Dates14–21 August
Competitors29 from 29 nations
Winning time6:49.30
Medalists
← 2000
2008 →

Background edit

This was the 24th 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.[2]

Six of the 24 single scullers from the 2000 Games returned: bronze medallist Marcel Hacker of Germany, fifth-place finisher Ivo Yanakiev of Bulgaria, sixth-place finisher Jüri Jaanson of Estonia, eleventh-place finisher Václav Chalupa of the Czech Republic, twelfth-place finisher Ali Ibrahim of Egypt, and thirteenth-place finisher Anderson Nocetti of Brazil. Jaanson, Chalupa, and Ibrahim had also competed in 1996; Chalupa had won a silver medal in 1992, with Jaanson finishing fifth that year. Hacker and Olaf Tufte were favored, with defending champion Rob Waddell of New Zealand and runner-up Xeno Müller of Switzerland retired and Iztok Čop of Slovenia competing only in the double sculls. Hacker, Tufte, Čop, and Chalupa had taken all 12 of the World Championships medals since the last Games, with Tufte winning in 2001 and 2003 and Hacker in 2002.[2]

The People's Republic of China, Chinese Taipei, India, Kenya, Paraguay, Peru, and Uzbekistan each made their debut in the event. Great Britain made its 19th appearance, tying the absent United States for most among nations.

Competition format edit

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 multiple possible finals. The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912.[3]

During the first round six quarterfinal heats, each with 4 or 5 boats, were held. The winning boat in each heat advanced to the A/B/C semifinals, while all others were relegated to the repechages.

The repechages offered the rowers another chance to qualify for the top semifinals. Placing in the repechages determined which semifinal the boat would race in. Six heats were held, with 3 or 4 boats each. The top two boats in each repechage moved on to the A/B/C semifinals, with the bottom three boats going to the D/E semifinals (and out of medal contention).

Five semifinals were held: three of the A/B/C semifinals and two of the D/E semifinals. For each A/B/C semifinal race, the top two boats advanced to the A final to compete for medals. The next two boats (3rd and 4th in each semifinal) went to the B final. The last two boats went to the C final. For the D/E semifinals, the top three boats in each semifinal went to the D final while the remaining boats went to the E 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 two of their A/B/C semifinal to reach the A final.

Schedule edit

All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

Date Time Round
Saturday, 14 August 2004 9:10 Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 17 August 2004 14:58 Repechage
Wednesday, 18 August 2004 8:50
12:00
Semifinals A/B/C
Semifinals D/E
Thursday, 19 August 2004 10:20
11:30
11:50
12:00
Final B
Final C
Final D
Final E
Saturday, 21 August 2004 8:50 Final A

Results edit

Quarterfinals edit

Quarterfinal heats were held on 14 August. The first place rower in each heat advanced directly to the top section semifinals, while the rest were sent to the repechages.

Quarterfinal 1 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Tim Maeyens   Belgium 7:17.68 QABC
2 André Vonarburg   Switzerland 7:23.43 R
3 Law Hiu Fung   Hong Kong 7:28.16 R
4 Wang Ming-hui   Chinese Taipei 7:29.99 R
5 Daniel Sosa   Paraguay 7:52.50 R

Quarterfinal 2 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Václav Chalupa   Czech Republic 7:13.84 QABC
2 Craig Jones   Australia 7:19.71 R
3 Davor Mizerit   Slovenia 7:24.60 R
4 Ali Ibrahim   Egypt 7:36.60 R
5 Óscar Vásquez   Chile 7:38.04 R

Quarterfinal 3 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Santiago Fernández   Argentina 7:22.52 QABC
2 Raphael Hartl   Austria 7:34.61 R
3 Vladimir Chernenko   Uzbekistan 7:38.27 R
4 Mohamed Aich   Algeria 7:41.85 R
5 Paulose Pandari Kunnel   India 8:00.11 R

Quarterfinal 4 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Olaf Tufte   Norway 7:12.53 QABC
2 Ian Lawson   Great Britain 7:24.01 R
3 Anderson Nocetti   Brazil 7:26.81 R
4 Gustavo Salcedo   Peru 7:29.06 R
5 Leandro Salvagno   Uruguay 7:43.91 R

Quarterfinal 5 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Marcel Hacker   Germany 7:17.55 QABC
2 Yuleidys Cascaret   Cuba 7:19.45 R
3 Dirk Lippits   Netherlands 7:21.19 R
4 Su Hui   China 7:23.19 R
5 Ham Jeong-uk   South Korea 7:50.39 R

Quarterfinal 6 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Jüri Jaanson   Estonia 7:13.74 QABC
2 Ivo Yanakiev   Bulgaria 7:28.97 R
3 Matteo Stefanini   Italy 7:31.54 R
4 Ibrahim Githaiga   Kenya 8:13.33 R

Repechage edit

The repechage took place on 17 August. The top two rowers in each repechage heat advanced to the top section of semifinals, while the others were relegated to the consolation semifinals (D and E).

