Artur Mikołajczewski
Polish rower (born 1990)
Mikołajczewski (left) with Jerzy Kowalski in 2019 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Nationality | Polish | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | (1990-06-27) 27 June 1990 (age 34) Inowrocław, Poland[1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 73 kg (161 lb) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Country | Poland | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Rowing | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Artur Mikołajczewski (born 27 June 1990) is a Polish competitive rower.
He competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in the men's lightweight double sculls.[2]
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Artur Mikołajczewski.
- Artur Mikołajczewski at World Rowing
- Artur Mikołajczewski at Olympics.com
- Artur Mikołajczewski at Olympedia
- Artur Mikołajczewski at the Polish Olympic Committee (archived) (in Polish)
- Artur Mikołajczewski at the International World Games Association
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World champions – Lightweight men's quad scull
- 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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