Arnaud Hybois
French canoeist (born 1982)
Hybois at the 2016 Summer Olympics. | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's canoe sprint | ||
Representing France | ||
World Championships | ||
2010 Poznań | K-2 200 m | |
2010 Poznań | K-4 1000 m | |
2011 Szeged | K-2 200 m | |
2014 Moscow | K-1 4x200 m | |
2009 Dartmouth | K-1 4 x 200 m | |
2013 Duisburg | K–1 500 m | |
European Championships | ||
2012 Zagreb | K-2 500 m | |
2014 Brandenburg | K-2 1000 m |
Arnaud Hybois (born 26 January 1982 in Pontivy) is a French sprint canoeist who has competed since the late 2000s. He has won six medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with three golds (K-2 200 m, K-4 1000 m: both 2010 and K-2 200 m in 2011), a silver (K-1 4 x 200 m, 2014) and two bronze (K-1 4 x 200 m: 2009, K-1 500 m 2013).
Hybois also competed in the K-1 500 m event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, but was eliminated in the semifinals. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he and Sebastien Jouve came 4th in the K2-200 m.[1]
References
- ^ "London 2012 Canoe Sprint - Olympic Results by Discipline".
External links
- Arnaud Hybois at the International Canoe Federation
- Arnaud Hybois at Olympics.com
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Arnaud Hybois". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17.
- Canoe09.ca profile at the Wayback Machine (archived March 11, 2012)
- v
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- 1994: Poland (Maciej Freimut & Adam Wysocki)
- 1995: United States (Stein Jorgensen & John Mooney)
- 1997: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1998: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1999: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 2001: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2002: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2003: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2005: Serbia and Montenegro (Dragan Zorić & Ognjen Filipović)
- 2006: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2007: Belarus (Raman Piatrushenka & Vadzim Makhneu)
- 2009: Belarus (Vadzim Makhneu & Raman Piatrushenka)
- 2010: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2011: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2013: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
- 2014: Serbia (Nebojša Grujić & Marko Novaković)
- 2015: Hungary (Sándor Tótka & Péter Molnár)
- 2017: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2018: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2019: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
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