Mitică Pricop
Mitică Pricop (born October 25, 1977 in Constanţa) is a Romanian sprint canoer who competed from the late 1990s to 2004. Competing in two Summer Olympics, he won two medals at Sydney in 2000 with a gold in the C-2 1000 m and a bronze in the C-2 500 m events with Florin Popescu. The following year, they were double European champions over 500 m and 1000 m.
In 2002, Pricop won the World Championship gold as part of the Romania C-4 500 m team. The following year they crossed the line second at the world championships in Gainesville, Georgia, USA, but were later awarded the gold medal after Russian Sergey Ulegin failed a doping test. Pricop won a total of eight medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in his career.
Pricop later competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in the C-1 1000 m event. He placed fourth in his initial heat with a time of 4:00.559, qualifying for the semifinals. There, he placed fifth, this time at 3:59.640. He did not advance to the final.
Pricop, a member of the Dinamo Bucharest club, retired from international competition after the Athens Olympics.
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- 1936: Czechoslovakia (Vladimír Syrovátka, Jan Brzák-Felix)
- 1948: Czechoslovakia (Jan Brzák-Felix, Bohumil Kudrna)
- 1952: Denmark (Bent Peder Rasch, Finn Haunstoft)
- 1956: Romania (Alexe Dumitru, Simion Ismailciuc)
- 1960: Soviet Union (Leonid Geishtor, Sergei Makarenko)
- 1964: Soviet Union (Andrei Khimich, Stepan Oshchepkov)
- 1968: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin, Serghei Covaliov)
- 1972: Soviet Union (Vladas Česiūnas, Yuri Lobanov)
- 1976: Soviet Union (Serhei Petrenko, Aleksandr Vinogradov)
- 1980 – 1984: Romania (Ivan Patzaichin, Toma Simionov)
- 1988: Soviet Union (Viktor Reneysky, Nicolae Juravschi)
- 1992: Germany (Ulrich Papke, Ingo Spelly)
- 1996: Germany (Gunar Kirchbach, Andreas Dittmer)
- 2000: Romania (Mitică Pricop, Florin Popescu)
- 2004: Germany (Christian Gille, Tomasz Wylenzek)
- 2008: Belarus (Andrei Bahdanovich, Aliaksandr Bahdanovich)
- 2012: Germany (Peter Kretschmer, Kurt Kuschela)
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- 1989: Soviet Union
- 1990: Soviet Union
- 1991: Soviet Union
- 1993: Hungary
- 1994: Hungary
- 1995: Hungary
- 1997: Hungary
- 1998: Hungary
- 1999: Russia
- 2001: Romania
- 2002: Romania
- 2003: Romania
- 2005: Romania
- 2006: Belarus
- 2007: Hungary
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