Yuri Lobanov
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's canoe sprint | ||
Olympic Games | ||
![]() | 1972 Munich | C-2 1000 m |
![]() | 1980 Moscow | C-2 1000 m |
World Championships | ||
![]() | 1973 Tampere | C-2 10000 m |
![]() | 1974 Mexico City | C-2 500 m |
![]() | 1974 Mexico City | C-2 1000 m |
![]() | 1974 Mexico City | C-2 10000 m |
![]() | 1975 Belgrade | C-2 500 m |
![]() | 1975 Belgrade | C-2 10000 m |
![]() | 1977 Sofia | C-2 1000 m |
![]() | 1977 Sofia | C-2 10000 m |
![]() | 1979 Duisburg | C-2 1000 m |
![]() | 1979 Duisburg | C-2 10000 m |
![]() | 1971 Belgrade | C-2 500 m |
![]() | 1973 Tampere | C-2 1000 m |
![]() | 1977 Sofia | C-2 500 m |
![]() | 1978 Belgrade | C-2 1000 m |
Yuri Lobanov (sometimes listed as Yuriy Lobanov, 29 September 1952 – 1 May 2017) was a Soviet-born Tajikistani sprint canoeist who competed from the early 1970s to the early 1980s. Competing in two Summer Olympics, he won two medals in the C-2 1000 m events with a gold in 1972 and a bronze in 1980. He was affiliated with Tadzhikiston Dushanbe.
Lobanov also won 14 medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with ten gold (C-2 500 m: 1974, 1975; C-2 1000 m: 1974, 1977, 1979; C-2 10000 m: 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1979), two silvers (C-2 500 m: 1971, C-2 1000 m: 1973), and two bronzes (C-2 500 m: 1977, C-2 1000 m: 1978).
Lobanov died on 1 May 2017, aged 64.[1]
References
- ^ "СКОНЧАЛСЯ ПОБЕДИТЕЛЬ ИГР-1972 ЮРИЙ ЛОБАНОВ". Sport-Express (in Russian). 2 May 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
Sources
- Kamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007) – Part 1: flatwater (now sprint). CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 1–41 at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 January 2010). Additional archives: 13 January 2016.
- Kamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007) – Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines. CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 42–83 at WebCite (archived 9 November 2009). Additional archives: 11 March 2016.
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Yury Lobanov". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 3 December 2016.
External links
- Yuri Lobanov at Olympics.com
- Yuri Lobanov at Olympedia
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- 1936:
Vladimír Syrovátka & Jan Brzák-Felix (TCH)
- 1948:
Jan Brzák-Felix & Bohumil Kudrna (TCH)
- 1952:
Bent Peder Rasch & Finn Haunstoft (DEN)
- 1956:
Dumitru Alexe & Simion Ismailciuc (ROU)
- 1960:
Leonid Geishtor & Sergei Makarenko (URS)
- 1964:
Andrey Khimich & Stepan Oshchepkov (URS)
- 1968:
Ivan Patzaichin & Serghei Covaliov (ROU)
- 1972:
Vladas Česiūnas & Yuri Lobanov (URS)
- 1976:
Serhiy Petrenko & Aleksandr Vinogradov (URS)
- 1980:
Ivan Patzaichin & Toma Simionov (ROU)
- 1984:
Ivan Patzaichin & Toma Simionov (ROU)
- 1988:
Viktor Reneysky & Nicolae Juravschi (URS)
- 1992:
Ulrich Papke & Ingo Spelly (GER)
- 1996:
Gunar Kirchbach & Andreas Dittmer (GER)
- 2000:
Mitică Pricop & Florin Popescu (ROU)
- 2004:
Christian Gille & Tomasz Wylenzek (GER)
- 2008:
Andrei Bahdanovich & Aliaksandr Bahdanovich (BLR)
- 2012:
Peter Kretschmer & Kurt Kuschela (GER)
- 2016:
Sebastian Brendel & Jan Vandrey (GER)
- 2020:
Serguey Torres & Fernando Jorge (CUB)
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