Christian Frederiksen
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's canoe sprint | ||
Olympic Games | ||
1992 Barcelona | C-2 1000 m | |
World Championships | ||
1987 Duisburg | C-2 10000 m | |
1989 Plovdiv | C-2 1000 m | |
1989 Plovdiv | C-2 10000 m | |
1990 Poznań | C-2 10000 m | |
1993 Copenhagen | C-2 1000 m | |
1993 Copenhagen | C-2 10000 m | |
1993 Copenhagen | C-2 500 m | |
1986 Montreal | C-2 10000 m |
Christian Frederiksen (born 31 January 1965) is a Danish-Norwegian sprint canoer and marathon canoeist who competed from the late 1980s to the early 2000s (decade). Competing in four Summer Olympics, he won a silver medal in the C-2 1000 m event at Barcelona in 1992.
Frederiksen moved from Denmark to Norway after the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.
He found better success at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with eight medals. This includes six golds (C-2 1000 m: 1989, 1993; C-2 10000 m: 1987, 1989, 1990, 1993), one silver (C-2 500 m: 1993), and one bronze (C-2 10000 m: 1986).
References
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships – Part 1: flatwater (now sprint): 1936–2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 2010-01-05)
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships – Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936–2007 at WebCite (archived 2009-11-09)
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Christian Frederiksen". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-18.
- v
- t
- e
- 1938: Germany (Rupert Weinstabl & Karl Proisl)
- 1950: Czechoslovakia (Jan Brzák-Felix & Bohumil Kudrna)
- 1954: Austria (Kurt Liebhart & Engelbert Lulla)
- 1958: Romania (Dumitru Alexe & Simion Ismailciuc)
- 1963: Romania (Achim Sidorov & Alexe Iacovici)
- 1966: Romania (Vicol Calabiciov & Serghei Covaliov)
- 1970: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin & Serghei Covaliov)
- 1971: Hungary (Tamás Wichmann & Gyula Petrikovics)
- 1973: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin & Serghei Covaliov)
- 1974: Soviet Union (Vladas Česiūnas & Yuri Lobanov)
- 1975: Hungary (Gábor Árva & Péter Povázsay)
- 1977: Soviet Union (Vasyl Yurchenko & Yuri Lobanov)
- 1978: Hungary (Tamás Buday & Oszkár Frey)
- 1979: Soviet Union (Vasyl Yurchenko & Yuri Lobanov)
- 1981: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin & Toma Simionov)
- 1982: Hungary (János Sarusi Kis & Gyula Hajdu)
- 1983: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin & Toma Simionov)
- 1985: East Germany (Olaf Heukrodt & Alexander Schuck)
- 1986: Hungary (János Sarusi Kis & István Vaskuti)
- 1987: Soviet Union (Yuriy Gurin & Valeriy Veshko)
- 1989: Denmark (Christian Frederiksen & Arne Nielsson)
- 1990: East Germany (Ulrich Papke & Ingo Spelly)
- 1991: Germany (Ulrich Papke & Ingo Spelly)
- 1993: Denmark (Christian Frederiksen & Arne Nielsson)
- 1994: Germany (Andreas Dittmer & Gunar Kirchbach)
- 1995: Hungary (György Kolonics & Csaba Horváth)
- 1997: Germany (Gunar Kirchbach & Matthias Röder)
- 1998: Russia (Aleksandr Kovalyov & Aleksandr Kostoglod)
- 1999: Russia (Aleksandr Kovalyov & Aleksandr Kostoglod)
- 2001: Poland (Marcin Kobierski & Michał Śliwiński)
- 2002: Poland (Marcin Kobierski & Michał Śliwiński)
- 2003: Romania (Silviu Simioncencu & Florin Popescu)
- 2005: Germany (Christian Gille & Tomasz Wylenzek)
- 2006: Hungary (György Kozmann & György Kolonics)
- 2007: Germany (Christian Gille & Tomasz Wylenzek)
- 2009: Germany (Erik Leue & Tomasz Wylenzek)
- 2010: Romania (Alexandru Dumitrescu & Victor Mihalachi)
- 2011: Germany (Stefan Holtz & Tomasz Wylenzek)
- 2013: Hungary (Henrik Vasbányai & Róbert Mike)
- 2014: Romania (Alexandru Dumitrescu & Victor Mihalachi)
- 2015: Brazil (Erlon Silva & Isaquias Queiroz)
- 2017: Germany (Peter Kretschmer & Yul Oeltze)
- 2018: Germany (Peter Kretschmer & Yul Oeltze)
- 2019: China (Liu Hao & Wang Hao)
- 2021: Russian Canoe Federation (Kirill Shamshurin & Vladislav Chebotar)
- 2022: Germany (Sebastian Brendel & Tim Hecker)
- 2023: Italy (Nicolae Craciun & Daniele Santini)
This article about a Danish Olympic medalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e