Repechage heat 1 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Ivo Yanakiev   Bulgaria 6:52.51 QABC
2 Dirk Lippits   Netherlands 7:01.39 QABC
3 Gustavo Salcedo   Peru 7:05.08 QDE
4 Paulose Pandari Kunnel   India 7:29.47 QDE

Repechage heat 2 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Yuleidys Cascaret   Cuba 6:58.44 QABC
2 Anderson Nocetti   Brazil 7:03.08 QABC
3 Oscar Vasquez   Chile 7:06.51 QDE
4 Mohammed Aich   Algeria 7:46.98 QDE

Repechage heat 3 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Ian Lawson   Great Britain 6:56.55 QABC
2 Ali Ibrahim   Egypt 6:59.05 QABC
3 Vladimir Tchernenko   Uzbekistan 7:13.43 QDE
4 Daniel Sosa   Paraguay 7:21.03 QDE

Repechage heat 4 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Davor Mizerit   Slovenia 7:01.31 QABC
2 Raphael Hartl   Austria 7:06.21 QABC
3 Wang Ming-hui   Chinese Taipei 7:09.99 QDE

Repechage heat 5 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Craig Jones   Australia 7:06.13 QABC
2 Law Hiu Fung   Hong Kong 7:10.72 QABC
3 Ham Jung-wook   South Korea 7:11.38 QDE
4 Ibrahim Githaiga   Kenya 7:25.58 QDE

Repechage heat 6 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 André Vonarburg   Switzerland 6:53.48 QABC
2 Su Hui   China 6:57.77 QABC
3 Leandro Salvagno   Uruguay 7:02.68 QDE
4 Matteo Stefanini   Italy 7:08.91 QDE

Semifinals edit

The semifinals were conducted on 18 August. The A, B, and C semifinals were for those rowers who still had a chance at medaling, and the top two in each of those semifinals moved on to the A final (top 6 places), the next two to the B final (places 7–12), and the bottom two in each to the C final (13–18). The D and E semifinals were consolation semis and the rowers in them had already been eliminated from medal contention; the top three in each moved to the D final (places 19–24) and the rest moved to E final (places 25–29).

Three of the four favored scullers, Václav Chalupa, Jüri Jaanson and Olaf Tufte, all qualified relatively easily for the finals from Semis A, B and C, respectively. But in a major surprise, Marcel Hacker, who was in Semi B with Tufte, finished third and failed to qualify. Hacker was the returning bronze medallist, a former World Champion, and holder of the World's best time. Ivo Yanakiev, who finished second in Semi B, went on to win a bronze medal.

Semifinal D/E 1 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Gustavo Salcedo   Peru 7:09.06 QD
2 Matteo Stefanini   Italy 7:10.34 QD
3 Vladimir Tchernenko   Uzbekistan 7:13.21 QD
4 Wang Ming-hui   Chinese Taipei 7:14.79 QE
5 Mohammed Aich   Algeria 7:22.05 QE
6 Ibrahim Githaiga   Kenya 7:40.78 QE

Semifinal D/E 2 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Leandro Salvagno   Uruguay 7:24.41 QD
2 Oscar Vasquez   Chile 7:27.11 QD
3 Ham Jung-wook   South Korea 7:33.70 QD
4 Daniel Sosa   Paraguay 7:36.87 QE
5 Paulose Pandari Kunnel   India 7:48.38 QE

Semifinal A/B/C 1 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Václav Chalupa   Czech Republic 6:59.39 QA
2 Santiago Fernández   Argentina 7:00.90 QA
3 Davor Mizerit   Slovenia 7:04.07 QB
4 Craig Jones   Australia 7:05.94 QB
5 Dirk Lippits   Netherlands 7:05.94 QC
6 Su Hui   China 7:10.33 QC

