Viktor Reneysky
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Olympic medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Men's canoeing | |||
Gold | 1988 Seoul | C-2 500m | |
Gold | 1988 Seoul | C-2 1000m | |
Silver | 1996 Atlanta | C-2 500m |
Viktor Iosifovich Reneysky (or Reneiski) (Russian: Виктор Иосифович Ренейский), born January 24, 1967 in Babruysk, is a canoer from Belarus who won three Olympic medals for the USSR and Moldova in the C-2 event with his teammate Nikolaï Juravschi. He also won a total of nine world titles, more than any other Canadian canoe paddler of his generation. Reneysky trained at Dynamo in Babruysk.
Reneysky and Juravschi won two gold medals at the 1988 Summer Olympics as competitors for the USSR. This success was followed by consecutive C-2 500m world championship golds in 1989 and 1990.
C-4 events were included in the world championships for the first time and were initially dominated by the USSR. Reneysky won double C-4 gold (500m and 1000m) in 1989, 1990 and 1991.
Despite this run of success Reneysky and Juravschi were not selected for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, having been defeated in the trials by Maseykov and Dovgalenok who justified their inclusion by going on to win the C-2 500m gold medal.
The break-up of the Soviet Union meant that Reneysky and Juravschi went their separate ways. Reneysky is from Belarus whereas Juravschi represented Romania and then his newly-independent homeland of Moldova.
However in 1995 Juravschi persuaded his former partner to join forces once more and represent Moldova at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. They won silver, Moldova's first-ever Olympic medal.
The following year Reneysky was competing for his native Belarus and won the final world championship gold (C-4 200m) of his career.
Reneysky then went into coaching as is now head of the Belarus national team. In 2005 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, he saw his young (average age 19) protégés (Rabchanka / Vaitsishkin / Shcharbak / Vauchetski) beat his own sixteen-year-old C-4 1000m senior world record.
Categories: Belarusian people stubs | Moldovan people stubs | Olympic medalist stubs | 1967 births | Living people | Belarusian canoers | Moldovan canoers | Soviet canoers | Dynamo sports society athletes | Canoers at the 1988 Summer Olympics | Canoers at the 1996 Summer Olympics | Olympic canoers of the Soviet Union | Olympic gold medalists for the Soviet Union | Olympic competitors for Moldova