Keeling, Brittain: 'in the medal mix'

Lawrence Brittain and Shaun Keeling after competing. Photo: Gonzalo Fuentes

Lawrence Brittain and Shaun Keeling after competing. Photo: Gonzalo Fuentes

Published Aug 10, 2016

Share

Rio de Janeiro - “Hope to entertain.” With those words Shaun Keeling and Lawrence Brittain left the media something to chew on as they prepare for their men’s pair final on Thursday.

The duo turned in a confident performance in their semi-final, finishing third to march into the final.

Qualifying for the final was quite the feat particularly for Brittain, who had beaten cancer after he was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease less than two years ago.

“It is awesome, the stressful day was today, you don’t want to put in four years of work and end up in a B final,” Brittain said.

“We’ve done all of the big work and now we are in an A final and it is bonus time from here.”

Lining up against defending Olympic champions Kiwi pair Hamish Bond and Eric Murray, the South Africans held the Kiwis at an arm’s length for most of the race, rowing in second place.

The duo saved their energy over the sprint allowing the British boat to pass them to secure a berth in the final with a third-place finish.

“We needed to have a big sprint to beat the other crews there, and we didn’t quite need it as we needed to be in the top three,” Brittain said.

“Obviously on Thursday it is about coming first and hopefully the sprint towards the end will put us back into the mix.”

Winning a medal will not be easy, and winning the gold may seem near impossible racing against the New Zealanders.

Bond and Murray have not lost a single race since they were put together in a boat in 2009.

The gritty South African crew will not be intimidated, though, and give themselves as good a chance as any of the other five boats.

Keeling said they needed to make a few adjustments to give them the best possible chance of winning a medal.

“We just need to tweak it a bit for Thursday in the last little bit to make sure we can be in the mix for a medal. It is about momentum, we had good momentum there,” Keeling said.

“We can make that fix and the final is obviously bigger and you are in it to go for it.”

Meanwhile, the men’s four boat of Jake Green, Vincent Breet, David Hunt, and Jonty Smith on Tuesday made amends for a below par performance in Monday’s heats.

They claimed a confidence-boosting victory in the repechage to earn a place in today’s semi-final.

Independent Media

Related Topics: