- Marek Jiras
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Medal record Men's canoe slalom Olympic Games Bronze 2000 Sydney C-2 World Championships Gold 1993 Mezzana C-2 team Gold 1999 La Seu d'Urgell C-2 Gold 1999 La Seu d'Urgell C-2 team Gold 2003 Augsburg C-2 team Gold 2006 Prague C-2 team Gold 2007 Foz do Iguaçu C-2 team Silver 1997 Três Coroas C-2 team Bronze 2002 Bourg St.-Maurice C-2 Marek Jiras (Czech pronunciation: [ˈmarɛk ˈjɪras]) (born 18 August 1978) is a Czech slalom canoer who competed in the 1990s and 2000s. He won a bronze medal in the C-2 event at the 2000 Summer Olympics together with Tomáš Máder. They then competed at the same event at the 2004 Summer Olympics, but only finished seventh.
Jiras also won eight medals at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships with six golds (C-2: 1999, C-2 team: 1993, 1999, 2003, 2006, 2007), a silver (C-2 team: 1997) and a bronze (C-2: 2002).
References
- DatabaseOlympics.com profile
- 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: France (Michel Duboille & Jacques Rosseau) · 1951: France (Claude Neveu & Roger Paris) · 1953: Switzerland (Charles Dussuet & Jean Engler) · 1955: France (Claude Neveu & Roger Paris) · 1957: East Germany (Dieter Friedrich & Horst Kleinert) · 1959: East Germany (Dieter Friedrich & Horst Kleinert) · 1961: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1963: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1965: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1967: Czechoslovakia (Miroslav Stach & Zdeněk Valenta) · 1969: France (Jean-Claude Olry & Jean-Louis Olry) · 1971: East Germany (Klaus Trummer & Jürgen Kretschmer) · 1973: Czechoslovakia (Jiří Krejza & Jaroslav Pollert) · 1975: East Germany (Klaus Trummer & Jürgen Kretschmer) · 1977: East Germany (Walter Hofmann & Jürgen Kalbitz) · 1979: West Germany (Dieter Welsink & Peter Czupryna) · 1981: United States (Steve Garvis & Mike Garvis) · 1983: United States (Lecky Haller & Fritz Haller) · 1985: West Germany (Thomas Klein-Impelmann & Stephan Küppers) · 1987: France (Pierre Calori & Jacques Calori) · 1989: West Germany (Frank Hemmer & Thomas Loose) · 1991: France (Frank Adisson & Wilfrid Forgues) · 1993: Czech Republic (Jiří Rohan & Miroslav Šimek) · 1995: Poland (Krzysztof Kołomański & Michał Staniszewski) · 1997: France (Frank Adisson & Wilfrid Forgues) · 1999: Czech Republic (Marek Jiras & Tomáš Máder) · 2002: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2003: Germany (Marcus Becker & Stefan Henze) · 2005: Germany (Christian Bahmann & Michael Senft) · 2006: Czech Republic (Jaroslav Volf & Ondřej Štěpánek) · 2007: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2009: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2010: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2011: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner)
1949: France (Michel Duboille/Jacques Rosseau, Claude Neveu/Roger Paris & René Gavinet/Simon Gavinet) · 1951: France (Pierre d'Alençon/Jean Dreux, Jacques Musson/André Pean & Claude Neveu/Roger Paris) · 1953: France (René Gavinet/Simon Gavinet, Claude Neveu/Roger Paris & Pierre d'Alençon/Jean-Luc Houssaye) · 1955: Czechoslovakia (František Hrabě/Jiří Kotana, Vladimír Lánský/Josef Hendrych & Rudolf Flégr/Milan Řehoř) · 1957: Czechoslovakia (Rudolf Fleger/Milan Řehoř, Václav Havel/Josef Hendrych & František Hrabě/Jiří Kotana) · 1959: East Germany (Dieter Friedrich/Horst Kleinert, Dieter Göthe/Lothar Schubert & Manfred Glöckner/Rudolf Seifert) · 1961: East Germany (Gernot Bergmann/Horst Rosenhagen, Dieter Friedrich/Horst Kleinert & Günther Merkel/Manfred Merkel) · 1963: East Germany (Siegfried Lück/Jürgen Noak, Günther Merkel/Manfred Merkel & Manfred