Semifinal A/B/C 2 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Olaf Tufte   Norway 6:50.55 QA
2 Ivo Yanakiev   Bulgaria 6:53.43 QA
3 Marcel Hacker   Germany 6:55.98 QB
4 André Vonarburg   Switzerland 7:08.52 QB
5 Anderson Nocetti   Brazil 7:11.90 QC
6 Ali Ibrahim   Egypt 7:14.58 QC

Semifinal A/B/C 3 edit

Rank Rower Nation Time Notes
1 Jüri Jaanson   Estonia 6:47.36 QA
2 Tim Maeyens   Belgium 6:50.33 QA
3 Ian Lawson   Great Britain 6:57.95 QB
4 Yuleidys Cascaret   Cuba 6:58.35 QB
5 Raphael Hartl   Austria 6:58.67 QC
6 Law Hiu Fung   Hong Kong 7:12.52 QC

Finals edit

Finals were contested on 19 August, except for the medal final on 21 August.

In the finals, Václav Chalupa followed by Fernandez and Maeyens pulled out to an early lead. At the 1000 meter mark (halfway), Olaf Tufte grabbed a small lead over Chalupa with Jüri Jaanson a close third. With 500 meters to go, Jaanson took a small lead over Tufte. Two seconds back (one length), Chalupa held a small lead for third over Ivo Yanakiev who had been slowly moving up through the field. In the final 500 meters, Tufte regained the lead and pulled away to win by a length over Jaanson. Meanwhile, Yanakiev grabbed third over Chalupa who faded to fifth place.

Final E edit

Rank Rower Nation Time
25 Wang Ming-hui   Chinese Taipei 7:07.84
26 Daniel Sosa   Paraguay 7:13.49
27 Paulose Pandari Kunnel   India 7:22.63
28 Mohammed Aich   Algeria 7:25.49
29 Ibrahim Githaiga   Kenya 7:29.02

Final D edit

Rank Rower Nation Time
19 Matteo Stefanini   Italy 6:57.16
20 Leandro Salvagno   Uruguay 7:01.33
21 Gustavo Salcedo   Peru 7:03.24
22 Ham Jung-wook   South Korea 7:10.44
23 Oscar Vasquez   Chile 7:10.75
24 Vladimir Tchernenko   Uzbekistan 7:23.56

Final C edit

Rank Rower Nation Time
13 Anderson Nocetti   Brazil 6:53.64
14 Ali Ibrahim   Egypt 6:55.34
15 Su Hui   China 6:57.42
16 Dirk Lippits   Netherlands 6:58.20
17 Raphael Hartl   Austria 7:00.75
18 Law Hiu Fung   Hong Kong 7:10.75

Final B edit

Rank Rower Nation Time
7 Marcel Hacker   Germany 6:47.26
8 André Vonarburg   Switzerland 6:52.88
9 Davor Mizerit   Slovenia 6:55.64
10 Ian Lawson   Great Britain 6:57.63
11 Craig Jones   Australia 6:58.48
12 Yuleidys Cascaret   Cuba 6:58.61

Final A edit

Rank Rower Nation Time
  Olaf Tufte   Norway 6:49.30
  Jüri Jaanson   Estonia 6:51.42
  Ivo Yanakiev   Bulgaria 6:52.80
4 Santiago Fernández   Argentina 6:55.17
5 Václav Chalupa   Czech Republic 6:59.13
6 Tim Maeyens   Belgium 7:01.74

