World Rowing Cup II Day Three
Photo (c) Naomi Baker
Great Britain continue to lead the World Rowing Cup standings after a fine display on the final day in Poznan which saw the team win five medals, adding to yesterday鈥檚 double silver success.
The men鈥檚 quadruple sculls upgraded their bronze from World Rowing Cup I with a superb gold medal winning performance in their A final on Lake Malta.
Jack Beaumont, Jonny Walton, John Collins and Pete Lambert have looked in good form all weekend and pulled away from the field in the second 1000m to claim the win.
Vicky Thornley continued her fine season in the single sculls, winning a silver medal close behind Austria鈥檚 Magdalena Lobnig who recorded a World Cup best time of 7:13.26 in the final.
The 29-year-old now has three medals this season, with today鈥檚 silver sitting alongside World Rowing Cup I bronze and European gold.
The men鈥檚 four of Matt Rossiter, Mohamed Sbihi, Matthew Tarrant and Will Satch secured their second World Cup medal of the season, adding silver today to their gold from Belgrade.
The Australian crew led from the start in the final and held off a hard-fought fight back from the British crew to take the win by half a length.
Medals continued for GB in the women鈥檚 eight as the crew pushed the New Zealand gold medallists throughout to claim silver ahead of the USA, the boat鈥檚 first medal of the season.
And the final GB medal success of day came in the last race with the men鈥檚 eight winning bronze, pushing the Australian boat into fourth to round off a fine day for British rowers in Poznan. That final also included a world鈥檚 best time, with Germany clocking 5:18.68.
In the women鈥檚 pair final, the British duo of Anastasia Chitty and Rebecca Girling, who replaced Karen Bennett and Holly Norton for the regatta in Poznan, finished sixth having performed well yesterday to make the A final.
The gold medal eventually went to the New Zealand pair of Grace Prendergast and Kerri Gowler, who set a world鈥檚 best time of 6:49.08 in the race, eclipsing the previous best held by double Olympic champions Helen Glover and Heather Stanning.
The lightweight double scull of Kathrine Copeland and Emily Craig finished their A final in an agonising fourth, with the European bronze medallists fighting back over the second 1000m but unable to haul in the second Chinese crew who clinched third.
Tom Barras, in just his first season as a senior, finished a creditable fifth in his men鈥檚 single sculls A final 鈥 a race that included a new world鈥檚 best time of 6:30.74 from Robert Manson of New Zealand.
Earlier in the day, Ellie Piggott and Gemma Hall won their lightweight women鈥檚 double sculls B final before the men鈥檚 quad, a lightweight crew competing in a largely open weight field, finished an impressive second in their B final.
There were also second places for the men鈥檚 double sculls of Nick Middleton and Frazier Christie as well as Georgia Francis and Emily Carmichael in the women鈥檚 double sculls, while Josh Armstrong finished his first ever senior regatta with a fifth place finish in the men鈥檚 single sculls B final.
British Rowing Performance Director Sir David Tanner said: 鈥淭he Team have produced some fine and encouraging results this weekend and it鈥檚 great to see us hold onto our lead at the top of the World Rowing Cup standings. To come away with seven medals, five in the Olympic classes, is very pleasing for the squad.
