Gold and bronze help GB rowers claim record haul
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Published
Great Britain powered to a thrilling gold in the menâs eight and bronze in the womenâs race, as the rowing team surpassed their previous best medal haul for an overseas Olympics.
The men traded the lead with the Netherlands before surging ahead in the third quarter of the 2,000m race.
The Netherlands tried to fight back but the British boat rose to the challenge and won by 1.08 seconds in five minutes and 22.8 seconds.
Cox Harry Brightmore and Sholto Carnegie in the bow seat climbed to their feet and roared with delight after winning the GB squadâs eighth medal in France.
The crew of Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Morgan Bolding, Jacob Dawson, Charlie Elwes, Tom Digby, James Rudkin and Tom Ford â plus their motivator-in-chief Brightmore â are now European, world and Olympic champions.
But such was the effort required that Bolding and Gibbs needed medical attention before the medal ceremony.
âHow can you put into words something that youâve always dreamed of? Itâs pretty epic,â said Dawson after receiving his medal.
Fordâs gold came just 20 minutes after his younger sister Emily won bronze in the womenâs race.
Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Holly Dunford, Ford, Lauren Irwin, Eve Stewart, Harriet Taylor and Annie Campbell-Orde â coxed by Henry Fieldman â battled all the way to the line to finish behind champions Romania and Tokyo winners Canada.
âI saw about the last five strokes of Tomâs race, the most important, said Emily.
âIâm really proud Tomâs achieved gold, but also super-proud of what weâve done to get on the podium as weâve overcome so much in the past few months with injuries and other things.â
Fieldman, who steered the menâs eight to bronze in Tokyo, made history by becoming the first person to win an Olympic medal in both menâs and womenâs events.
The womenâs bronze is only Britainâs second medal in the event after their silver at the Rio Olympics in 2016 and comes after they failed to make the final in Tokyo.
However, the men have now won medals in the eights at five consecutive Games, including gold in Rio in 2016.
The successes mean Britain finish the rowing competition with a record haul for an overseas Games, and their best tally since London 2012, where they won nine on home water.
Redemption for Britain after Tokyo trauma
It has been a remarkable turnaround for Britain after the team only managed two rowing medals in Tokyo, neither of them gold, and finished 14th in the medal table.
Here in Paris they have secured three golds, two silvers and three bronzes, and finished second in the medal table behind the Dutch, who have won the same number but four golds.
Eight of the 10 British crews won medals and two, the womenâs four and the menâs pair, fell agonisingly short of winning gold.
Britainâs preparations for the Tokyo Games suffered the double setback of Covid restrictions disrupting training camps and the twin departures of Jurgen Grobler, the legendary coach behind Sir Steve Redgrave and Sir Matt Pinsentâs successes, and womenâs head coach Paul Thompson.
After Tokyo, new performance director Louise Kingsley, menâs head coach Paul Stannard and womenâs head coach Andrew Randell have overhauled the team.
âI think it was about putting the past behind us and very much looking forward,â said Dawson, about the teamâs revival in France.
âObviously weâve had a change in leadership and change of direction on where we want to go.â
âMasochists even in the depth of painâ
âOne engine, one machine,â was how Rudkin described the teamâs ethos before the Games, and he was proved right as the crew motored to victory.
Elwes â one of four survivors from the bronze medal-winning crew in Tokyo â said a poor stroke at the start of the race spurred them on.
â99.9% of that was perfect,â he said. âWe did have a bit of a duff stroke on stroke one and that really scared us.
âBut it almost fires you up another 20% so we shot out of the start and never looked back.â
Brightmore shouted out the orders from his coxâs seat to ensure Britain held the Dutch at bay.
âThese guys are masochists,â he said. âThey like to be told â even when theyâre in the depths of pain â that they can put out more. Itâs my job to crack the whip.
âEven though it was nip and tuck and we were ahead at certain points, we needed to be totally ruthless.â
Dawson, who took time away from the sport in 2022 because of a life-threatening blood clot on the lung caused by Covid complications, admitted to mixed emotions.
âItâs sadness that this project is now at an end,â he said. âToday is probably the last day that any of us will row in the same crew â but thereâs also complete elation.â
âDid we get it? Did we get a medal?â
Britainâs McKellar said she had to ask whether they had won a medal such was her focus on rowing all the way to the line in a tight finish to the womenâs final.
âI turned around and I was like, âDid we get it? Did we get a medal?â. I didnât realise how close it was,â she said.
âI looked to my right and I saw Australia really close to us. We were just heads in, the whole way.â
Team-mate Long added: âItâs really special to get a medal in this race and this boat class, and the girls have done amazingly. It was a tough competition.â
Cox Fieldman wants the bronze to lead to the womenâs eight becoming regular medallists at future global events.
âI hope that now that weâve had two Olympic medals in the womenâs eight that this could be the start of more womenâs eights medals to come â stepping on to greater things,â he said.
Britainâs rowing medallists at Paris 2024
Britain finished the Paris Olympics with eight medals to beat their previous best at an overseas Games.
Here are the medal winners:
Gold
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Menâs eight â Sholto Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Morgan Bolding, Jacob Dawson, Charlie Elwes, Tom Digby, James Rudkin, Tom Ford and cox Harry Brightmore
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Womenâs lightweight double sculls â Emily Craig and Imogen Grant
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Womenâs quadruple sculls â Lauren Henry, Lola Anderson, Hannah Scott and Georgina Brayshaw
Silver
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Menâs pair â Oliver Wynne-Griffith and Tom George
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Womenâs four â Helen Glover, Esme Booth, Sam Redgrave and Rebecca Shorten
Bronze
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Womenâs eight â Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Holly Dunford, Emily Ford, Lauren Irwin, Eve Stewart, Harriet Taylor, Annie Campbell-Orde and cox Henry Fieldman
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Menâs four â Oli Wilkes, David Ambler, Matt Aldridge and Freddie Davidson
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Womenâs double sculls â Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne and Becky Wilde
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