Michał Śliwiński
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men's flatwater canoeing | |||
---|---|---|---|
Competitor for the Soviet Union | |||
Silver | 1988 Seoul | C-1 500m | |
Competitor for the Unified Team | |||
Silver | 1992 Barcelona | C-1 500m |
Michał Śliwiński (Mykhaylo Slyvynsky Ukrainian: Михайло Сливинский; born February 5, 1970 in Dobrotvir, Ukraine) is a Soviet/Ukrainian/Polish flatwater canoer won six world championship titles over his long career.
An ethnic Pole from Ukraine, Śliwiński represented the USSR at the 1988 Olympics, winning the Canadian canoe C-1 500m silver medal at the age of only eighteen.
Over the next three years he dominated the event, winning consecutive world championship gold medals in 1989, 1990 and 1991. However in the 1992 Olympics he had to settle for another silver medal behind Nikolay Bukhalov of Bulgaria.
The break-up of the Soviet Union affected Śliwiński's career greatly as the newly-independent Ukraine did not win any world championship gold medals during the 1990s. Śliwiński, now specialising in the short sprint 200m races, was still regarded as a top competitor at international events but he endured a frustrating sequence of four world championship bronze medals. With no 200m races included in the Olympics he competed in the C-1 500m at Atlanta 1996, finishing just outside the medals in fourth place.
In 2001 he accepted an invitation to switch to representing Poland, a decision which dramatically revived his career. Although in his thirties he went on to win three more world titles. With partner Marcin Kobierski he became C-2 1000m champion in 2001 in Poznań, Poland. In 2002 they retained their crown in Seville.
Śliwiński's build-up to the Athens Olympics was beset with problems, not of his own making. In 2003 his partner Kobierski tested positive in a drugs test as did his most obvious left-handed replacement Michał Gajownik. Both were given two-year bans, ruling them out of the Olympics.
After much debate young hopeful Lukasz Woszczynski was chosen to partner Śliwiński. At their first major competition together they finished in fourth place at the 2003 World Championships in Gainesville, USA. In 2004 they became C-2 1000m European champions in front of their home crowd in Poznań. At the Athens Olympics they finished seventh in the C-2 1000m final, the exhausted Woszczynski collapsing at the end of the race.
The partnership was retained for the 2005 season. They took the C-2 500m silver medal at the European championships in July but Woszczynski was then injured and unable to take part in the World Championships in Zagreb. It seemed as if Śliwiński would be left without a boat. However, when a member of Poland's four-man (C4) 100m crew, Arkadiusz Tonski, also had to pull out injured, Śliwiński was called up as a last-minute replacement. The Polish four, ironically including the now rehabitated Gajownik, edged out the Romanian crew to take the gold medal. For the thirty-five year-old Śliwiński it was the first C-4 gold of his long career.
Śliwiński is a member of the Spojnia Warsaw club. He is 177 cm (5'10") tall and weighs 89 kg (196 lbs).