Canoeing at the 2000 Summer Olympics |
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Slalom |
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C-1 | men | |||
C-2 | men | |||
K-1 | men | women | ||
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 2000 Summer Olympics program.
Contents |
Gold: | Silver: | Bronze: |
Hungary Ákos Vereckei, Zoltán Kammerer, Botond Storcz, and Gábor Horváth |
Germany Jan Schäfer, Mark Zabel, Björn Bach, and Stefan Ulm |
Poland Grzegorz Kotowicz, Dariusz Białkowski, Adam Seroczyński, and Marek Witkowski |
13 crews entered in two heats. The top three finishers in each heat advanced to the final while the remaining teams competed in the semifinal.
Heat 1 of 2 Date: Tuesday 26 September 2000 |
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Place | Overall | Nation | Athletes | Time | Qual. |
1 | 1 | Hungary | Ákos Vereckei, Zoltán Kammerer, Gábor Horváth, and Botond Storcz | 2:58.096 | QF |
2 | 3 | Russia | Anatoli Tishchenko, Oleg Gorobiy, Yevgeny Salakhov, and Roman Zarubin | 2:59.764 | QF |
3 | 4 | Poland | Dariusz Białkowski, Grzegorz Kotowicz, Adam Seroczyński, and Marek Witkowski | 3:00.166 | QF |
4 | 5 | Bulgaria | Milko Kazanov, Petar Merkov, Yordan Yordanov, and Petar Sibinkić | 3:00.634 | QS |
5 | 9 | Sweden | Jonas Fager, Anders Gustafsson, Erik Lindeberg, and Niklaes Persson | 3:04.420 | QS |
6 | 10 | Yugoslavia | Igor Kovačić, Saša Vujanić, Jozef Soti, and Dragan Zorić | 3:04.432 | QS |
7 | 12 | France | Frédéric Gauthier, Maxime Boccon, Pierre Lubac, and Stéphane Gourichon | 3:05.806 | QS |
Heat 2 of 2 Date: Tuesday 26 September 2000 |
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Place | Overall | Nation | Athletes | Time | Qual. |
1 | 2 | Germany | Björn Bach, Jan Schäfer, Stefan Ulm, and Mark Zabel | 2:59.473 | QF |
2 | 6 | Slovakia | Róbert Erban, Richard Riszdorfer, Juraj Tarr, and Erik Vlček | 3:00.955 | QF |
3 | 7 | United States | Stein Jorgensen, John Mooney, Peter Newton, and Angel Pérez | 3:01.369 | QF |
4 | 8 | Czech Republic | Karel Leština, Pavel Hottmar, Pavel Holubář, and Jiří Polívka | 3:02.053 | QS |
5 | 11 | Romania | Vasile Curuzan, Sorin Petcu, Romică Şerban, and Marian Sîrbu | 3:05.341 | QS |
6 | 13 | Australia | Ross Chaffer, Shane Suska, Peter Scott, and Cameron McFadzean | 3:05.893 | QS |
Overall Results Heats
Yugoslavia is shown as Serbia and Montenegro (SCG) in the sports-reference.com website.
The top three finishers in the semifinal advanced to the final.
Heat 1 of 1 Date: Thursday 28 September 2000 |
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Place | Nation | Athletes | Time | Qual. |
1 | Bulgaria | Milko Kazanov, Petar Merkov, Yordan Yordanov, and Petar Sibinkić | 3:01.051 | QF |
2 | Sweden | Jonas Fager, Anders Gustafsson, Erik Lindeberg, and Niklaes Persson | 3:02.611 | QF |
3 | Yugoslavia | Igor Kovačić, Saša Vujanić, Jozef Soti, and Dragan Zorić | 3:02.713 | QF |
4 | Czech Republic | Karel Leština, Pavel Hottmar, Pavel Holubář, and Jiří Polívka | 3:02.851 | |
5 | France | Frédéric Gauthier, Maxime Boccon, Pierre Lubac, and Stéphane Gourichon | 3:03.703 | |
6 | Romania | Vasile Curuzan, Sorin Petcu, Romică Şerban, and Marian Sîrbu | 3:05.101 | |
7 | Australia | Ross Chaffer, Shane Suska, Peter Scott, and Cameron McFadzean | 3:05.527 |
Heat 1 of 1 Date: Saturday 30 September 2000 |
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Place | Athlete | Nation | Time |
1 | Hungary | Ákos Vereckei, Zoltán Kammerer, Gábor Horváth, and Botond Storcz | 2:55.188 |
2 | Germany | Björn Bach, Jan Schäfer, Stefan Ulm, and Mark Zabel | 2:55.704 |
3 | Poland | Dariusz Białkowski, Grzegorz Kotowicz, Adam Seroczyński, and Marek Witkowski | 2:55.704 |
4 | Slovakia | Róbert Erban, Richard Riszdorfer, Juraj Tarr, and Erik Vlček | 2:57.696 |
5 | Bulgaria | Milko Kazanov, Petar Merkov, Yordan Yordanov, and Petar Sibinkić | 2:59.112 |
6 | United States | Stein Jorgensen, John Mooney, Peter Newton, and Angel Pérez | 2:59.472 |
7 | Russia | Anatoli Tishchenko, Oleg Gorobiy, Yevgeny Salakhov, and Roman Zarubin | 2:59.778 |
8 | Sweden | Jonas Fager, Anders Gustafsson, Erik Lindeberg, and Niklaes Persson | 3:01.326 |
9 | Yugoslavia | Igor Kovačić, Saša Vujanić, Jozef Soti, and Dragan Zorić | 3:02.316 |
Germany won the K-4 1000 m world championships in 1997 and 1998 while Hungary won in 1999. Germany won the European championships in July 2000, but the Hungarians won the Olympic final by about 2.5 meter (8 feet).