sport.wikisort.org - AthleteVadzim 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).
Belarusian canoeist
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 42) Minsk, Belarus |
---|
Height | 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) |
---|
Weight | 100 kg (220 lb) |
---|
|
Sport | Canoe sprint |
---|
Club | Dynamo Minsk |
---|
|
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 secretly married Alina, a receptionist of the hotel he had lived in while training in Mozyr.
His father, Gennady, finished seventh for the Soviet Union 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
 Olympic Kayaking Champions in Men's K-4 1000 m |
---|
- 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)
|
World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-2 200 m |
---|
- 1994: Poland (Maciej Freimut & Adam Wysocki)
- 1995: United States (Stein Jorgensen & John Mooney)
- 1997: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1998: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1999: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 2001: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2002: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2003: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2005: Serbia and Montenegro (Dragan Zorić & Ognjen Filipović)
- 2006: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2007: Belarus (Raman Piatrushenka & Vadzim Makhneu)
- 2009: Belarus (Vadzim Makhneu & Raman Piatrushenka)
- 2010: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2011: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2013: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
- 2014: Serbia (Nebojša Grujić & Marko Novaković)
- 2015: Hungary (Sándor Tótka & Péter Molnár)
- 2017: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2018: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2019: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
|
World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-2 500 m |
---|
|
World champions in men's canoe sprint K-4 200 m |
---|
- 1994: Russia
- 1995: Hungary
- 1997: Russia
- 1998: Hungary
- Gyula Kajner
- Vince Fehérvári
- István Beé
- Róbert Hegedűs
- 1999: Hungary
- Gyula Kajner
- Vince Fehérvári
- István Beé
- Róbert Hegedűs
- 2001: Hungary
- Gyula Kajner
- Vince Fehérvári
- István Beé
- Róbert Hegedűs
- 2002: Slovakia
- Martin Chorváth
- Rastislav Kužel
- Ladislav Belovič
- Juraj Lipták
- 2003: Ukraine
- Oleksiy Slivinskiy
- Mykhaylo Luchnik
- Mykola Zaichenkov
- Andriy Borzukov
- 2005: Hungary
- Viktor Kadler
- István Beé
- Balázs Babella
- Gergely Gyertyános
- 2006: Serbia
- Milan Đenadić
- Ognjen Filipović
- Bora Sibinkić
- Dragan Zorić
- 2007: Hungary
- Viktor Kadler
- István Bée
- Gergely Boros
- Balázs Babella
- 2009: Belarus
|
World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-4 500 m |
---|
- 1977: Poland
- Ryszard Oborski
- Daniel Wełna
- Grzegorz Kołtan
- Henryk Budzicz
- 1978: East Germany
- 1979: East Germany
- 1981: Soviet Union
- Igor Gaydamaka
- Sergey Krivozheyev
- Juri Poljans
- Aleksandr Vodovatov
- 1982: Soviet Union
- Sergey Krivozheyev
- Igor Gaydamaka
- Sergey Kolokolov
- Aleksandr Vodovatov
- 1983: East Germany
- 1985: East Germany
- 1986: East Germany
- 1987: Soviet Union
- 1989: Soviet Union
- 1990: Soviet Union
- 1991: Germany
- 1993: Russia
- 1994: Russia
- 1995: Russia
- 1997: Hungary
- 1998: Germany
- 1999: Germany
- 2001: Russia
- Roman Zarubin
- Aleksandr Ivanik
- Denys Tourtchenkov
- Andrey Tissin
- 2002: Slovakia
- 2003: Slovakia
- 2005: Belarus
- 2006: Slovakia
- 2007: Slovakia
- 2017: Germany
- 2018: Germany
- 2019: Germany
- 2021: Ukraine
- Oleh Kukharyk
- Dmytro Danylenko
- Ihor Trunov
- Ivan Semykin
- 2022: Spain
|
World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-4 1000 m |
---|
- 1938: Germany
- Ernst Kube
- Heini Brüggemann
- Ernst Strathmann
- Heine Strathmann
- 1948: Sweden
- 1950: Sweden
- Einar Pihl
- Hans Eriksson
- Lars Pettersson
- Berndt Häppling
- 1954: Hungary
- Imre Vagyóczki
- László Kovács
- László Nagy
- Zoltán Szigeti
- 1958: West Germany
- 1963: East Germany
- 1966: Romania
- 1970: Soviet Union
- 1971: Soviet Union
- 1973: Hungary
- 1974: East Germany
- 1975: Spain
- 1977: Poland
- Ryszard Oborski
- Daniel Wełna
- Grzegorz Kołtan
- Henryk Budzicz
- 1978: East Germany
- 1979: East Germany
- 1981: East Germany
- 1982: Sweden
- 1983: Romania
- Ionel Constantin
- Nicolae Fedosel
- Ionel Letcae
- Angelin Velea
- 1985: Sweden
- 1986: Hungary
- 1987: Hungary
- 1989: Hungary
- 1990: Hungary
- 1991: Hungary
- 1993: Germany
- 1994: Russia
- 1995: Germany
- 1997: Germany
- 1998: Germany
- 1999: Hungary
- 2001: Germany
- 2002: Slovakia
- 2003: Slovakia
- 2005: Germany
- 2006: Hungary
- 2007: Germany
- 2009: Belarus
- 2010: France
- Arnaud Hybois
- Étienne Hubert
- Sébastien Jouve
- Philippe Colin
- 2011: Germany
- 2013: Russia
- Vitaly Yurchenko
- Vasily Pogreban
- Anton Vasilev
- Oleg Zhestkov
- 2014: Czech Republic
- 2015: Slovakia
- 2017: Australia
- 2018: Germany
- 2019: Germany
- Lukas Reuschenbach
- Felix Frank
- Jakob Thordsen
- Tobias-Pascal Schultz
|
На других языках
- [en] Vadzim Makhneu
[fr] Vadzim Makhneu
Vadzim Makhneu (né le 21 décembre 1979 à Minsk) est un kayakiste biélorusse pratiquant la course en ligne.
[it] Vadzim Machneŭ
Vadzim Machneŭ (biel. Вадзім Махнеў; Minsk, 21 dicembre 1979) è un canoista bielorusso.
[ru] Махнёв, Вадим Геннадьевич
Вадим Геннадьевич Махнев (белор. Вадзім Генадзевіч Махнеў; род. 21 декабря 1979 года в Минске) — белорусский гребец-байдарочник. Олимпийский чемпион 2008 года на байдарке-четвёрке, бронзовый призёр Олимпийских игр 2004 и Олимпийских игр 2008 на байдарке-двойке, 6-й на Олимпиаде 2004 в четвёрке. Многократный чемпион мира и Европы.
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии