Super Saturday for GB Rowing with seven medal haul
God Save the King rang out five times at the Sava River asĀ Great Britain ended the day with five gold, one silver and a bronze at the 2023 World Rowing Championships in Belgrade

GB Rowing currently sits top of the medal table with seven medals in total and have three further A finals to contest tomorrow.
Both the PR2 Mixed double sculls (PR2 Mix2x) and PR3 Mixed coxed four (PR3 Mix4+) won gold in the Paralympic class boats. In the Olympic class boats there was gold for the Womenās quadruple sculls (W4x), Lightweight Womenās double (LW2x) and the Menās four (M4-) a silver in the Menās pair (M2-) and a bronze in the Womenās four (W4-).
The Womenās quadruple sculls (W4x) of Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgie Brayshaw had a real tussle with the Netherlands throughout the 2k course but kept their heads to win GBās first World gold medal in that boat class since 2010. āIt was absolutely amazing,ā Lauren said, āWeāve practiced our race plan so many times, and we just executed it down to the wire. It was unbelievable. Iām so grateful to all these girls, theyāve helped me so much this season. Itās my first year on the team and my first World Championships and I canāt believe weāve just won gold. I was so excited I let go of my blade at the finish! This season I was aiming to get a gold at U23s, so to get a gold at seniors is beyond anything.ā Georgie added: āItās a first senior gold medal for all of us, and to do it today itās just like all the stars have aligned. We have worked so hard to get to this point, weāve kept it calm, we lost a blade over the finish line but it doesnāt matter because Iām so proud of everyone!ā
Emily Craig and Imogen Grant are now consecutive double World Champions in the Lightweight womenās double sculls (LW2x), as they continued their unbeaten run since the delayed Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. āI donāt have any words to describe how great that was!ā Imogen said, āI feel like this whole Olympiad the excitement has been building. Itās an understatement to say how much weāve improved in the last few months and Iām really excited to see what next season brings!ā Emily added: āWe missed out on the podium in Tokyo by such a small margin and I have the photo finish printed off, on my living room wall. Itās not a negative reminder anymore it’s more ālook at how close we were in some incredibly trying circumstancesā and we are now at the point where weāve had two exceptional seasons together and gained a wealth of experience so that the 6 minutes, 50 seconds of Tokyo 2021, pales into insignificance.ā
Another boat celebrating becoming consecutive double World Champions were the Menās four (M4-) of Oli Wilkes, David Ambler, Matt Aldridge and Freddie Davidson, who pulled away from the pack in the last 500m to win by over 2 seconds. Freddie said: āIt was an epic race. We said beforehand, people are going to do crazy things, it’s a World Champs final, you donāt just go off and settle for second or third, so we knew it was going to be hot all the way down the field. Iām just amazed, all of us are, it was an epic crew effort and epic commitment all the way.ā
Oli said: āWith the unbeaten season that weāve had I think we felt a lot of pressure coming into this, but at the end of the day if youāve had a good season you want to finish on a high and we managed to do it. It was an epic row from these three guys in front of me, I felt I could sit back and do my thing while these guys were hauling today. Iām really happy for us.ā
Double Paralympic Champion Lauren Rowles and former Royal Engineer Commando Gregg Stevenson won a tight race in the PR2 Mixed double sculls (PR2 Mix 2x), pulling away from China in the final strokes to cross the line first to continue their dominance in this boat class this season. Lauren said: āThe China crew are phenomenal athletes. I raced them in Tokyo, they drove us out hard in Tokyo and theyāve driven us out hard here too. We were in the middle of that race and the Chinese started pushing back and we wanted to let them know that this is our day, this is our medal. For me I know theyāre going to come out fighting, and thatās what we want! We want good racing, we want a great spectator sport! So for us that was a brilliant race.ā
Gregg, celebrating his birthday as well as his first World Championship gold medal said: āIāve never been in such a tight race, every other race weāve managed to get out front. But that was something else and I was filled with adrenaline and we stuck at it together. Iām really glad we managed to get the win today.ā
The PR3 Mixed coxed four (PR3 Mix4+) of Frankie Allen, Giedre Rakauskaite, Ed Fuller, Morgan Fice-Noyes and cox Erin Kennedy won another gold medal continuing the long running unbeaten status of the boat class. āIt feels pretty special to be World Champions again,ā Ed said, adding: ā It was special last year, but to be able to come back with a different crew and do exactly what we did last year is phenomenal. It wasnāt very easy out there, the headwind was strong and made quite hard work for us, but at the end of the day itās about getting your bows across the lines first and thatās what we did.ā
Frankie said: āItās a privilege to be part of such an amazing crew. To qualify the boat for the Paralympics on Monday then topping off the week by winning gold today feels amazing.ā
Erin, who has returned to cox the crew after her treatment and recovery from breast cancer said: āItās been a big year. I remember this time last year I was at home feeling pretty sorry for myself but so proud of the team. Iāve been dreaming of this for a long time and so to be here and to be on the top of the podium with the best team in the world, I couldnāt be happier.ā
Ollie Wynne-Griffith and Tom George achieved their best World Championship result to date, winning silver in the Menās pair (M2-). Ollie said: āSome things didnāt go our way today and thatās sport. We want to win, so today feels like a bit of a missed opportunity, but we did well to get that silver medal and we qualified the boat for Paris so from that perspective, Iām pleased.ā
The Womenās four (W4-) of Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Helen Glover and Rebecca Shorten were a little disappointed with their third place bronze. Rowan said: āItās not exactly what we were coming here for and I feel like weāve just missed the mark today. Weāve stepped on in the last six weeks, throughout the regatta and that shows how much we can step on in the next year. Itās definitely made us hungry and I think it will set us up for a really good year.ā
The Menās quadruple sculls (M4x) of Callum Dixon, George Bourne, Matt Haywood and Tom Barras narrowly missed out on a podium spot in the final strokes of the race to place fourth.
