Canoeing at the 1988 Summer Olympics |
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Sprint |
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C-1 500 m | men | |||
C-1 1000 m | men | |||
C-2 500 m | men | |||
C-2 1000 m | men | |||
K-1 500 m | men | women | ||
K-1 1000 m | men | |||
K-2 500 m | men | women | ||
K-2 1000 m | men | |||
K-4 500 m | women | |||
K-4 1000 m | men |
The men's K-4 1000 metres event was a fours kayaking event conducted as part of the Canoeing at the 1988 Summer Olympics program.
Contents |
Gold | Silver | Bronze |
Zsolt Gyulay, Ferenc Csipes, Sándor Hódosi, and Attila Ábrahám Hungary (HUN) |
Aleksandr Motuzenko, Sergey Kirsanov, Igor Nagaev, and Viktor Denisov Soviet Union (URS) |
Kay Bluhm, André Wohllebe, Andreas Stähle, and Hans-Jörg Bliesener East Germany (GDR) |
18 crews entered in three heats on September 27. The top three finishers from each of the heats advanced directly to the semifinals while the remaining nine teams were relegated to the repechages.
Nine teams competed in two repechages on September 27. The top three finishers from each of the repechages advanced directly to the semifinals.
Repechage 1 | |||
1. | Beniamino Bonomi, Daniele Scarpa, Alessandro Pieri, and Francesco Mandragona (ITA) | 3:06.90 | QS |
2. | Nikolay Yordanov, Petar Godev, Borislav Tsvetkov, and Ivan Marinov (BUL) | 3:09.30 | QS |
3. | Grant Bramwell, Brent Clode, John MacDonald, and Stephen Richards (NZL) | 3:11.27 | QS |
4. | Gustavo Cirillo, José Luis Marello, Fernando Chaparro, and Norberto Méndez (ARG) | 3:24.16 | |
5. | Seo Gyeong-Sek, Yun Yeong-Dae, Lee Yong-Cheol, and Kim Dong-Su (KOR) | 3:26.79 | |
Repechage 2 | |||
1. | Didier Vavasseur, Christophe Petibout, Pierre Lubac, and Daniel Legras (FRA) | 3:16.68 | QS |
2. | Juan Manuel Sánchez, Fernando Fuentes, Javier Álvarez, and Juan José Román (ESP) | 3:16.79 | QS |
3. | Donald Brien, Colin Shaw, Kenneth Padvaiskas, and Renn Crichlow (CAN) | 3:16.80 | QS |
4. | Rueben Burgess, Robin Ayres, Jan Raciborski, and Adrian Collier (GBR) | 3:17.54 |
The top three finishers in the each of the semifinals (raced on September 29) advanced to the final.
Norway's reason for not finishing was not disclosed in the official report.
The final was held on October 1.
Zsolt Gyulay, Ferenc Csipes, Sándor Hódosi, and Attila Ábrahám (HUN) | 3:00.20 | |
Aleksandr Motuzenko, Sergey Kirsanov, Igor Nagaev, and Viktor Denisov (URS) | 3:01.40 | |
Kay Bluhm, André Wohllebe, Andreas Stähle, and Hans-Jörg Bliesener (GDR) | 3:02.37 | |
4. | Bryan Thomas, Steven Wood, Grant Kenny, and Paul Gilmour (AUS) | 3:03.70 |
5. | Maciej Freimut, Wojciech Kurpiewski, Grzegorz Krawców, and Kazimierz Krzyżański (POL) | 3:04.73 |
6. | Gilbert Schneider, Reiner Scholl, Dirk Joestel, and Thomas Reineck (FRG) | 3:05.43 |
7. | Beniamino Bonomi, Daniele Scarpa, Alessandro Pieri, and Francesco Mandragona (ITA) | 3:05.97 |
8. | Per-Inge Bengtsson, Lars-Erik Moberg, Kalle Sundqvist, and Bengt Andersson (SWE) | 3:06.03 |
9. | Didier Vavasseur, Christophe Petibout, Pierre Lubac, and Daniel Legras (FRA) | 3:08.71 |
Hungary was seventh at the 500 meter mark before coming back to lead in the third 250 meter part of the race.