
Tokyo 2020 Olympics Preview – Women’s Double Sculls
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
So here it is, the big one, the one all rowers want to race at, and for some, the culmination of years of training and
Now time to look at the women’s Olympic class events at the Sabaudia World Cup. Women’s Single Fifteen scullers Four scullers are Tokyo-bound, but unlike
Time for the third and final World Cup of the 2021 season, the last major regatta before the Tokyo Olympics. This year the host is
W1X Eighteen Scullers One of the season’s surprises so far was Russia’s Hanna Prakhasten at the European Championships. She qualified for Tokyo via the European
Now that the business of qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics is pretty much done and dusted, it’s time to get down to race preparation and
Image: World Rowing Now for a look at the women’s entries for the Final Olympic Qualifying Regatta – the “Regatta of Death”….. W1X Eleven scullers