Results summary edit

Rank Rower Nation Quarterfinals Repechage Semifinals Finals
  Olaf Tufte   Norway 7:12.53 Bye 6:50.55
Semifinals A/B/C
6:49.30
Final A
  Jüri Jaanson   Estonia 7:13.74 Bye 6:47.36
Semifinals A/B/C
6:51.42
Final A
  Ivo Yanakiev   Bulgaria 7:28.97 6:52.51 6:53.43
Semifinals A/B/C
6:52.80
Final A
4 Santiago Fernández   Argentina 7:22.52 Bye 7:00.90
Semifinals A/B/C
6:55.17
Final A
5 Václav Chalupa   Czech Republic 7:13.84 Bye 6:59.39
Semifinals A/B/C
6:59.13
Final A
6 Tim Maeyens   Belgium 7:17.68 Bye 6:50.33
Semifinals A/B/C
7:01.74
Final A
7 Marcel Hacker   Germany 7:17.55 Bye 6:55.98
Semifinals A/B/C
6:47.26
Final B
8 André Vonarburg   Switzerland 7:23.43 6:53.48 7:08.52
Semifinals A/B/C
6:52.88
Final B
9 Davor Mizerit   Slovenia 7:24.60 7:01.31 7:04.07
Semifinals A/B/C
6:55.64
Final B
10 Ian Lawson   Great Britain 7:24.01 6:56.55 6:57.95
Semifinals A/B/C
6:57.63
Final B
11 Craig Jones   Australia 7:19.71 7:06.13 7:05.94
Semifinals A/B/C
6:58.48
Final B
12 Yuleidys Cascaret   Cuba 7:19.45 6:58.44 6:58.35
Semifinals A/B/C
6:58.61
Final B
13 Anderson Nocetti   Brazil 7:26.81 7:03.08 7:11.90
Semifinals A/B/C
6:53.64
Final C
14 Ali Ibrahim   Egypt 7:36.60 6:59.05 7:14.58
Semifinals A/B/C
6:55.34
Final C
15 Su Hui   China 7:23.19 6:57.77 7:10.33
Semifinals A/B/C
6:57.42
Final C
16 Dirk Lippits   Netherlands 7:21.19 7:01.39 7:05.94
Semifinals A/B/C
6:58.20
Final C
17 Raphael Hartl   Austria 7:34.61 7:06.21 6:58.67
Semifinals A/B/C
7:00.75
Final C
18 Law Hiu Fung   Hong Kong 7:28.16 7:10.72 7:12.52
Semifinals A/B/C
7:10.75
Final C
19 Matteo Stefanini   Italy 7:31.54 7:08.91 7:10.34
Semifinals D/E
6:57.16
Final D
20 Leandro Salvagno   Uruguay 7:43.91 7:02.68 7:24.41
Semifinals D/E
7:01.33
Final D
21 Gustavo Salcedo   Peru 7:29.06 7:05.08 7:09.06
Semifinals D/E
7:03.24
Final D
22 Ham Jung-wook   South Korea 7:50.39 7:11.38 7:33.70
Semifinals D/E
7:10.44
Final D
23 Oscar Vasquez   Chile 7:38.04 7:06.51 7:27.11
Semifinals D/E
7:10.75
Final D
24 Vladimir Tchernenko   Uzbekistan 7:38.27 7:13.43 7:13.21
Semifinals D/E
7:23.56
Final D
25 Wang Ming-hui   Chinese Taipei 7:29.99 7:09.99 7:14.79
Semifinals D/E
7:07.84
Final E
26 Daniel Sosa   Paraguay 7:52.50 7:21.03 7:36.87
Semifinals D/E
7:13.49
Final E
27 Paulose Pandari Kunnel   India 8:00.11 7:29.47 7:48.38
Semifinals D/E
7:22.63
Final E
28 Mohammed Aich   Algeria 7:41.85 7:46.98 7:22.05
Semifinals D/E
7:25.49
Final E
29 Ibrahim Githaiga   Kenya 8:13.33 7:25.58 7:40.78
Semifinals D/E
7:29.02
Final E

References edit

  1. ^ . Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Single Sculls, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance". World Rowing. 1 May 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2021.

