- Associated Press - Friday, July 30, 2021

TOKYO (AP) – The rowing at the Tokyo Olympic Games may be remembered more for the British and American dynasties that sunk rather than the boats that won.

After so much success in London in 2012 and Rio de Janeiro in 2016, Britain leaves Tokyo with just two medals and its famed men’s four nearly caused an embarrassing crash in a stunning loss.

The Americans didn’t win anything at all. The once-dominant U.S. women’s eight that had won three consecutive Olympic titles, finished fourth as Canada took its first women’s rowing gold medal since 1996.

The British and U.S. programs have work to do for Paris 2024.

New Zealand and the Netherlands led the Tokyo medal totals with five each. Seventeen countries medaled overall, and China looks like a country on the rise after winning the women’s quadruple sculls by five seconds, taking bronze in men’s double sculls, then beating the U.S. to the bronze in the women’s eight.

Britain’s lowest moment came in the men’s four, an event it had won in every Olympic Games since 2000. With about 500 meters to go, a steering problem sent the British boat veering wildly toward the Italian one. A clipped oar likely cost the Italians a silver medal and Britain finished fourth.

Britain’s success in the “sitting down” sports is a point of pride and the country pumped more than $33 million into its rowing program since the 2016 Games.

“We need to ask ourselves tough questions. We had a four-medal target, we didn’t meet that target. We didn’t meet our own expectations. We can’t hide from that,” performance director Brendan Purcell told Press Association on Friday.

“Overall, I think we’ve got to be disappointed,” said former British rowing star Sir Steven Redgrave, who is now leading China’s rowing program as that team’s high performance director. He was in the British fours boat that started the country’s win streak that ended in Tokyo.

Redgrave said British “changes” in the program delivered the poor results. He did not elaborate. British rowing head coach Jurgen Grobler stepped down in August 2020 after overseeing British crews for seven Olympics.

“I’m just stating facts,” Redgrave said. “They changed our system in the last year and suddenly from being one of the best nations, we’re down near the other end.”

When asked if he sees himself with China at the 2024 Olympics in Paris, Redgrave noted his contract runs through the end of those Games.

“I have to assess if my bosses still want me, if I’ve still got a future, and we’ll see from there,” Redgrave said. “China has the athletes, has the resources, and some of the know-how, to be the strongest rowing nation in the world. I was brought in to get them there.”

If the British medal haul was a pittance, it was Olympic riches compared to the Americans.

The U.S. had limited medal hopes in Japan, but one that was expected was the women’s eight. The Americans had won the event in 2008, 2012 and 2016.

But the U.S. crew had lost its invincible aura when it was beaten at the world championships in 2017 and 2019. The Tokyo crew returned only two members from the 2016 gold medal boat.

An impressive opening heat shot them straight to the final, but the U.S. was quickly dropped by the leaders in the medal race and was never in contention.

The U.S. team had to overcome a COVID-19 outbreak that forced them to scatter from their home base in New Jersey in early 2020 and train alone for several months.

“To get here took an inordinate amount of effort and belief in ourselves and each other. I would do the whole five years over again, even knowing what the result would be,” said Katelin Guregian, coxswain for the U.S. women’s eight and one of the two Olympic holdovers.

Kara Kohler was the other top medal hope for the U.S. in women’s single sculls, but the bronze medalist at the 2019 world championships didn’t make the Olympic final in Tokyo.

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