From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French rower
René Duhamel
|
Born | 1 February 1935 (1935-02) Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France |
---|
Died | 12 March 2007 (2007-03-13) (aged 72)[1] |
---|
|
Sport | Rowing |
---|
Club | Avignon SN, Rouen CNA, Caderousse SN |
---|
|
René Duhamel (1 February 1935 – 12 March 2007) was a French male rower. He has competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics and in the 1964 Summer Olympics.[2][3]
Duhamel has also competed at the inaugural World Rowing Championships held in 1962. He along with Bernard Monnereau won the gold medal in the men's double scull (M2×) event representing France.[4]
|
---|
- 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)
|
|