External links edit

  • Official Olympic Report

rowing, 2004, summer, olympics, single, sculls, single, sculls, competition, 2004, summer, olympics, took, place, schinias, olympic, rowing, canoeing, centre, greece, event, held, from, august, events, male, competitors, rowing, 2004, summer, olympics, athens,. The men s single sculls competition at the 2004 Summer Olympics took place at Schinias Olympic Rowing and Canoeing Centre Greece The event was held from 14 to 21 August and was one of six events for male competitors in Rowing at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens 1 There were 29 competitors from 29 nations with each nation limited to a single boat in the event 2 The event was won by Olaf Tufte of Norway Silver went to Juri Jaanson of Estonia with bronze to Ivo Yanakiev of Bulgaria It was the first medal in the men s single sculls for all three nations Marcel Hacker s failure to make the final made this the first men s single sculls race since 1956 without a German rower on the podium between the United Team of Germany East Germany West Germany and Germany the German medal streak in the event had been 11 Games long Men s single scullsat the Games of the XXVIII OlympiadSchinias venueVenueSchinias Olympic Rowing and Canoeing CentreDates14 21 AugustCompetitors29 from 29 nationsWinning time6 49 30MedalistsOlaf Tufte NorwayJuri Jaanson EstoniaIvo Yanakiev Bulgaria 20002008 Contents 1 Background 2 Competition format 3 Schedule 4 Results 4 1 Quarterfinals 4 1 1 Quarterfinal 1 4 1 2 Quarterfinal 2 4 1 3 Quarterfinal 3 4 1 4 Quarterfinal 4 4 1 5 Quarterfinal 5 4 1 6 Quarterfinal 6 4 2 Repechage 4 2 1 Repechage heat 1 4 2 2 Repechage heat 2 4 2 3 Repechage heat 3 4 2 4 Repechage heat 4 4 2 5 Repechage heat 5 4 2 6 Repechage heat 6 4 3 Semifinals 4 3 1 Semifinal D E 1 4 3 2 Semifinal D E 2 4 3 3 Semifinal A B C 1 4 3 4 Semifinal A B C 2 4 3 5 Semifinal A B C 3 4 4 Finals 4 4 1 Final E 4 4 2 Final D 4 4 3 Final C 4 4 4 Final B 4 4 5 Final A 5 Results summary 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThis was the 24th 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 2 Six of the 24 single scullers from the 2000 Games returned bronze medallist Marcel Hacker of Germany fifth place finisher Ivo Yanakiev of Bulgaria sixth place finisher Juri Jaanson of Estonia eleventh place finisher Vaclav Chalupa of the Czech Republic twelfth place finisher Ali Ibrahim of Egypt and thirteenth place finisher Anderson Nocetti of Brazil Jaanson Chalupa and Ibrahim had also competed in 1996 Chalupa had won a silver medal in 1992 with Jaanson finishing fifth that year Hacker and Olaf Tufte were favored with defending champion Rob Waddell of New Zealand and runner up Xeno Muller of Switzerland retired and Iztok Cop of Slovenia competing only in the double sculls Hacker Tufte Cop and Chalupa had taken all 12 of the World Championships medals since the last Games with Tufte winning in 2001 and 2003 and Hacker in 2002 2 The People s Republic of China Chinese Taipei India Kenya Paraguay Peru and Uzbekistan each made their debut in the event Great Britain made its 19th appearance tying the absent United States for most among nations Competition format editThis 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 multiple possible finals The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912 3 During the first round six quarterfinal heats each with 4 or 5 boats were held The winning boat in each heat advanced to the A B C semifinals while all others were relegated to the repechages The repechages offered the rowers another chance to qualify for the top semifinals Placing in the repechages determined which semifinal the boat would race in Six heats were held with 3 or 4 boats each The top two boats in each repechage moved on to the A B C semifinals with the bottom three boats going to the D E semifinals and out of medal