Glöckner/Rudolf Seifert) · 1965: Czechoslovakia (Ladislav Měšťan/Zdeněk Měšťan, Emil Pollert/Jaroslav Pollert & Jaroslav Brejcha/Milan Kalas) · 1967: East Germany (Ulrich Hippauf/Willi Landers, Siegfried Lück/Jürgen Noak & Günther Merkel/Manfred Merkel) · 1969: West Germany (Karl-Heinz Scheffer/Heinz-Jürgen Steinschulte, Manfred Heß/Wolfgang Wenzel & Hermann Roock/Norbert Schmidt) · 1971: East Germany (Rolf-Dieter Amend/Walter Hofmann, Klaus Trummer/Jürgen Kretschmer & Uwe Franz/Ulrich Opelt) · 1973: West Germany (Olaf Fricke/Michael Reimann, Karl-Heinz Scheffer/Heinz-Jürgen Steinschulte & Wilhelm Baues/Hans-Otto Schumacher) · 1975: East Germany (Rolf-Dieter Amend/Walter Hofmann, Herbert Fischer/Jürgen Henze & Klaus Trummer/Jürgen Kretschmer) · 1977: Czechoslovakia (Jiří Benhák/Ladislav Benhák, Radomír Halfar/Svetomír Kmostak & Miroslav Nedvěd/Pavel Schwarc) · 1979: Poland (Wojciech Kudlik/Jerzy Jeż, Jan Frączek/Ryszard Seruga & Zbigniew Czaja/Jacek Kasprzycki) · 1981: Great Britain (Jock Young/Alistair Munro, Robert Joce/Robert Owen & Eric Jamieson/Robin Williams) · 1983: Czechoslovakia (Miroslav Hajdučík/Milan Kučera, Dušan Zaťko/Ľudovít Tkáč & František Slavík/Jiří Decastelo) · 1985: Czechoslovakia (Jiří Rohan/Miroslav Šimek, Miroslav Hajdučík/Milan Kučera & Viktor Beneš/Ondřej Mohout) · 1987: France (Pierre Calori/Jacques Calori, Michel Saidi/Jerome Daval & Gilles Lelievre/Jerome Daille) · 1989: France (Emmanuel del Rey/Thierry Saidi, Michel Saidi/Jerome Daval & Gilles Lelievre/Jerome Daille) · 1991: France (Frank Adisson/Wilfrid Forgues, Thierry Saidi/Emmanuel del Rey & Gilles Lelievre/Jerome Daille) · 1993: Czech Republic (Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder, Petr Štercl/Pavel Štercl & Jiří Rohan/Miroslav Šimek) · 1995: Czech Republic (Jiří Rohan/Miroslav Šimek, Petr Štercl/Pavel Štercl & Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert) · 1997: France (Frank Adisson/Wilfrid Forgues, Emmanuel del Rey/Thierry Saidi & Eric Biau/Bertrand Daille) · 1999: Czech Republic (Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder, Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek & Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert) · 2002: France (Pierre Luquet/Christophe Luquet, Alexandre Lauvergne/Nathanael Fouquet & Philippe Quemerais/Yann le Pennec) · 2003: Czech Republic (Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek, Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert & Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder) · 2005: Non-medal event · 2006: Czech Republic (Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder, Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek & Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert) · 2007: Czech Republic (Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek, Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder & Jaroslav Pospíšil/David Mrůzek) · 2009: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner/Peter Hochschorner, Ladislav Škantár/Peter Škantár & Tomáš Kučera/Ján Bátik) · 2010: France (Denis Gargaud Chanut/Fabien Lefèvre, Gauthier Klauss/Matthieu Peche & Pierre Picco/Hugo Biso) · 2011: France (Gauthier Klauss/Matthieu Peche, Pierre Labarelle/Nicolas Peschier & Denis Gargaud Chanut/Fabien Lefèvre)
Categories:- 1978 births
- Czech canoeists
- Canoeists at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Canoeists at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Living people
- Olympic canoeists of the Czech Republic
- Olympic bronze medalists for the Czech Republic
- Olympic medalists in canoeing
- Czech Republic canoeist stubs
- Czech sportspeople stubs
- European Olympic medalist stubs
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