Two brothers in a boat went to Rio

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Republished with permission from HearTheBoatSing blog by Greg Denieffe:
Rowing ireland, O'Donovan brothers, Photo credit: Irish Examiner

A long time ago, in a small Irish town, a young boy learnt a very valuable lesson. The year was 1976 and the boy was very interested in the Olympics being held in Montreal. You see, the boy was sure that Séan Drea, a fellow Carlovian and one of the best scullers in the world, would win an Olympic medal in rowing for Ireland. Drea performed very well in his heat and superbly in his semi-final, which he won breaking the world best time in the process.

The final was a harsh lesson about not counting your chickens, especially those of a golden, silver or bronze hue, before they are hatched. In a controversial race, and at a time when performance enhancing drugs were being used legally by many athletes, Drea finished fourth and out of the medals behind the Finn Pertti Karppinen. Karppinen was very patient in the race and let West German, Peter-Michael Kolbe take what looked like an unassailable lead. Kolbe had taken a lactic suppressant which had the side effect of suddenly wearing off with 500m to go and the rush of lactic slowed him down dramatically, allowing the flying Finn to scull through and claim the gold. East Germany took bronze and I shed tears as Drea finished fourth and out of the medals.

1976 Men’s Single Sculls Final.

Forty years have passed since that day and many more fourth place finishes have been achieved by Irish athletes at the Olympics. Only this year, the wonderfully loquacious Thomas Barr, a 400m hurdler, joined the club and simultaneously became the country’s heartthrob. He joined Drea, Eamon Coughlan (1976 1,500m and 1980 5,000m), Sonia O’Sullivan (1992 3,000m) and several others (including Kevin Babbington, Eoin Rheinisch and Annalise Murphy) in the nearly club.

selfieA selfie by Gary O’Donovan with Rob Heffernan (left) and Thomas Barr (right). Heffernan a five-time Olympian (2000 to 2016), finished 4th in the 50km Walk in London in 2012 and in March 2016 was upgraded to the bronze medal position after the race winner, Sergey Kirdyapkin (Russia), was eventually disqualified after a protracted appeals procedure. Photo: Gary O’Donovan.

Of course there was more heartbreak for the rowing fans along the way – the men’s lightweight four of Neville Maxwell, Sam Lynch, Tony O’Connor and Derek Holland matched Drea’s placing in Atlanta in 1996. By then, I was hardened enough to take misery to the nth degree but cry, no chance.

1996 Men’s Lightweight Four races – Final starts at 19.00.

Others crews showed potential but an Olympic medal was never really more than a dream. I took delight in the successes, whatever they came in: boxing, walking, sailing; I even joined the ‘four legs good’ brigade when show jumping came to our rescue, but I never cried when we lost.

This year, Ireland qualified three boats for Rio and my expectations were high. All boats in A finals would be nice; competitive at the sharp end in those finals a possibility; a medal – don’t push it; you know what happened the last time and the time before that. However, things turned out differently this time and despite racing in an outside lane in the final, the lightweight double of Paul and Gary O’Donovan, raced magnificently to put themselves, Skibbereen and Ireland on the medal table for the first time. They got to wear their podium-pants (rowing having long ago done away with the actual podium) and I got to cry unashamedly. I was not the only one: Neville Maxwell, he of four world championship medals, found it hard to keep his emotions in check on national television.

Neville Maxwell proves that real men do cry!

Many column inches have been written, not only in Ireland but around the world about the silver-medal duo, partially because they were so relaxed in their attitude to the whole Olympic experience. Their post-race interviews have attracted close to 1.5m views on YouTube. So much has been written about them that I decided that to even try and match some of the articles would be foolish on my part. A wonderful example of what was written is an article by the Irish Independent journalist Eamonn Sweeney called “O’Donovans’ triumph carved from solid Skibb”.

Yet, I wanted to do something to celebrate their achievements both in Rio and in Rotterdam a couple of weeks later when Paul won the gold medal in the men’s lightweight single at the World Rowing Championships.

With a little help and a lot of encouragement from my 10-year-old daughter, I ventured into the world of iMovies. Feature length films have been made in less time but in the end we managed to make something just over four minutes long, add a backing track (that wasn’t muted on upload) and put it on YouTube. Well, as Bonaparte was wont to say ‘A good sketch is better than a long speech’.

Straight Outta Skibbereen.

A short history of Ireland’s international rowing development.

  • 1948 – Ireland affiliate to FISA and race the eights at that year’s Olympic Games in Henley.
  • 1949-1969 – Ireland send only two crews to FISA events; M4 to the European Championships of 1964 and Séan Drea in M1x to the same competition in 1969. Both were unplaced.
  • 1970 – Séan Drea finishes 12th (M1x) at the World Championships in St. Catherines, Canada.
  • 1972 – Drea finishes 7th at the Olympic Games in Munich, West Germany.
  • 1975 – Drea wins Ireland’s first World Championship medal, a silver, in Nottingham, England.
  • 1976 – Drea finishes 4th at the Olympic Games in Montreal, Canada. Ireland send three crews to the Games (M4+ 7th, M4.
  • 1980 – Ireland send four crews to partially boycotted Olympics in Moscow, USSR, including their first woman, Frances Cryan (W1x 7th, M2 7th, M2+ 11th M4+ 11th).
  • 1991 – Niall O’Toole wins Ireland’s first gold medal, the LM1x, at the World Championships in Vienna, Austria.
  • 1996 – Another Olympic ‘A’ final, another 4th place finish (LM4), Atlanta, USA.
  • 2001 – Annus mirabilis – Ireland finish 3rd in the medal table at the World Championships in Lucerne, Switzerland, after winning three gold medals (Sam Lynch, LM1x; Gearoid Towey and Tony O’Connor, LM2 and Sinéad Jennings, LW1x). Jennings later married Lynch and qualified as a doctor. They have three children and as Sinéad Lynch raced in the LW2x at the 2016 Olympic Games.
  • 2002 – Sam Lynch becomes Ireland’s first and only double (as of 2016) world rowing champion after retaining his LM1x title in Seville, Spain.
  • 2004 – Hopes are high for that first Olympic medal when two strong crews qualify for the Games in Athens, Greece, but it was not to be. The LM4- made the ‘A’ final and finished 6th and the LM2x of Lynch and Towey, struggling to make weight, finished 10th.
  • 2016 – A first Olympic medal (LM2x), a first Olympic ‘A’ final in a women’s event (LW2x) and a sixth World Championship gold medal (Paul O’Donovan, LM1x). Sanita Puspure finishes 13th in the W1x, the same position she finished four years earlier. Grown men cry over a rowing race.
  • Senior World Championship medals 1970 (first entry) 2016: 6 Gold, 7 Silver 7 Bronze.

A final note from Rowperfect:  Rowing Ireland has since decided not to renew the contract of Don McLachlan the head coach announced March 2013 with a photo from Rowperfect’s archive.  Interestingly, the announcement on the IARU website is now a broken link.

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