There was excitement earlier in the day with Olympic qualification places still up for grabs.Ā Emily Ford and Esme Booth needed to finish fifth or above in the B final of the Womenās pair (W2-). It was an epic race and they worked their way through the field to finish third (9th overall) to secure Olympic qualification. Emily said: āIt’s so exciting to qualify the pair and we could become the first British women to double up and qualify two boats if we get within the top five in the eight tomorrow. It would be awesome to make some history and weāre one step closer to that!ā When asked about doubling up and the number of races across the regatta, Esme commented: āThe sunglasses are hiding a few sins there! Itās one of the hardest races I think weāve ever done, we just kept going earlier and earlier, we just wanted to get that bow ball ahead. Everyone says that qualification regattas are so hard and that was BIG!ā
You can follow the World Rowing Championships live across British Rowing social media channels, here on our World Rowing Championships hub and on the World Rowing website. The BBC will be covering tomorrow’s racing as follows:
- All finals on BBC iPlayer live from 12pm (commentary from Katie Smith and James Cracknell)
- Highlights on BBC2 at 3pm (with Matthew Pinsent and Katherine Grainger in the studio).
Results from Day Seven finals at 2023 World Rowing Championships
Boat | Race | Time | Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q) |
---|---|---|---|
W2- Emily Ford (Leander Club) Esme Booth (Leander Club) | B Final | 07:16.76 | 9th overall (Q) |
PR2 Mix2x Lauren Rowles (Birmingham RC) Gregg Stevenson (Agecroft BC) | A Final | 08:45.67 | (Q) |
PR3 Mix4+ Frankie Allen (Oxford Brookes University BC) Giedre Rakauskaite (Worcester RC) Morgan Fice-Noyes (Bradford-on-Avon RC) Ed Fuller (Reading University BC) Erin Kennedy (cox) (Leander Club) | A Final | 07:22.20 | (Q) |
LW2x Emily Craig (University of London BC) Imogen Grant (Cambridge University BC) | A Final | 07:19.23 | (Q) |
W4- Heidi Long (Leander Club) Rowan McKellar (Leander Club) Helen Glover (Marlow RC) Rebecca Shorten (Imperial College BC) | A Final | 06:44.31 | (Q) |
M4- Oli Wilkes (Oxford Brookes University BC) David Ambler (Oxford Brookes University BC) Matt Aldridge (Oxford Brookes University BC) Freddie Davidson (Oxford Brookes University BC) | A Final | 06:04.35 | (Q) |
W4x Lauren Henry (Leicester RC/ University of Leicester BC) Hannah Scott (Bann RC/ Leander Club) Lola AndersonĀ (Leander Club) Georgie Brayshaw (Leander Club) | A Final | 06:29.70 | (Q) |
M4x Callum Dixon (Twickenham RC) George Bourne (Leander Club) Matt Haywood (Nottingham RC/ Burton Leander RC ) Tom Barras (Leander Club/ Burway RC) | A Final | 05:55.75 | 4th Overall (Q) |
M2- Ollie Wynne-Griffith (Leander Club/ Cambridge University BC) Tom George (Leander Club/ Cambridge University BC) | A Final | 06:53.46 | (Q) |
- Boat:
- W2-
Emily Ford (Leander Club)
Esme Booth (Leander Club) - Race:
- B Final
- Time:
- 07:16.76
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- 9th overall (Q)
- Boat:
- PR2 Mix2x
Lauren Rowles (Birmingham RC)
Gregg Stevenson (Agecroft BC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 08:45.67
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- PR3 Mix4+
Frankie Allen (Oxford Brookes University BC)
Giedre Rakauskaite (Worcester RC)
Morgan Fice-Noyes (Bradford-on-Avon RC)
Ed Fuller (Reading University BC)
Erin Kennedy (cox) (Leander Club) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 07:22.20
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- LW2x
Emily Craig (University of London BC)
Imogen Grant (Cambridge University BC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 07:19.23
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- W4-
Heidi Long (Leander Club)
Rowan McKellar (Leander Club)
Helen Glover (Marlow RC)
Rebecca Shorten (Imperial College BC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 06:44.31
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- M4-
Oli Wilkes (Oxford Brookes University BC)
David Ambler (Oxford Brookes University BC)
Matt Aldridge (Oxford Brookes University BC)
Freddie Davidson (Oxford Brookes University BC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 06:04.35
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- W4x
Lauren Henry (Leicester RC/ University of Leicester BC)
Hannah Scott (Bann RC/ Leander Club)
Lola AndersonĀ (Leander Club)
Georgie Brayshaw (Leander Club) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 06:29.70
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
- Boat:
- M4x
Callum Dixon (Twickenham RC)
George Bourne (Leander Club)
Matt Haywood (Nottingham RC/ Burton Leander RC )
Tom Barras (Leander Club/ Burway RC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 05:55.75
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- 4th Overall (Q)
- Boat:
- M2-
Ollie Wynne-Griffith (Leander Club/ Cambridge University BC)
Tom George (Leander Club/ Cambridge University BC) - Race:
- A Final
- Time:
- 06:53.46
- Result and Paris 2024 Qualification (Q):
- (Q)
Photos: Benedict Tufnell.