- Nikolay Astapkovich
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Medal record Men's canoe sprint World Championships Gold 1975 Belgrade K-2 500 m Gold 1981 Nottingham K-2 10000 m Gold 1983 Tampere K-4 10000 m Silver 1974 Mexico City K-1 4 x 500 m Silver 1974 Mexico City K-4 1000 m Silver 1977 Sofia K-2 500 m Silver 1979 Duisburg K-2 10000 m Bronze 1982 Belgrade K-1 10000 m Nikolay Astapkovich is a Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He won eight medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with three golds (K-2 500 m: 1975 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, K-2 10000 m: 1981, K-4 10000 m: 1983), four silvers (K-1 4 x 500 m: 1974, K-2 500 m: 1977, K-2 10000 m: 1979, K-4 1000 m: 1974) and a bronze (K-1 10000 m: 1982).
References
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships - Part 1: flatwater (now sprint): 1936-2007.
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships - Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936-2007.
1948: Finland (Thor Axelsson & Nils Björklöf) · 1950: Sweden (Lars Glasser & Ingemar Hedberg) · 1954: West Germany (Ernst Steinhauer & Meinrad Miltenberger) · 1958: Poland (Stefan Kapłaniak & Władysław Zieliński) · 1963: Romania (Vasilie Nicoarǎ & Haralambie Ivanov) · 1966: Romania (Aurel Vernescu & Atanase Sciotnic) · 1970: Sweden (Lars Andersson & Rolf Peterson) · 1971: Sweden (Lars Andersson & Rolf Peterson) · 1973: Soviet Union (Nikolay Gogol & Pytor Greshta) · 1974: Poland (Ryszard Oborski & Grzegorz Śledziewski) · 1975: Soviet Union (Viktor Vorobiyev & Nikolay Astapkovich) · 1977: East Germany (Joachim Mattern & Bernd Olbricht) · 1978: East Germany (Bernd Olbricht & Rüdiger Helm) · 1979: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergei Chukhray) · 1981: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergei Chukhray) · 1982: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergey Superata) · 1983: East Germany (Frank Fischer & André Wohllebe) · 1985: New Zealand (Alan Thompson & Paul MacDonald) · 1986: West Germany (Reiner Scholl & Thomas Pfrang) · 1987: Hungary (Ferenc Csipes & László Fidel) · 1989: East Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche) · 1990: Soviet Union (Sergey Kalesnik & Anatoli Tishchenko) · 1991: Spain (Juan José Roman & Juan Manuel Sánchez) · 1993: Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche) · 1994: Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche) · 1995: Italy (Beniamino Bonomi & Daniele Scarpa) · 1997: Australia (Andrew Trim & Daniel Collins) · 1998: Slovakia (Michal Riszdorfer & Juraj Bača) · 1999: Poland (Marek Twardowski & Adam Wysocki) · 2001: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2002: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2003: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2005: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2006: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2007: Germany (Ronald Rauhe & Tim Wieskötter) · 2009: Belarus (Vadzim Makhneu & Raman Piatrushenka) · 2010: Belarus (Raman Piatrushenka & Vadzim Makhneu) · 2011: Hungary (Dávid Tóth & Tamás Kulifai)