contention Five semifinals were held three of the A B C semifinals and two of the D E semifinals For each A B C semifinal race the top two boats advanced to the A final to compete for medals The next two boats 3rd and 4th in each semifinal went to the B final The last two boats went to the C final For the D E semifinals the top three boats in each semifinal went to the D final while the remaining boats went to the E 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 two of their A B C semifinal to reach the A final Schedule editAll times are Greece Standard Time UTC 2 Date Time RoundSaturday 14 August 2004 9 10 QuarterfinalsTuesday 17 August 2004 14 58 RepechageWednesday 18 August 2004 8 5012 00 Semifinals A B CSemifinals D EThursday 19 August 2004 10 2011 3011 5012 00 Final BFinal CFinal DFinal ESaturday 21 August 2004 8 50 Final AResults editQuarterfinals edit Quarterfinal heats were held on 14 August The first place rower in each heat advanced directly to the top section semifinals while the rest were sent to the repechages Quarterfinal 1 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Tim Maeyens nbsp Belgium 7 17 68 QABC2 Andre Vonarburg nbsp Switzerland 7 23 43 R3 Law Hiu Fung nbsp Hong Kong 7 28 16 R4 Wang Ming hui nbsp Chinese Taipei 7 29 99 R5 Daniel Sosa nbsp Paraguay 7 52 50 RQuarterfinal 2 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Vaclav Chalupa nbsp Czech Republic 7 13 84 QABC2 Craig Jones nbsp Australia 7 19 71 R3 Davor Mizerit nbsp Slovenia 7 24 60 R4 Ali Ibrahim nbsp Egypt 7 36 60 R5 oscar Vasquez nbsp Chile 7 38 04 RQuarterfinal 3 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Santiago Fernandez nbsp Argentina 7 22 52 QABC2 Raphael Hartl nbsp Austria 7 34 61 R3 Vladimir Chernenko nbsp Uzbekistan 7 38 27 R4 Mohamed Aich nbsp Algeria 7 41 85 R5 Paulose Pandari Kunnel nbsp India 8 00 11 RQuarterfinal 4 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Olaf Tufte nbsp Norway 7 12 53 QABC2 Ian Lawson nbsp Great Britain 7 24 01 R3 Anderson Nocetti nbsp Brazil 7 26 81 R4 Gustavo Salcedo nbsp Peru 7 29 06 R5 Leandro Salvagno nbsp Uruguay 7 43 91 RQuarterfinal 5 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Marcel Hacker nbsp Germany 7 17 55 QABC2 Yuleidys Cascaret nbsp Cuba 7 19 45 R3 Dirk Lippits nbsp Netherlands 7 21 19 R4 Su Hui nbsp China 7 23 19 R5 Ham Jeong uk nbsp South Korea 7 50 39 RQuarterfinal 6 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Juri Jaanson nbsp Estonia 7 13 74 QABC2 Ivo Yanakiev nbsp Bulgaria 7 28 97 R3 Matteo Stefanini nbsp Italy 7 31 54 R4 Ibrahim Githaiga nbsp Kenya 8 13 33 RRepechage edit The repechage took place on 17 August The top two rowers in each repechage heat advanced to the top section of semifinals while the others were relegated to the consolation semifinals D and E Repechage heat 1 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Ivo Yanakiev nbsp Bulgaria 6 52 51 QABC2 Dirk Lippits nbsp Netherlands 7 01 39 QABC3 Gustavo Salcedo nbsp Peru 7 05 08 QDE4 Paulose Pandari Kunnel nbsp India 7 29 47 QDERepechage heat 2 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Yuleidys Cascaret nbsp Cuba 6 58 44 QABC2 Anderson Nocetti nbsp Brazil 7 03 08 QABC3 Oscar Vasquez nbsp Chile 7 06 51 QDE4 Mohammed Aich nbsp Algeria 7 46 98 QDERepechage heat 3 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Ian Lawson nbsp Great Britain 6 56 55 QABC2 Ali Ibrahim nbsp Egypt 6 59 05 QABC3 Vladimir Tchernenko nbsp Uzbekistan 7 13 43 QDE4 Daniel Sosa nbsp Paraguay 7 21 03 QDERepechage heat 4 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Davor Mizerit nbsp Slovenia 7 01 31 QABC2 Raphael Hartl nbsp Austria 7 06 21 QABC3 Wang Ming hui nbsp Chinese Taipei 7 09 99 QDERepechage heat 5 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Craig Jones nbsp Australia 7 06 13 QABC2 Law Hiu Fung nbsp Hong Kong 7 10 72 QABC3 Ham Jung wook nbsp South Korea 