Jonathan Koch (rower)
Koch in 2008 | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's rowing | ||
Representing Germany | ||
World Championships | ||
2010 Karapiro | Lwt quad sculls | |
2017 Sarasota | Lwt coxless four | |
European Championships | ||
2013 Seville | Lwt single sculls | |
2016 Brandenburg | Lwt coxless four |
Jonathan Koch (born 29 October 1985 in Giessen) is a German lightweight rower.
Until the end of 2010, Jonathan Koch was rowing for his hometown club Gießener Rudergesellschaft 1877. Already in summer 2010, he became part of the training group of Mainzer Ruder-Verein 1878 (MRV) under the supervision of Robert Sens, the rowing head coach of the German Federal State of Rhineland-Palatinate. Since 2011 he is officially rowing for MRV.[1] After reaching only the B-final at the 2006 World Rowing Championships in Single Sculls he reached the A-final the following year at the World Championships in Munich, Germany, where he finished fourth. Since the Lightweight Single Sculls are not an Olympic boat class, Koch competed at the 2008 Beijing Olympics together with Manuel Brehmer in the Men's Lightweight Double Sculls where they finished ninth.
After a break in 2009[2] Jonathan Koch was rowing Single Sculls as well as Quadruple Sculls at the 2010 World Championships in Karapiro, NZ.[3][4] While finishing 8th in Single Sculls he became World Champion Quadruple Sculls.
At the 2011 German Championships Koch gained the title of German Champion in Single Sculls as well as Quadruple Sculls.[5]
At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, he competed in the men's lightweight coxless four. The German team finished in 9th place.[6]
International results
- 2005: 7th place U23-World Championships, Lightweight Single Sculls
- 2006: 9th place World Championships, Lightweight Single Sculls
- 2007: 4th place World Championships, Lightweight Single Sculls
- 2008: 9th place Olympic Games, Lightweight Single Sculls
- 2010: 1st place World Championships, Quadruple Single Sculls
- 2010: 8th place World Championships, Lightweight Single Sculls
- 2011: 8th place World Championships, Lightweight Single Sculls
References
- ^ Noch ein Weltmeister für den MRV 6. Februar 2011 auf der Webseite des Mainzer Ruder-Verein von 1878 e. V.
- ^ Jonathan Koch: Späte Erholung vom China-Syndrom. In: Frankfurter Rundschau. 11. Oktober 2010.
- ^ Deutschlandachter will im Weltcup ungeschlagen bleiben. 9. Juli 2010 auf der Webseite des Mainzer Ruder-Verein von 1878 e. V.
- ^ Anlauf holen fürs Treppchen. In: Allgemeine Zeitung. 29. September 2010.
- ^ Ein Herzschlagfinale In: Allgemeine Zeitung. 23. Mai 2011.
- ^ "Rio 2016". Rio 2016. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
External links
- Jonathan Koch at World Rowing
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Jonathan Koch". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
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- 1989: (Peter Uhrig, Jan Fischer, Björn Gehlsen, Thomas Melges)
- 1990: (Francesco Esposito, Massimo Lana, Paolo Pittino, Massimo Guglielmi)
- 1991: (Simon Burgess, Gary Lynagh, Bruce Hick, Stephen Hawkins)
- 1992: (Michelangelo Crispi, Francesco Esposito, Massimo Lana, Massimo Guglielmi)
- 1993: (Gernot Faderbauer, Walter Rantasa, Christoph Schmölzer, Wolfgang Sigl)
- 1994: (Gernot Faderbauer, Walter Rantasa, Christoph Schmölzer, Wolfgang Sigl)
- 1995: (Gernot Faderbauer, Walter Rantasa, Christoph Schmölzer, Wolfgang Sigl)
- 1996: (Lorenzo Bertini, Paolo Pittino, Franco Sancassani, Massimo Guglielmi)
- 1997: (Stefano Basalini, Paolo Pittino, Franco Sancassani, Massimo Guglielmi)
- 1998: (Lorenzo Bertini, Elia Luini, Paolo Pittino, Franco Sancassani)
- 1999: (Simone Forlani, Daniele Gilardoni, Franco Sancassani, Mauro Baccelli)
- 2000: (Hitoshi Hase, Takehiro Kubo, Kazuaki Mimoto, Daisaku Takeda)
- 2001: (Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Mauro Baccelli, Filippo Mannucci)
- 2002: (Emanuele Federici, Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Filippo Mannucci)
- 2003: (Emanuele Federici, Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Filippo Mannucci)
- 2004: (Franco Sancassani, Alessandro Lodigiani, Daniele Gilardoni, Marcello Miani)
- 2005: (Gardino Pellolio, Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Filippo Mannucci)
- 2006: (Gardino Pellolio, Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Daniele Danesin)
- 2007: (Leonardo Pettinari, Daniele Gilardoni, Luca Moncada, Daniele Danesin)
- 2008: (Franco Sancassani, Daniele Gilardoni, Stefano Basalini, Daniele Danesin)
- 2009: (Franco Sancassani, Daniele Gilardoni, Lorenzo Bertini, Stefano Basalini)
- 2010: (Jonathan Koch, Lars Wichert, Linus Lichtschlag, Lars Hartig)
- 2011: (Francesco Rigon, Daniele Gilardoni, Franco Sancassani, Stefano Basalini)
- 2012: (Adam Sobczak, Mariusz Stańczuk, Artur Mikołajczewski, Miłosz Jankowski)
- 2013: (Georgios Konsolas, Spyridon Giannaros, Panagiotis Magdanis, Eleftherios Konsolas)
- 2014: (Georgios Konsolas, Spyridon Giannaros, Panagiotis Magdanis, Eleftherios Konsolas)
- 2015: (Maxime Demontfaucon, Damien Piqueras, Pierre Houin, Morgan Maunoir)
- 2016: (Patrik Stöcker, Florian Roller, Johannes Ursprung, Cedric Kulbach)
- 2017: (François Teroin, Damien Piqueras, Maxime Demontfaucon, Stany Delayre)
- 2018: (Joachim Agne, Max Röger, Florian Roller, Moritz Moos)
- 2019: (Zhang Zhiyuan, Chen Sensen, Lü Fanpu, Zeng Tao)
- 2022: (Antonio Vicino, Alessandro Benzoni, Niels Torre, Patrick Rocek)
- 2023: (Luca Borgonovo, Nicolò Demiliani, Pietro Ruta, Matteo Tonelli)
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