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What is final C in rowing?

Author

Rachel Ellis

Published Jan 17, 2026

A and B finals are contested in events with eight or more entries (A is for places one through six, B is for places seven through 12). When 13 or more crews are entered, a C final is held; if 19 or more crews are entered, a D final is held; and so on.

What is final a final B and final C in rowing?

The B final gives rankings from 7th to 12th, the C from 13th to 18th, and so on. Thus, to win a medal rowers have to finish in the top three of their heat (or top two of their repechage heat), top three of their quarterfinal, and top three of their A/B semifinal to reach the A final.

What does C final mean?

Top three finishers in A Final get medals. At other regattas, the "A Final" is sometimes called the "Grand Final." B Final sometimes called the "Petit Final." "C Final" sometimes called "Third Level Final." But no medals for B Final boats.

What does final a mean in rowing?

Final A will be the race that decides the medallists, with the fastest boats going through to this final. The semi-finalists who do not qualify for the A final will go through to Final B. No medals are decided at the B final. “Length” the length of the boat type racing is used to signify leads.

Why are there 3 finals in rowing?

This is traditional in rowing races; 6 lanes per race mean that B, C etc finals are used to establish the final placings for all the entrants. So if there are two semifinals (12 boats) the top three from each progress to the A final, the bottom three to the B final to race for places 7-12.

33 related questions found

What does final B mean?

Noun. B final (plural B finals) The final featuring those who failed to pass the semifinals onto the A final, to sort out the minor rankings.

What is final B in rowing?

A and B finals are contested in events with eight or more entries (A is for places one through six, B is for places seven through 12). When 13 or more crews are entered, a C final is held; if 19 or more crews are entered, a D final is held; and so on.

What is the difference between final A and B?

A or B final: The A final is one race of six skaters to decide places one through six. The B final is one race of six skaters to decide places seven through 12.

What is an Olympic B final?

Did you know there was such thing as a "B" Final in Swimming in Olympics? Basically, it's whomever from the semis didn't qualify for the "A" final. It has happened where the winner of the "A" final swam slower (winning Gold obviously) than the winner of the "B" final.

What is a canvas in rowing?

Canvas. The covered section of the boat that is from the bow to the open area (where the athlete sits) and from the open area to the stern. Often used to as a description of how much a race was won or lost by.

Why does rowing have a repechage?

A repechage is when the people who have failed to qualify for a semi or final in the heats get another chance to race for a qualification spot.

How do rowing finals Work Olympics?

Medals are determined based upon the order in which crews cross the finish line. The first crew to cross, which is the crew with the fastest time, wins gold. The second crew to finish wins a silver medal, and the third crew to finish wins a bronze medal. The rest of the places (fourth, fifth, etc.)

Why is there a final A and a final B in rowing?

The top two boats in the repechage moved on to Final A, with the remaining boats sent to Final B. There are two finals. Final A determined the medalists and the places through 6th.

What is final B in Winter Olympics?

The competitions are held in three phrase: quarterfinals, semifinals and finals. The winners of each semifinal advance to the A Final to determine gold and silver; the losers compete in the B Final to determine bronze.

Why do they have AB final?

I noticed that for every event, there was a "Final B" preceding the "Final A." Google tells me that the purpose of the Final B is essentially just for ranking purposes, so we know who comes 9th-16th places.

What is AB final swimming?

CHAMPIONSHIP HEAT - The Championship Heat (A Final) is the fastest heat (6 or 8 swimmers) of Finals when multiple heats are held and is usually conducted last, after the Bonus (C Final) and Consolation (B Final) heats.

What is final A and final B in Olympics short track?

Final A awards medals to the top skaters, while final B determines placement to the slower skaters from the semi-finals.

How many quadruple sculls are there?

A 'quad' is different from a 'four' in that a 'quad', or quadruple scull, is composed of four rowers each with two blades, sculling. A 'four' is made up of four rowers each with one oar in hand, sweeping.

What type of rowing is in the Olympics?

Men and women currently compete in six events. These events are the single, double and quadruple sculls, lightweight double scull, the eight and the coxless pair. Men also race in two further events, the coxless four and lightweight coxless four.

Can you win a medal from repechage?

The winners of the two repechage groups will receive each the bronze medal.

What is repechage round?

Repechage (/rəpɛˈʃɑːʒ/; French: repêchage, "fishing out, rescuing") is a practice in series competitions that allows participants who failed to meet qualifying standards by a small margin to continue to the next round.

Why is it called a repechage?

It comes from the French verb, “repêch” which means literally to “fish up again.” Idiomatically, it means “to get a second chance.” In the context of rowing, a repechage is a race that gives athletes a second chance to advance to the next round in their event.

What is a Coxon?

In a rowing crew, the coxswain (/ˈkɒksən/ KOK-sən; colloquially known as the cox or coxie) is the member who does not row but steers the boat and faces forward, towards the bow. The coxswain is responsible for steering the boat and coordinating the power and rhythm of the rowers.

What is a 4+ in rowing?

Four (4-) or (4+): A shell with 4 rowers. Coxless fours (4-) are often referred to as straight fours, and are commonly used by lightweight and elite crews and are raced at the Olympics. In club and school rowing, one more frequently sees a coxed four (4+) which is easier to row, and has a coxswain to steer.

What is skull in rowing?

scull (plural sculls) A single oar mounted at the stern of a boat and moved from side to side to propel the boat forward. One of a pair of oars handled by a single rower. A small rowing boat, for one person.