7 11 38 QDE4 Ibrahim Githaiga nbsp Kenya 7 25 58 QDERepechage heat 6 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Andre Vonarburg nbsp Switzerland 6 53 48 QABC2 Su Hui nbsp China 6 57 77 QABC3 Leandro Salvagno nbsp Uruguay 7 02 68 QDE4 Matteo Stefanini nbsp Italy 7 08 91 QDESemifinals edit The semifinals were conducted on 18 August The A B and C semifinals were for those rowers who still had a chance at medaling and the top two in each of those semifinals moved on to the A final top 6 places the next two to the B final places 7 12 and the bottom two in each to the C final 13 18 The D and E semifinals were consolation semis and the rowers in them had already been eliminated from medal contention the top three in each moved to the D final places 19 24 and the rest moved to E final places 25 29 Three of the four favored scullers Vaclav Chalupa Juri Jaanson and Olaf Tufte all qualified relatively easily for the finals from Semis A B and C respectively But in a major surprise Marcel Hacker who was in Semi B with Tufte finished third and failed to qualify Hacker was the returning bronze medallist a former World Champion and holder of the World s best time Ivo Yanakiev who finished second in Semi B went on to win a bronze medal Semifinal D E 1 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Gustavo Salcedo nbsp Peru 7 09 06 QD2 Matteo Stefanini nbsp Italy 7 10 34 QD3 Vladimir Tchernenko nbsp Uzbekistan 7 13 21 QD4 Wang Ming hui nbsp Chinese Taipei 7 14 79 QE5 Mohammed Aich nbsp Algeria 7 22 05 QE6 Ibrahim Githaiga nbsp Kenya 7 40 78 QESemifinal D E 2 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Leandro Salvagno nbsp Uruguay 7 24 41 QD2 Oscar Vasquez nbsp Chile 7 27 11 QD3 Ham Jung wook nbsp South Korea 7 33 70 QD4 Daniel Sosa nbsp Paraguay 7 36 87 QE5 Paulose Pandari Kunnel nbsp India 7 48 38 QESemifinal A B C 1 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Vaclav Chalupa nbsp Czech Republic 6 59 39 QA2 Santiago Fernandez nbsp Argentina 7 00 90 QA3 Davor Mizerit nbsp Slovenia 7 04 07 QB4 Craig Jones nbsp Australia 7 05 94 QB5 Dirk Lippits nbsp Netherlands 7 05 94 QC6 Su Hui nbsp China 7 10 33 QCSemifinal A B C 2 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Olaf Tufte nbsp Norway 6 50 55 QA2 Ivo Yanakiev nbsp Bulgaria 6 53 43 QA3 Marcel Hacker nbsp Germany 6 55 98 QB4 Andre Vonarburg nbsp Switzerland 7 08 52 QB5 Anderson Nocetti nbsp Brazil 7 11 90 QC6 Ali Ibrahim nbsp Egypt 7 14 58 QCSemifinal A B C 3 edit Rank Rower Nation Time Notes1 Juri Jaanson nbsp Estonia 6 47 36 QA2 Tim Maeyens nbsp Belgium 6 50 33 QA3 Ian Lawson nbsp Great Britain 6 57 95 QB4 Yuleidys Cascaret nbsp Cuba 6 58 35 QB5 Raphael Hartl nbsp Austria 6 58 67 QC6 Law Hiu Fung nbsp Hong Kong 7 12 52 QCFinals edit Finals were contested on 19 August except for the medal final on 21 August In the finals Vaclav Chalupa followed by Fernandez and Maeyens pulled out to an early lead At the 1000 meter mark halfway Olaf Tufte grabbed a small lead over Chalupa with Juri Jaanson a close third With 500 meters to go Jaanson took a small lead over Tufte Two seconds back one length Chalupa held a small lead for third over Ivo Yanakiev who had been slowly moving up through the field In the final 500 meters Tufte regained the lead and pulled away to win by a length over Jaanson Meanwhile Yanakiev grabbed third over Chalupa who faded to fifth place Final E edit Rank Rower Nation Time25 Wang Ming hui nbsp Chinese Taipei 7 07 8426 Daniel Sosa nbsp Paraguay 7 13 4927 Paulose Pandari Kunnel nbsp India 7 22 6328 Mohammed Aich nbsp Algeria 7 25 4929 Ibrahim Githaiga nbsp Kenya 7 29 02Final D edit Rank Rower Nation Time19 Matteo Stefanini nbsp Italy 6 57 1620 Leandro Salvagno nbsp Uruguay 7 01 3321 Gustavo Salcedo nbsp Peru 7 03 2422 Ham Jung wook nbsp South Korea 7 10 4423 Oscar Vasquez nbsp Chile 7 10 7524 Vladimir Tchernenko nbsp Uzbekistan 7 23 