EUBC Senior World Championships 2017 (Sarasota, Florida)
Britain’s first medal of the World Rowing Championships was won by the lightweight men’s quad (LM4x) and our very own Gavin Horsburgh, with Maddie Arlett and alumni Robyn Hart-Winks finishing 5th in the lightweight women’s quad (LW4x).
Britain’s lightweight men’s quadruple scull (LM4x), stroked by EUBC athlete Gavin Horsburgh, claimed the team’s first medal of the 2017 World Rowing Championships after winning silver on the opening day of finals in Sarasota-Bradenton.
The quad of Gavin Horsburgh, Peter Chambers, Ed Fisher and Zak Lee-Green were edged on the line by France, who clinched gold by just 0.17 seconds with Greece back in third.
Horsburgh said: “We went out there three days on the trot and committed ourselves each time and showed our best form. In the final we didn’t quite get the result we wanted but we couldn’t have asked for more effort”.
“It’s a fantastic feeling to win a medal but to also win Britain’s first here, we couldn’t have asked for more. It’s my first senior Worlds and we set a high bar for ourselves and I wouldn’t be sat here without three incredible teammates.”
In the women’s lightweight quadruple sculls (LW4x) A final, EUBC athlete Maddie Arlett, and alumni Robyn Hart-Winks, finished in fifth, as Italy, Australia and China claimed the medals. The crew consisting of Maddie Arlett, Robyn Hart-Winks, Eleanor Piggott and Gemma Hall, the same athletes who won silver in Lucerne, made it straight into the A final by finishing second in their heats in Sarasota-Bradenton.
EUBC alumni Kenneth Lui had an excellent championships racing for Hong Kong, finishing 2nd in the C final.
British Rowing Performance Director Sir David Tanner said: “As a Team we’ve had an excellent first six days here in Florida and my congratulations go to the lightweight men’s quad on winning our first medal after an impressive week for the four of them”.
Gavin Horsburgh, Peter Chambers, Ed Fisher and Zak Lee-Green had been building their form throughout the Championship this week and look to be peaking at the right time after an impressive display in their semi-final.
Gavin Horsburgh: “The trip was an amazing experience; it was the first time since 1994 that the USA has hosted a World Championships so they created an event which intended to leave a legacy hence why alongside the rowing there were a variety of entertainment stalls and shows. The racing itself was incredible as the standard in the lightweight men’s quad sculling has increased due to the scratching of the men’s four from the Olympic programme. Many more countries now put potential scullers who aim to make the Olympic lightweight double (the only remaining boat class) into the quad which in turn made it much more competitive this year”.



