- Nikolay Gogol (canoer)
-
Medal record Men's canoe sprint World Championships Gold 1970 Copenhagen K-1 4 x 500 m Gold 1971 Belgrade K-1 500 m Gold 1973 Tampere K-2 500 m Silver 1973 Tampere K-4 1000 m Bronze 1971 Belgrade K-2 500 m Nikolay Gogol is a Soviet sprint canoer who competed in the early to mid 1970s. He won five medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with three golds (K-1 500 m: 1971, K-1 4 x 500 m: 1970, K-2 500 m: 1973), a silver (K-4 1000 m: 1973), and a bronze (K-2 500 m: 1971).
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: Gert Fredriksson (SWE) * 1950: Johan Andersen (DEN) * 1954: Gert Fredriksson (SWE) * 1958: Stefan Kapłaniak (POL) * 1963: Aurel Vernescu (ROU) * 1966: Aurel Vernescu (ROU) * 1970: Anatoliy Tischenko (URS) * 1971: Nikolay Gogol (URS) * 1973: Géza Csapó (HUN) * 1974: Vasile Dîba (ROU) * 1975: Géza Csapó (HUN) * 1977: Vasile Dîba (ROU) * 1978: Vasile Dîba (ROU) * 1979: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS) * 1981: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS) * 1982: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS) * 1983: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS) * 1985: Andreas Stähle (GDR) * 1986: Jeremy West (GBR) * 1987: Paul MacDonald (NZL) * 1989: Martin Hunter (AUS) * 1990: Sergey Kalesnik (URS) * 1991: Renn Crichlow (CAN) * 1993: Mikko Kolehmainen (FIN) * 1994: Zsombor Borhi (HUN) * 1995: Piotr Markiewicz (POL) * 1997: Botond Storcz (HUN) * 1998: Ákos Vereckei (HUN) * 1999: Ákos Vereckei (HUN) * 2001: Ákos Vereckei (HUN) * 2002: Nathan Baggaley (AUS) * 2003: Nathan Baggaley (AUS) * 2005: Nathan Baggaley (AUS) * 2006: Marek Twardowski (POL) * 2007: Adam van Koeverden (CAN) * 2009: Ronald Rauhe (GER) * 2010: Anders Gustafsson (SWE) * 2011: Marek Twardowski (POL)1948: Sweden (Lars Glasser, Lars Helsvik, Lennart Klingström & Gert Fredriksson · 1950: Sweden (Lars Glasser, Ingemar Hedberg, Lennart Klingström & Gert Fredriksson) · 1954: Sweden (Lars Glasser, Carl-Ake Ljung, Bert Nilsson & Gert Fredriksson) · 1958: West Germany (Paul Lange, Meinrad Miltenberger, Helmut Herz & Fritz Briel) · 1963: Romania (Aurel Vernescu, Vasilie Nicoarǎ, Haralambie Ivanov & Anton Ivanescu) · 1966: Soviet Union (Georgiy Karyuchin, Yuriy Kabanov, Villi Baltins & Dmitry Matveyev) · 1970: Soviet Union (Nikolay Gogol, Anatoliy Tischenko, Anatoliy Kobrisev & Anatoliy Sedasov) · 1971: Hungary (Géza Csapó, István Szabó, Csaba Giczi & Mihály Hesz) · 1973: Soviet Union (Vitaliy Trukshin, Anatoliy Kobrisev, Sergey Nikolskiy & Oleg Zhegoyev) · 1974: Romania (Vasile Dîba, Ernst Pavel, Atanase Sciotnic & Mihai Zafiu) · 1975: Hungary (Iván Herczeg, Jószef Svidró, Zoltán Sztanity & Peter Várhelyi)
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)
Categories:- Living people
- Soviet canoeists
- Soviet canoeist stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.