Rowing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's double sculls

The women's double sculls event at the 2020 Summer Olympics is scheduled took place from 23 to 28 July 2021 at the Sea Forest Waterway.[1] 26 rowers from 13 nations competed.[2]

Women's double sculls
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
Olympic rowing
VenueSea Forest Waterway
Dates23–28 July 2021
Competitors26 from 13 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Nicoleta-Ancuța Bodnar
Simona Radiș
 Romania
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Brooke Donoghue
Hannah Osborne
 New Zealand
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Roos de Jong
Lisa Scheenaard
 Netherlands
← 2016
2024 →

Background

edit

This was the 12th appearance of the event, which has been held every year since women's rowing was introduced in 1976.

The reigning Olympic medalists were Poland, Great Britain, and Lithuania. Lithuania was the only team to qualify.

Qualification

edit

Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) was limited to a single boat in the event. There were 13 qualifying places in the women's single sculls:[2]

  • 11 from the 2019 World Championship
  • 2 from the final qualification regatta

The COVID-19 pandemic delayed many of the events for qualifying for rowing.

Competition format

edit

This rowing event is a double scull event, meaning that each boat is propelled by two rowers. 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. The competition consists of multiple rounds. The competition continues to use the three-round format. Finals are held to determine the placing of each boat. The course uses the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912.[3]

During the first round three heats were held. The first three boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals, with the others relegated to the repechage.

The repechage offered rowers a second chance to qualify for the semifinals. Placing in the repechage determined which semifinal the boat would race in. The top three boats in the repechage moved on to the semifinals, with the remaining boats eliminated.

Two semifinal heats were held, each with 6 boats. The top three boats from each heat advanced to Final A and competed for a medal. The remaining boats advanced to Final B.

The third and final round is the finals. Each final determined a set of rankings. The A final determined the medals, along with the rest of the places through 6th, while the B final gave rankings from 7th to 12th.

Schedule

edit

The competition was held over six days.[1]

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Date Time Round
Friday, 23 July 2021 11:00 Heats
Saturday, 24 July 2021 9:00 Repechage
Sunday, 25 July 2021 12:20 Semifinals A/B
Wednesday, 28 July 2021 8:10 Final B
Wednesday, 28 July 2021 9:18 Final A

Results

edit

Heats

edit

The first three of each heat qualified for the semifinals, while the remainder went to the repechage.[4]

Heat 1

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 3 Brooke Donoghue
Hannah Osborne
  New Zealand 6:53.62 Q
2 1 Kristina Wagner
Genevra Stone
  United States 6:55.65 Q
3 4 Helene Lefebvre
Elodie Ravera-Scaramozzino
  France 6:57.83 Q
4 2 Shuangmei Shen
Xiaoxin Liu
  China 7:03.78 R
5 5 Kristyna Fleissnerova
Lenka Antosova
  Czech Republic 7:05.56 R

Heat 2

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 3 Nicoleta-Ancuța Bodnar
Simona Radis
  Romania 6:49.79 Q
2 4 Gabrielle Smith
Jessica Sevick
  Canada 6:57.69 Q
3 1 Alessandra Patelli
Chiara Ondoli
  Italy 6:59.58 Q
4 2 Ekaterina Pitirimova
Ekaterina Kurochkina
  ROC 7:03.96 R

Heat 3

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 4 Roos de Jong
Lisa Scheenaard
  Netherlands 6:49.90 Q
2 3 Donata Karalienė
Milda Valciukaite
  Lithuania 6:50.38 Q
3 1 Amanda Bateman
Tara Rigney
  Australia 6:53.30 Q
4 2 Annekatrin Thiele
Leonie Menzel
  Germany 6:59.61 R

Repechage

edit

The first three pairs in the repechage qualified for the semifinals, while the fourth pair was eliminated.

Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 4 Ekaterina Pitirimova
Ekaterina Kurochkina
  ROC 7:13.77 Q
2 2 Annekatrin Thiele
Leonie Menzel
  Germany 7:14.92 Q
3 3 Kristyna Fleissnerova
Lenka Antosova
  Czech Republic 7:16.96 Q
4 1 Shuangmei Shen
Xiaoxin Liu
  China 7:21.93

Semifinals

edit

The first three of each heat qualify to the Final A, other to Final B

Semifinal A/B 1

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 3 Nicoleta-Ancuța Bodnar
Simona Radis
  Romania 7:04.31 FA
2 5 Brooke Donoghue
Hannah Osborne
  New Zealand 7:09.05 FA
3 2 Donata Karalienė
Milda Valciukaite
  Lithuania 7:11.29 FA
4 4 Alessandra Patelli
Chiara Ondoli
  Italy 7:19.25 FB
5 6 Kristyna Fleissnerova
Lenka Antosova
  Czech Republic 7:24.22 FB
6 1 Ekaterina Pitirimova
Ekaterina Kurochkina
  ROC 7:24.37 FB

Semifinal A/B 2

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
1 3 Roos de Jong
Lisa Scheenaard
  Netherlands 7:08.09 FA
2 2 Gabrielle Smith
Jessica Sevick
  Canada 7:09.44 FA
3 4 Kristina Wagner
Genevra Stone
  United States 7:11.14 FA
4 1 Helene Lefebvre
Elodie Ravera-Scaramozzino
  France 7:12.68 FB
5 5 Amanda Bateman
Tara Rigney
  Australia 7:15.25 FB
6 6 Annekatrin Thiele
Leonie Menzel
  Germany 7:20.44 FB

Finals

edit

Final B

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
7 2 Amanda Bateman
Tara Rigney
  Australia 6:57.71
8 3 Helene Lefebvre
Elodie Ravera-Scaramozzino
  France 6:58.52
9 4 Alessandra Patelli
Chiara Ondoli
  Italy 6:58.88
10 5 Kristyna Fleissnerova
Lenka Antosova
  Czech Republic 6:59.19
11 1 Annekatrin Thiele
Leonie Menzel
  Germany 7:01.21
12 6 Ekaterina Pitirimova
Ekaterina Kurochkina
  ROC 7:01.83

Final A

edit
Rank Lane Rower Nation Time Notes
  4 Nicoleta-Ancuța Bodnar
Simona Radiș
  Romania 6:41.03 OB
  5 Brooke Donoghue
Hannah Osborne
  New Zealand 6:44.82
  3 Roos de Jong
Lisa Scheenaard
  Netherlands 6:45.73
4 1 Donata Karalienė
Milda Valciukaite
  Lithuania 6:47.44
5 6 Kristina Wagner
Genevra Stone
  United States 6:52.98
6 2 Gabrielle Smith
Jessica Sevick
  Canada 6:53.19

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Rowing Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Archived from the original on 3 July 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Qualification System – Games of the XXXII Olympiad – Rowing" (PDF). World Rowing Federation. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance". World Rowing. 1 May 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Rowing - Heat 1 Results". Archived from the original on 25 July 2021. Retrieved 23 July 2021.