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The First Supersprint Rowing Grand Prix London, 11 September 1999 The
first Supersprint Rowing Grand Prix was held in London, supported by Nortel Networks and with many of the world's top rowers competing.The Nortel Networks International Supersprint Challenge
was contested between Denmark, Germany, Great Britain, Holland, Russia and the United States. Russia and Germany raced brilliantly but were edged out of the Final by Denmark, Great Britain, Holland and the United States.
The Final produced high speeds, drama and excitement. First the men's sculls were won by Holland with Denmark second. In the women's doubles, Great Britain finished just ahead of Holland and the United States. The
men's pairs were then won by Great Britain with Holland second and the United States in third place. The overall winners were now to be decided by the final relay. The Dutch sculler started very fast and handed over a
lead of nearly a length to the women's double. Behind him the United States, Denmark and Great Britain were very close together with Great Britain edging less than a metre ahead of the USA in the last seconds. In the
women's doubles Holland held on to their lead, but with the British double gaining, ahead of the USA and Denmark. Handover to the last rowers, the men's pair, saw Holland start with a lead of 2.5 seconds over Britain.
With Olympic Gold Medallists in the Dutch and
British boats, the power and pressure were intense. The British pair (Redgrave and Cracknell) started to close the gap and in the last 50 metres the two boats were level. Just 2 seconds from the line, either team could win. In the last strokes, as they crossed the line, Britain was ahead of Holland by a metre, with the USA and Denmark close behind.
As expected, the Supersprints format produced a sensational finish, with some of the fastest and closest races ever seen, and with the outcome in doubt until the last second. |