Belarusian canoeist (born 1979)
Vadzim Makhneu
Beijing K-4 1000 m team on a 2010 Belarusian stamp: Abalmasau, Piatrushenka, Litvinchuk and Makhneu (right)
Born 21 December 1979 (1979-12-21 ) (age 45)Minsk , Belarus Height 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Weight 100 kg (220 lb) Sport Canoe sprint Club Dynamo Minsk
Vadzim Henadzevich Makhneu (Belarusian : Вадзім Генадзевіч Махнеў ) or Vadim Makhnev Russian : Вадим Махнев ; born 21 December 1979) is a Belarusian flatwater canoeist who has competed since 2000. Competing in three Summer Olympics , he won four medals with a gold (K-4 1000 m: 2008 ), a silver (K-2 200m: 2012 ) and two bronzes (K-2 500 m: 2004 , 2008).
Career
In 2001, he was promoted to the senior K-4 boat and won his first senior medals at the European championships in Milan (K-4 500 m bronze and K-4 1000 m bronze). A year later, the same crew went to the world championships in Seville and took the K-4 500 m silver medal.
In 2003, Makhneu formed a K-2 partnership with Raman Piatrushenka , moving to Mozyr to work under Piatrushenka's coach Vladimir Shantarovich . In their first season together, the pair won the 500 m silver medal at the world championships in Gainesville , USA.
This decision was amply rewarded in 2005 when the Belarus K-4 500 m crew of Piatrushenka/Abalmasau /Turchyn /Makhneu were crowned first European and then world champions .
He would win nine more medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with a bronze in 2006 (K-4 1000 m), two more in 2007 (K-2 200 m: gold, K-2 500 m: silver), and four golds in 2009 (K-2 200 m, K-2 500 m, K-4 200 m, K-4 1000 m), and in 2010 , a gold (K-2 500 m) and a silver (K-4 1000 m).
In 2005, Makhneu married Alina, a receptionist of the hotel he had lived in while training in Mozyr.
His father, Gennady , was also a canoeist who represented the Soviet Union . He finished seventh in the K-4 1000 m event at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow .
References
Canoe09.ca profile
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: BCU.org.uk .
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: BCU.org.uk .
Kamber, Raymond , ed. (2008). "Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007)" (PDF) . CanoeICF.com . International Canoe Federation . pp. 1– 83. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 May 2018.
Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill ; et al. "Vadim Makhnyov" . Olympics at Sports-Reference.com . Sports Reference LLC . Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
External links
1964 : Nikolai Chuzhikov , Anatoli Grishin , Vyacheslav Ionov , Vladimir Morozov (URS )
1968 : Steinar Amundsen , Tore Berger , Egil Søby , Jan Johansen (NOR )
1972 : Yuri Filatov , Yuri Stetsenko , Vladimir Morozov , Valeri Didenko (URS )
1976 : Sergei Chukhray , Aleksandr Degtyarev , Yuri Filatov , Vladimir Morozov (URS )
1980 : Rüdiger Helm , Bernd Olbricht , Harald Marg , Bernd Duvigneau (GDR )
1984 : Grant Bramwell , Ian Ferguson , Paul MacDonald , Alan Thompson (NZL )
1988 : Zsolt Gyulay , Ferenc Csipes , Sándor Hódosi , Attila Ábrahám (HUN )
1992 : Mario Von Appen , Oliver Kegel , Thomas Reineck , André Wohllebe (GER )
1996 : Thomas Reineck , Olaf Winter , Detlef Hofmann , Mark Zabel (GER )
2000 : Zoltán Kammerer , Botond Storcz , Ákos Vereckei , Gábor Horváth (HUN )
2004 : Zoltán Kammerer , Botond Storcz , Ákos Vereckei , Gábor Horváth (HUN )
2008 : Raman Piatrushenka , Aliaksei Abalmasau , Artur Litvinchuk , Vadzim Makhneu (BLR )
2012 : Tate Smith , Dave Smith , Murray Stewart , Jacob Clear (AUS )
2016 : Max Rendschmidt , Tom Liebscher , Max Hoff , Marcus Gross (GER )
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