- David Hearn (canoer)
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Medal record Men's canoe slalom World Championships Gold 1979 Jonquière C-1 team Gold 1981 Bala C-1 team Gold 1983 Meran C-1 team Gold 1985 Augsburg C-1 Gold 1985 Augsburg C-1 team Gold 1987 Bourg St.-Maurice C-1 team Gold 1989 Savage River C-1 team Gold 1995 Nottingham C-1 Silver 1979 Jonquière C-1 Silver 1981 Bala C-1 Silver 1983 Merano C-1 Silver 1987 Bourg St.-Maurice C-1 Silver 1989 Savage River C-1 David Hearn (born June 17, 1979) is a slalom canoer who competed from the late 1970s to the early 2000s. He won seven medals in the C-1 event at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships with two golds (1985, 1995) and five silvers (1979, 1981, 1983, 1987, 1989).
Hearn also competed in three Summer Olympics, earning his best finish of ninth in the C-1 event at Atlanta in 1996.
Hearn's sister, Cathy, and his ex-brother-in-law, Lecky Haller, also competed in canoe slalom for the United States.
He was born in Bethesda, Maryland.
References
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships - Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936-2007.
- Sports-reference.com profile
1949: Pierre d'Alençon (FRA) · 1951: Charles Dussuet (SUI) · 1953: Charles Dussuet (SUI) · 1955: Vladimír Jirásek (TCH) · 1957: Manfred Schubert (GDR) · 1959: Vladimír Jirásek (TCH) · 1961: Manfred Schubert (GDR) · 1963: Manfred Schubert (GDR) · 1965: Gert Kleinert (GDR) · 1967: Wolfgang Peters (FRG) · 1969: Wolfgang Peters (FRG) · 1971: Reinhold Kauder (FRG) · 1973: Reinhard Eiben (GDR) · 1975: Petr Sodomka (TCH) · 1977: Petr Sodomka (TCH) · 1979: Jon Lugbill (USA) · 1981: Jon Lugbill (USA) · 1983: Jon Lugbill (USA) · 1985: David Hearn (USA) · 1987: Jon Lugbill (USA) · 1989: Jon Lugbill (USA) · 1991: Martin Lang (GER) · 1993: Martin Lang (GER) · 1995: David Hearn (USA) · 1997: Michal Martikán (SVK) · 1999: Emmanuel Brugvin (FRA) · 2002: Michal Martikán (SVK) · 2003: Michal Martikán (SVK) · 2005: Robin Bell (AUS) · 2006: Tony Estanguet (FRA) · 2007: Michal Martikán (SVK) · 2009: Tony Estanguet (FRA) · 2010: Tony Estanguet (FRA) · 2011: Denis Gargaud Chanut (FRA)
1949: France (Pierre d'Alençon, Paul Huguet & Marcel Renaud) · 1951: Czechoslovakia (Václav Nič, Jaroslav Váňa & Jan Pecka) · 1953: Czechoslovakia (Vladimír Jirásek, Jan Šulc & Stanislav Jánský) · 1955: Czechoslovakia (Vladimír Jirásek, Jiří Hradil & Luděk Beneš) · 1957: West Germany (Günther Beck, Heiner Stumpf & Otto Stumpf) · 1959: Czechoslovakia (Luděk Beneš, Václav Janovský & Vladimír Jirásek) · 1961: Czechoslovakia (Tibor Sýkora, Jaroslav Pollert & Bohuslav Pospíchal) · 1963: East Germany (Karl-Heinz Wozniak, Gert Kleinert & Manfred Schubert) · 1965: Czechoslovakia (Jiří Vočka, Luděk Beneš & Bohuslav Pospíchal) · 1967: Czechoslovakia (Karel Kumpfmüller, Bohuslav Pospíchal & Petr Sodomka) · 1969: West Germany (Wolfgang Peters, Harald Cuypers & Reinhold Kauder) · 1971: East Germany (Jürgen Köhler, Wulf Reinicke & Jochen Förster) · 1973: Czechoslovakia (Jaroslav Radil, Karel Třešňák & Petr Sodomka) · 1975: Czechoslovakia (Petr Sodomka, Jaroslav Radil & Karel Třešňák) · 1977: East Germany (Reinhard Eiben, Peter Massalski & Lutz Körner) · 1979: United States (Jon Lugbill, David Hearn & Bob Robison) · 1981: United States (Jon Lugbill, David Hearn & Ron Lugbill) · 1983: United States (Jon Lugbill, David Hearn & Kent Ford) · 1985: United States (David Hearn, Jon Lugbill & Kent Ford) · 1987: United States (Jon Lugbill, David Hearn & Bruce Lessels) · 1989: United States (Jon Lugbill, David Hearn & Jed Prentice) · 1991: United States (Adam Clawson, Jon Lugbill & Jed Prentice) · 1993: Slovenia (Jože Vidmar, Boštjan Žitnik & Simon Hočevar) · 1995: Germany (Vitus Husek, Sören Kaufmann & Martin Lang) · 1997: Slovakia (Michal Martikán, Juraj Minčík & Juraj Ontko) · 1999: Poland (Krzysztof Bieryt, Sławomir Mordarski & Mariusz Wieczorek) · 2002: Czech Republic (Přemysl Vlk, Jan Mašek & Stanislav Ježek) · 2003: Slovakia (Alexander Slafkovský, Juraj Minčík & Michal Martikán) · 2005: France (Olivier Lalliet, Pierre Labarelle & Tony Estanguet) · 2006: Germany (Stefan Pfannmöller, Nico Bettge & Jan Benzien) · 2007: France (Tony Estanguet, Pierre Labarelle & Nicolas Peschier) · 2009: Slovakia (Alexander Slafkovský, Michal Martikán & Matej Beňuš) · 2010: Slovakia (Michal Martikán, Alexander Slafkovský & Matej Beňuš) · 2011: Slovakia (Michal Martikán, Alexander Slafkovský & Matej Beňuš)
Categories:- 1959 births
- American canoeists
- Canoeists at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Canoeists at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Canoeists at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Living people
- Olympic canoeists of the United States
- People from Bethesda, Maryland
- American canoeist stubs
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