56Final C edit Rank Rower Nation Time13 Anderson Nocetti nbsp Brazil 6 53 6414 Ali Ibrahim nbsp Egypt 6 55 3415 Su Hui nbsp China 6 57 4216 Dirk Lippits nbsp Netherlands 6 58 2017 Raphael Hartl nbsp Austria 7 00 7518 Law Hiu Fung nbsp Hong Kong 7 10 75Final B edit Rank Rower Nation Time7 Marcel Hacker nbsp Germany 6 47 268 Andre Vonarburg nbsp Switzerland 6 52 889 Davor Mizerit nbsp Slovenia 6 55 6410 Ian Lawson nbsp Great Britain 6 57 6311 Craig Jones nbsp Australia 6 58 4812 Yuleidys Cascaret nbsp Cuba 6 58 61Final A edit Rank Rower Nation Time nbsp Olaf Tufte nbsp Norway 6 49 30 nbsp Juri Jaanson nbsp Estonia 6 51 42 nbsp Ivo Yanakiev nbsp Bulgaria 6 52 804 Santiago Fernandez nbsp Argentina 6 55 175 Vaclav Chalupa nbsp Czech Republic 6 59 136 Tim Maeyens nbsp Belgium 7 01 74Results summary editRank Rower Nation Quarterfinals Repechage Semifinals Finals nbsp Olaf Tufte nbsp Norway 7 12 53 Bye 6 50 55Semifinals A B C 6 49 30Final A nbsp Juri Jaanson nbsp Estonia 7 13 74 Bye 6 47 36Semifinals A B C 6 51 42Final A nbsp Ivo Yanakiev nbsp Bulgaria 7 28 97 6 52 51 6 53 43Semifinals A B C 6 52 80Final A4 Santiago Fernandez nbsp Argentina 7 22 52 Bye 7 00 90Semifinals A B C 6 55 17Final A5 Vaclav Chalupa nbsp Czech Republic 7 13 84 Bye 6 59 39Semifinals A B C 6 59 13Final A6 Tim Maeyens nbsp Belgium 7 17 68 Bye 6 50 33Semifinals A B C 7 01 74Final A7 Marcel Hacker nbsp Germany 7 17 55 Bye 6 55 98Semifinals A B C 6 47 26Final B8 Andre Vonarburg nbsp Switzerland 7 23 43 6 53 48 7 08 52Semifinals A B C 6 52 88Final B9 Davor Mizerit nbsp Slovenia 7 24 60 7 01 31 7 04 07Semifinals A B C 6 55 64Final B10 Ian Lawson nbsp Great Britain 7 24 01 6 56 55 6 57 95Semifinals A B C 6 57 63Final B11 Craig Jones nbsp Australia 7 19 71 7 06 13 7 05 94Semifinals A B C 6 58 48Final B12 Yuleidys Cascaret nbsp Cuba 7 19 45 6 58 44 6 58 35Semifinals A B C 6 58 61Final B13 Anderson Nocetti nbsp Brazil 7 26 81 7 03 08 7 11 90Semifinals A B C 6 53 64Final C14 Ali Ibrahim nbsp Egypt 7 36 60 6 59 05 7 14 58Semifinals A B C 6 55 34Final C15 Su Hui nbsp China 7 23 19 6 57 77 7 10 33Semifinals A B C 6 57 42Final C16 Dirk Lippits nbsp Netherlands 7 21 19 7 01 39 7 05 94Semifinals A B C 6 58 20Final C17 Raphael Hartl nbsp Austria 7 34 61 7 06 21 6 58 67Semifinals A B C 7 00 75Final C18 Law Hiu Fung nbsp Hong Kong 7 28 16 7 10 72 7 12 52Semifinals A B C 7 10 75Final C19 Matteo Stefanini nbsp Italy 7 31 54 7 08 91 7 10 34Semifinals D E 6 57 16Final D20 Leandro Salvagno nbsp Uruguay 7 43 91 7 02 68 7 24 41Semifinals D E 7 01 33Final D21 Gustavo Salcedo nbsp Peru 7 29 06 7 05 08 7 09 06Semifinals D E 7 03 24Final D22 Ham Jung wook nbsp South Korea 7 50 39 7 11 38 7 33 70Semifinals D E 7 10 44Final D23 Oscar Vasquez nbsp Chile 7 38 04 7 06 51 7 27 11Semifinals D E 7 10 75Final D24 Vladimir Tchernenko nbsp Uzbekistan 7 38 27 7 13 43 7 13 21Semifinals D E 7 23 56Final D25 Wang Ming hui nbsp Chinese Taipei 7 29 99 7 09 99 7 14 79Semifinals D E 7 07 84Final E26 Daniel Sosa nbsp Paraguay 7 52 50 7 21 03 7 36 87Semifinals D E 7 13 49Final E27 Paulose Pandari Kunnel nbsp India 8 00 11 7 29 47 7 48 38Semifinals D E 7 22 63Final E28 Mohammed Aich nbsp Algeria 7 41 85 7 46 98 7 22 05Semifinals D E 7 25 49Final E29 Ibrahim Githaiga nbsp Kenya 8 13 33 7 25 58 7 40 78Semifinals D E 7 29 02Final EReferences edit Rowing at the 2004 Athens Summer Games Men s Single Sculls Sports Reference Archived from the original on 18 April 2020 Retrieved 25 September 2018 a b c Single Sculls Men Olympedia Retrieved 5 May 2021 Why Do We Race 2000m The History Behind the Distance World Rowing 1 May 2017 Retrieved 19 April 2021 External links editOfficial Olympic Report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rowing at the 2004 Summer Olympics Men 27s single sculls amp oldid 1045369685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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