Rigney heartbreak and men’s-eights flop ends mediocre rowing campaign – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL3 August 2024Last Update :
Rigney heartbreak and men’s-eights flop ends mediocre rowing campaign – MASHAHER


Paris: Australian rower Tara Rigney has narrowly missed out on a bronze medal in the women’s single skulls at Paris, as the newly named Rowsellas finished the Olympic regatta with their worst result since they went medalless at Seoul in 1988.

More disappointment followed Rigney’s heartache, with the much-hyped men’s eights finishing dead last in their gold medal race despite selectors earlier this year deciding to prioritise that event over defending gold in the coxless fours.

Australia’s Tara Rigney finished fourth.Credit: Getty Images

The women’s eights finished fourth – their best result since it became an Olympic event – but it meant Australia finished the week with just one medal.

Rowing Australia had trumpeted its team’s hopes ahead of the Games, heralding the squad as one of the strongest to represent Australia at an Olympics.

Forecasts from Gracenote, a global data and technology company that analyses the major competition form of all athletes and teams heading into the Olympics, had predicted Australian crews to win at least seven medals, three silver and four bronze – including podium finishes in both eights events.

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The men’s crew had a suffered a setback before their race, with Josh Hicks withdrawing on Saturday morning through illness. He was replaced by men’s four rower Tim Masters. But they never appeared in the race, finishing almost 9 seconds behind the victorious Great Britain crew.

The women’s event was closer, with the Australian crew storming past the US to claim fourth in a brilliant finish. But they were still a second behind third-placed Britain, with Romania winning the gold in 5:54.39 ahead of Canada in silver.

Rigney, 25, was in third place for almost the entire 2000m, but was pipped on the line by Lithuanian Viktorija Senkute. World champion Karolien Florijn continued the Dutch dominance on the water, winning in 7:17.28, two seconds ahead of her New Zealand rival Emma Twigg in second.


Source Agencies

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