鈥淭he performances certainly bode well for the final World Cup of the season in Lucerne and then ultimately the World Championships in three months鈥 time.鈥
Pete Lambert said: 鈥淚鈥檓 really happy for the guys. I鈥檝e been in this boat a while but for the others this is their first full season in the quad so to go out and do that in that time makes us really happy and that鈥檚 a benchmark of where sculling is at the moment in Britain. We are all returning Olympians who didn鈥檛 achieve quite what we wanted in Rio so there鈥檚 a desire and a hunger to do good things in this boat.鈥
Mohamed Sbihi said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a tough few weeks after the disappointment of the Europeans but this is a step in the right direction. This is a long-term project and we鈥檝e got to get it right in three months鈥 time at the Worlds and that鈥檚 the key target. It鈥檚 been tough but it will be worth it in the end.鈥
Matilda Horn said: 鈥淲inning a silver medal feels incredible. That was probably the best race we could have had out there. We trusted our rhythm and won a medal so couldn鈥檛 have asked for anything more. The girls have really bought into the pattern that James [Harris, the coach] has led and with a little bit of experience from Karen and the extra trust in each other we鈥檝e really come together and done something special.鈥
Adam McNeil said: “We had a tough race yesterday, but I felt we came together better today and we are starting to get there as a whole.鈥
Vicky Thornley said: I rowed well but it wasn鈥檛 good enough for the gold today but we鈥檒l go back and figure out how to go even faster. The conditions were lovely and that was certainly the fastest I鈥檝e done. I鈥檓 just loving it at the moment. These races are really enjoyable to be a part of and it seems to be going well this season.鈥
Results
Lightweight women鈥檚 double sculls B Final
1. Eleanor Piggott & Gemma Hall (GBR) 7:02.77
2. Georgia Nesbitt & Amy James (AUS) 7:04.00
Men鈥檚 quadruple sculls B Final
1. New Zealand 5:44.78
2. Great Britain (Ed Fisher, Jamie Copus, Gavin Horsburgh & Sam Mottram) 5:47.71
3. China 5:51.00
Men鈥檚 double sculls B final
1. Bastien Quiqueret & Maxime Ducret (FRA) 6:16. 67
2. Nick Middleton & Frazier Christie (GBR) 6:18.37
3. Petr Melichar& Klang Matyas (CZE) 6:18.65
Women鈥檚 double sculls B final
1. Jingjing Li & Yan Jiang (CHN) 6:58.04
2. Georgia Francis & Emily Carmichael (GBR) 6:58.04
Men鈥檚 single sculls B final
1. Stanislau Shcharbachenia (BLR) 6:47.36
2. Marko Marjanovic (SRB) 6:47.66
3. Brian Rosso (ARG) 6:50.07
–
5. Josh Armstrong (GBR) 6:54.21
Lightweight women鈥檚 double sculls A Final
1. Fang Chen & Dandan Pan (CHN) 6:50.93
2. Weronika Deresz & Martyna Mikolajczak (POL) 6:52.63
3. Cuiming Chen & Feihong Pan (CHN) 6:52.63
–
4. Katherine Copeland & Emily Craig (GBR) 6:54.15
Men鈥檚 four A Final
1. Australia 5:44.34
2. Great Britain (Matt Rossiter, Mohamed Sbihi, Matthew Tarrant & Will Satch) 5:45.57
3. Germany 5:55.25
Men鈥檚 quadruple sculls A Final
1. Great Britain (Jack Beaumont, Jonny Walton, John Collins & Peter Lambert) 5:36.42
2. Netherlands 5:38.97
3. Norway 5:39.42
Women鈥檚 pair A final
1. Grace Prendergast & Kerri Gowler (NZL) 6:49.08 WB
2. Megan Kalmore & Tracy Eisser (USA) 6:54.61
3. Sarah Hawe & Molly Goodman (AUS) 7:03.08
–
6. Anastasia Chitty & Rebecca Girling (GBR) 7:08.45
Women鈥檚 eight A Final
1. New Zealand 6:01.27
2. Great Britain (Annie Withers, Sara Parfett, Caragh McMurtry, Rebecca Chin, Josephine Wratten, Rebecca Shorten, Karen Bennett, Katherine Douglas & cox Matilda Horn) 6:02.31
3. USA 6:04.05
Men鈥檚 single sculls A Final
1. Robert Manson (NZL) 6:30.74 WB
2. Angel Fournier Rodriguez (CUB) 6:38.67
3. Nico Stahlberg (SUI) 6:40.25
–
5. Tom Barras (GBR) 6:45.46
Women鈥檚 single sculls A Final
1. Magdalena Lobnig (AUT) 7:13.26
2. Vicky Thornley (GBR) 7:14.74
3. Jingli Duan (CHN) 7:15.48
Men鈥檚 eight A Final
1. Germany 5:18.68
2. New Zealand 5:23.20
3. Great Britain (Tom Jeffery, Tom Ford, Jacob Dawson, Adam McNeil, Cameron Buchan, Callum McBrierty, James Rudkin, Lance Tredell & cox Henry Fieldman) 5:25.97