1938: Sweden (Gunnar Johansson & Berndt Berndtsson) * 1938: (folding) Sweden (Carl-Gustav Hellstrandt & Erik Helsvik) * 1950: Sweden (Gunnar Åkerlund & Hans Wetterström) * 1954: Austria (Maximilian Raub & Herbert Wiedermann) * 1958: Hungary (János Urányi & László Fábián) * 1963: Hungary (László Fábián & István Timár) * 1966: Hungary (Imre Szöllősi & László Fábián) * 1970: Soviet Union (Konstantin Kostenko & Vyacheslav Kononov) * 1971: Soviet Union (Konstantin Kostenko & Vyacheslav Kononov) * 1973: Hungary (Zoltán Bakó & Géza Csapó) * 1974: Romania (Antrop Varabiev & Ion Terente) * 1975: Hungary (Zoltán Bakó & István Szabó) * 1977: Soviet Union (Petras Shurskas & Anatoliy Korolkov) * 1978: Hungary (Zoltán Bakó & István Szabó) * 1979: Romania (Nicuşor Eşanu & Ion Bîrlădeanu) * 1981: Soviet Union (Nikolay Astapkovich & Vladimir Romanovsky) * 1982: France (Bernard Brégeon & Patrick Lefoulon) * 1983: Great Britain (Stephen Jackson & Alain Williams) * 1985: Sweden (Mikael Berger & Conny Edholm) * 1986: Hungary (Gábor Kulcsar & László Gindl) * 1987: France (Philippe Boccara & Pascal Boucherit) * 1989: Hungary (Attila Ábrahám & Sándor Hódosi) * 1990: Great Britain (Grayson Burne & Ivan Lawler) * 1991: France (Philippe Boccara & Pascal Boucherit) * 1993: Hungary (Zsolt Borhi & Attila Ábrahám)1950: Sweden (Karl Andersson, Stig Andersson, Gösta Gustavsson, & Harry Johansson) * 1954: Sweden (Einar Pihl, Ebbe Frick, Ragnar Heurlin, & Stig Andersson) * 1958: West Germany (Michel Scheuer, Georg Lietz, Gustav Schmidt, & Theodor Kleine) * 1963: Hungary (István Timár, László Fábián, Otto Koltai, & László Ürögi) * 1966: Soviet Union (Nikolai Chuzhikov, Anatoli Grishin, Volodymyr Morozov, & Vyacheslav Yonov) * 1970: Norway (Egil Søby, Steinar Amundsen, Tore Berger, & Jan Johansen) * 1971: Romania (Cuprian Macarencu, Costel Coşniţă, Vasilie Simiocenco, & Atanase Sciotnic) * 1973: Hungary (Csaba Giczi, Tibor Nagy, Csongor Vargha, & Géza Kralován) * 1974: Soviet Union (Leonid Derevyanko, Nikolai Gorbachev, Pytor Zhurga, & Anatoliy Zharikin) * 1975: Norway (Einar Rasmussen, Steinar Amundsen, Andreas Orheim, & Olaf Søyland) * 1977: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Shaparenko, Volodymyr Morozov, Sergey Nikolskiy, & Aleksandr Avdeyev) * 1978: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Shaparenko, Sergey Nikolskiy, Volodymyr Morozov, & Aleksandr Avdeyev) * 1979: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Shaparenko, Sergey Nikolskiy, Volodymyr Morozov, & Aleksandr Avdeyev) * 1981: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Yermilov, Nikolay Baranov, Sergey Kolokolov, & Vasiliy Silenkov) * 1982: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Yermilov, Nikolay Baranov, Sergei Chukhray, & Vladimir Romanovsky) * 1983: Soviet Union (Nikolay Astapkovich, Aleksandr Avdeyev, Nikolay Baranov, & Aleksandr Yermilov) * 1985: Hungary (Zoltán Böjti, Tibor Helyi, Zoltán Kovács, & Kálmán Petrovics) * 1986: Soviet Union (Nikolay Oselez, Grigoriy Medvedyev, Sergey Kislev, & Aleksandr Akunichikov) * 1987: Norway (Harald Amundsen, Arne Sletsjøe, Morten Ivarsen, & Arne Johan Almeland) * 1989: Soviet Union (Vladimir Bobrezhov, Aleksandr Myzgin, Sergey Superata, & Arturas Veta) * 1990: Soviet Union (Dmitriy Bankovskiy, Vladimir Bobrezhov, Aleksandr Myzgin, & Arturas Veta) * 1991: Germany (Detlef Hofmann, Oliver Kegel, Thomas Reineck, & André Wohllebe) * 1993: Germany (Thomas Reineck, Oliver Kegel, André Wohllebe, & Mario Von Appen)Categories:- Living people
- Soviet canoeists
- Soviet canoeist stubs
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