World Rowing U19 Championships

The World Rowing U19 Championships, former name World Rowing Junior Championships is an international rowing regatta organized by FISA (the International Rowing Federation). A rower or coxswain shall be classified as a Junior until 31 December of the year in which he reaches the age of 18. After that date, he shall be classified as an Under 23 rower. During Olympic years it is held at the same location as the Senior World Rowing Championships.

The first FISA Youth Regatta was held in 1967[1] and has been held every year since then, being raised to the status of FISA Junior Champs in 1970 and Junior World Champs in 1985.

Many European countries send athletes not up to the standard for World Championships to the Coupe de la Jeunesse.

Venues

Year Dates Host City No. of events 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place
1967 29–30 July Ratzeburg 7 Italy West Germany Yugoslavia
1968 2–4 August Amsterdam 7 East Germany Netherlands United States
1969 6–10 August Naples 7 West Germany Czechoslovakia France
1970 5–8 August Ioannina 7 East Germany West Germany Italy
1971 28–31 July Bled 7 East Germany Soviet Union West Germany
1972 2–5 August Milan 7 East Germany West Germany Soviet Union
1973 1–4 August Nottingham 7 East Germany West Germany Soviet Union
1974 1–4 August Ratzeburg 8 East Germany West Germany Italy
1975 6–10 August Montreal 8 East Germany Soviet Union West Germany
1976 11–14 August Villach 8 East Germany Soviet Union West Germany
1977 4–7 August Tampere 8 East Germany West Germany  Poland
1978 29–30 July Belgrade 14 East Germany Soviet Union Czechoslovakia
1979 14–18 August Moscow 14 Soviet Union East Germany Bulgaria
1980 13–17 August Heindonk 14 East Germany Soviet Union Bulgaria
1981 4–8 August Sofia 14 East Germany Romania Soviet Union
1982 4–8 August Piediluco 14 East Germany Soviet Union West Germany
1983 3–7 August Vichy 14 East Germany Soviet Union Bulgaria
1984 18–21 July Jönköping 14 East Germany Soviet Union France
1985[2] 7–11 August Brandenburg an der Havel 14 East Germany Romania Soviet Union
1986 30 July – 3 August Račice 14 East Germany Soviet Union Italy
1987 5–9 August Cologne 14 East Germany Soviet Union Italy
1988 3–7 August Milan 14 East Germany Soviet Union Italy
1989 1–6 August Szeged 14 East Germany Soviet Union Yugoslavia
1990 1–5 August Aiguebelette-le-Lac 14 East Germany Soviet Union Italy
1991 1–4 August Banyoles 14 Germany Czechoslovakia Soviet Union
1992 12–15 August Montreal 14 Germany Czechoslovakia Australia
1993 4–8 August Ås 14 Germany Australia Norway
1994 6–15 August Oberschleißheim 14 Germany Romania  Switzerland
1995 1–5 August Poznań 14 Germany Australia Denmark
1996 5–11 August Glasgow 14 Germany Romania Australia
1997 6–10 August Heindonk 14 Germany Romania Australia
1998 4–8 August Ottensheim 14 Germany Romania Australia
1999 5–8 August Plovdiv 14 Germany Romania Great Britain
2000 2–5 August Zagreb 14 Germany Italy Belarus
2001 8–11 August Duisburg 14 Romania France Germany
2002 7–10 August Trakai 14 Italy Romania Australia
2003 6–9 August Athens 14 Italy Australia Romania
2004 27–31 July Banyoles 14 Romania Ukraine Germany
2005 3–6 August Brandenburg an der Havel 14 Germany Romania Italy
2006 2–5 August Amsterdam 14 Germany Romania New Zealand
2007 8–11 August Beijing 13 China Germany Romania
2008 22–28 July Ottensheim 13 Germany New Zealand United States
2009 5–8 August Brive-la-Gaillarde 13 Germany Australia Great Britain
Romania
2010 5–8 August Račice 13 Germany Romania Greece
United States
2011 3–7 August Dorney 13 Germany Romania Italy
2012 15–19 August Plovdiv 13 Italy Romania Germany
2013 7–11 August Trakai 13 Germany Romania Italy
2014 6–10 August Hamburg 13 Germany Romania China
2015 5–8 August Rio de Janeiro 13 Germany Italy Netherlands
2016 23–28 August Rotterdam 13 Italy Germany Czech Republic
2017 2–6 August Trakai 13 Romania Great Britain Croatia
2018 8–12 August Račice 13 United States Italy Great Britain
2019 7–11 August Tokyo 14 Germany China Italy
2020 16–23 August Bled cancelled[3]
2021 11–15 August Plovdiv 14 United States Germany Romania
2022 27–31 July Varese 14 Greece Italy Germany
2023 2–6 August Paris 14 Great Britain
Italy
Romania
2024 18–25 August St. Catharines 14 Romania Italy Greece
2025 Trakai[4]
2026 Plovdiv[5]

Medal table

As of 2024.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany1465317216
2 Germany14010769316
3 Romania734241156
4 Italy496957175
5 Soviet Union426148151
6 Australia27222776
7 Great Britain264333102
8 United States23313387
9 West Germany184141100
10 China1581639
11 Czech Republic1361029
12 France12353279
13 Bulgaria11142146
14 Greece10211546
15 Netherlands941932
16 Russia8151538
17 Czechoslovakia8112039
18 Switzerland871025
19 Poland7111937
20 New Zealand7111432
21 Slovenia77721
22 Belarus613625
23 Yugoslavia612624
24 Lithuania53311
25 Denmark481022
26 Serbia42410
27 Spain371020
28 Croatia37818
29 Estonia3216
30 Canada231520
31 Ukraine23813
32 Latvia23611
33 Norway22610
34 Turkey2248
35 Argentina1102
36 Portugal1001
37 Austria08715
38 South Africa05510
39 Belgium0358
40 Hungary02911
41 Sweden0224
42 Chile0213
 Ireland0213
Individual Neutral Athletes0112
44 Slovakia0022
45 Brazil0011
 Finland0011
 Uruguay0011
Totals (47 entries)7057126872,104

References

  1. ^ "FISA Timeline". Rowing Story. 26 April 2017. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  2. ^ "Ruder-Nachwuchs kämpft um 14 Weltmeister-Titel" [Rowing youngsters fights for 14 world champion titles]. Berliner Zeitung (in German). Vol. 41, no. 182. 6 August 1985. p. 6. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  3. ^ "2020 World Rowing regatta season : the continued consequences of COVID-19 global pandemic". worldrowing.com. 9 April 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  4. ^ 2025-aisiais Trakuose vyks pasaulio jaunių irklavimo čempionatas
  5. ^ "2022 World Rowing Congress attributes 2025 World Rowing Championships to Shanghai". World Rowing. 26 September 2022. Retrieved 6 September 2023.