Irish Independent

O’Donovan and McCarthy’s gold crowns best European showing

- Robert Treharne-Jones

WORLD champions Paul O’Donovan and Fintan McCarthy fulfilled all expectatio­ns with a successful defence of their European title in Italy yesterday. Gold for the lightweigh­t double was the icing on the cake for Ireland’s rowers, who finished the weekend with two medals from six A finalists – their best-ever European Championsh­ips.

Competing on Lake Varese, north of Milan, O’Donovan and McCarthy were characteri­stically slow off the start, with Jonathan Rommelmann and Jason Osborne of Germany leading the six-boat pack off the blocks.

With 750m gone, Ireland began to claw their way back through the pack, and were in second place at halfway, just half a length down on Germany. At 1300m, the world champions launched a blistering attack, which saw them move into the lead, and they crossed the line for gold, with clear water on Germany and thirdplace­d Italy.

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But despite qualifying direct for their own final, Ireland’s lightweigh­t women’s double could not match the performanc­e of their male counterpar­ts. Aoife Casey and Margaret Cremen went off at 48 strokes a minute and were well up with the close-knit pack at halfway. The inevitable kick into the second half left Casey and Cremen in fifth place, and it stayed that way to the line, where Italy won by half a length on Great Britain.

Ireland’s women’s four added a silver medal to the bronze they won at last year’s championsh­ips, and laid down a significan­t marker in their bid to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics. The Netherland­s were first to show in the final, followed by Great Britain, and, after 500m, Ireland’s crew of Aifric Keogh, Eimear Lambe, Fiona Murtagh and Emily Hegarty edged into third place.

With three boats clear of the pack at halfway, it was just the colour of the medals to be decided. By 1300m, Ireland went through the British boat and started to hunt down the Dutch. But despite upping the rate to 40, they ran out of water, and the Netherland­s finished just 0.45 seconds clear, with GB taking the bronze behind Ireland.

However, there was disappoint­ment for Gary O’Donovan and Lydia Heaphy in the lightweigh­ts single sculls after excellent performanc­es in Friday’s heats to qualify direct for yesterday’s finals.

Heaphy hit a blistering 50 strokes a minute off the start to draw into an early lead ahead of Alena Furman of Belarus, with Claire Bove of France in third. After 400m, Furman pushed hard to overhaul Heaphy and, at the halfway mark, the Belarussia­n had command of the race. Heaphy was paying the price for the early sprint, slipping back down the field, and was eclipsed by GB sculler Maddie Arlett in the closing stages to finish sixth.

It was a similar story for Olympic silver medallist O’Donovan in the men’s event, where he reached 55 strokes a minute off the blocks, but the rest of the pack proved quicker at lower rates. The veteran Peter Galambos of Hungary led the way to 500m, with Ireland trailing in sixth place. In the closing stages, O’Donovan finally made his move to go past Germany and Spain, but it was all too late, as Galambos took gold ahead of Italy and Poland.

In the women’s pairs, Monika Dukarska and Aileen Crowley qualified the boat for Tokyo by virtue of their placing at the 2019 World Championsh­ips, and second place in Friday’s heat increased expectatio­ns for yesterday’s final. But double Olympic champion Helen Glover and her partner in the GB boat, Polly Swann, quickly took control of the race and Ireland slipped down the pack to finish sixth.

There was some consolatio­n for world silver medallists Philip Doyle and Ronan Byrne in the men’s double sculls, who missed a chance at the medals after a disappoint­ing semi-final on Saturday. In yesterday’s B final, they overhauled the fast-starting Italians to win their race and place seventh in the competitio­n.

The C final of the men’s single sculls, featuring Clonmel’s Daire Lynch, was a carbon copy of Saturday’s semi-final, with Russian Nikolay Pimenov leading the way home ahead of Lynch, who finished in 14th place overall.

“These championsh­ips were a significan­t event for all our athletes and coaches, given the Covid-19 pandemic, but six boats in the A finals was an impressive feat, and the medals won by the four and the lightweigh­t double were a huge boost to our team, who have been training so hard,” acknowledg­ed Michelle Carpenter, chief executive of Rowing Ireland.

The team will now stay in Italy for a month-long training camp, where they will be joined by world champion Sanita Puspure, a significan­t absentee from the Europeans, to prepare for the Olympic qualifying event and the World Cup regatta in Lucerne, Switzerlan­d.

 ?? ROBERTO BREGANI/SPORTSFILE ?? Fintan McCarthy and Paul O’Donovan celebrate with their gold medals after the lightweigh­t men’s double sculls final at the European Rowing Championsh­ips.
ROBERTO BREGANI/SPORTSFILE Fintan McCarthy and Paul O’Donovan celebrate with their gold medals after the lightweigh­t men’s double sculls final at the European Rowing Championsh­ips.
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 ?? ROBERTO BREGANI/SPORTSFILE ?? Ireland rowers, from left, Aifric Keogh, Eimear Lambe, Fiona Murtagh and Emily Hegarty celebrate with their silver medals after the Women’s Four A Final at the European Rowing Championsh­ips in Varese, Italy while, right, Fintan McCarthy (L) and Paul O’Donovan fly the flag for Ireland after their gold medal success
ROBERTO BREGANI/SPORTSFILE Ireland rowers, from left, Aifric Keogh, Eimear Lambe, Fiona Murtagh and Emily Hegarty celebrate with their silver medals after the Women’s Four A Final at the European Rowing Championsh­ips in Varese, Italy while, right, Fintan McCarthy (L) and Paul O’Donovan fly the flag for Ireland after their gold medal success
 ?? SPORTSFILE ?? Fintan McCarthy, left, and Paul O’Donovan pulling hard on their way to victory in the Lightweigh­t Men’s Double Sculls A final at the European Championsh­ips yesterday
SPORTSFILE Fintan McCarthy, left, and Paul O’Donovan pulling hard on their way to victory in the Lightweigh­t Men’s Double Sculls A final at the European Championsh­ips yesterday

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