Lars Bjønness
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Born | (1963-07-27) July 27, 1963 (age 60) Oslo, Norway | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Occupation | rower | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 192 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Lars Bjønness (born 27 July 1963) is a former Norwegian competition rower and Olympic medalist.
He received a silver medal in quadruple sculls at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, together with Alf Hansen, Vetle Vinje, and Rolf Thorsen.[1]
He also received a silver medal in quadruple sculls at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, together with Kjetil Undset, Per Sætersdal, and Rolf Thorsen.[2]
Career
In 1983, Bjønness joined the Norwegian quad scull. He participated in several World Rowing Championships, and won gold in 1985, bronze in 1986 and silver 1987.[3] The crew, which also consisted of Alf Hansen, Vetle Vinje and Rolf Thorsen, also participated at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul. In that competition, the Norwegian team won both the opening and the semi-final, lost the final to Italy, and secured the silver medal by winning against the East German team.[4]
After the 1988 Olympics, Bjønness turned to double scull, where he rowed together with Thorsen. They won the World Rowing Championships in 1989.[5] For the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, the pair returned to quad scull and was joined by Kjetil Undset and Per Sætersdal. The Norwegian team won their opening and qualified for the final with a second placed in the semi-final behind Italy. They finished behind the German team, and thus gained the silver medal.[6]
After the 1992 Olympics, Thorsen and Bjønness turned again to double scull, where they won a silver medal in 1993 World Cup and a gold in 1994. Bjønness ended his international career after winning the gold medal with Thorsen in the 1995 World Cup.
References
- ^ "1988 Summer Olympics – Seoul, South Korea – Rowing" Archived 31 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine (Retrieved on 12 May 2008)
- ^ "1992 Summer Olympics – Barcelona, Spain – Rowing" Archived 23 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine (Retrieved on 12 May 2008)
- ^ "World Rowing - All go for 3000 rowers at Masters Regatta". World Rowing. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ "Olympedia – Quadruple Sculls, Men". www.olympedia.org. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ Bryhn, Rolf; Sundby, Jørn (6 January 2023), "Aftenpostens gullmedalje", Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian), retrieved 16 January 2023
- ^ "Olympedia – Quadruple Sculls, Men". www.olympedia.org. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
External links
- Lars Bjønness at World Rowing
- Lars Bjønness at Olympics.com
- Lars Bjønness at Olympedia
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- 1962: (René Duhamel, Bernard Monnereau)
- 1966: (Melchior Bürgin, Martin Studach)
- 1970: (Jørgen Engelbrecht, Niels Henry Secher)
- 1974: (Christof Kreuziger, Uli Schmied)
- 1975: (Alf Hansen, Frank Hansen)
- 1977: (Chris Baillieu, Michael Hart)
- 1978: (Frank Hansen, Alf Hansen)
- 1979: (Alf Hansen, Frank Hansen)
- 1981: (Klaus Kröppelien, Joachim Dreifke)
- 1982: (Rolf Thorsen, Alf Hansen)
- 1983: (Thomas Lange, Uwe Heppner)
- 1985: (Thomas Lange, Uwe Heppner)
- 1986: (Alberto Belgeri, Igor Pescialli)
- 1987: (Daniel Yordanov, Vasil Radev)
- 1989: (Rolf Thorsen, Lars Bjønness)
- 1990: (Arnold Jonke, Christoph Zerbst)
- 1991: (Nico Rienks, Henk-Jan Zwolle)
- 1993: (Samuel Barathay, Yves Lamarque)
- 1994: (Lars Bjønness, Rolf Thorsen)
- 1995: (Lars Christensen, Martin Haldbo Hansen)
- 1997: (Andreas Hajek, Stephan Volkert)
- 1998: (Andreas Hajek, Stephan Volkert)
- 1999: (Iztok Čop, Luka Špik)
- 2001: (Ákos Haller, Tibor Pető)
- 2002: (Ákos Haller, Tibor Pető)
- 2003: (Sébastien Vieilledent, Adrien Hardy)
- 2005: (Luka Špik, Iztok Čop)
- 2006: (Jean-Baptiste Macquet, Adrien Hardy)
- 2007: (Luka Špik, Iztok Čop)
- 2009: (Eric Knittel, Stephan Krüger)
- 2010: (Nathan Cohen, Joseph Sullivan)
- 2011: (Nathan Cohen, Joseph Sullivan)
- 2013: (Nils Jakob Hoff, Kjetil Borch)
- 2014: (Martin Sinković, Valent Sinković)
- 2015: (Martin Sinković, Valent Sinković)
- 2017: (John Storey, Chris Harris)
- 2018: (Hugo Boucheron, Matthieu Androdias)
- 2019: (Zhang Liang, Liu Zhiyu)
- 2022: (Hugo Boucheron, Matthieu Androdias)
- 2023: (Melvin Twellaar, Stef Broenink)
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