Stuart MacKenzie

Stuart MacKenzie
Medal record
Men's rowing
Representing  Australia
Olympic Games
1956 Melbourne Single sculls
Commonwealth Games
1958 Cardiff Single sculls
1958 Cardiff Double sculls
Representing  United Kingdom
World Championships
1962 Lucerne Single sculls

Stuart MacKenzie (born 5 April 1937) is an Australian competition rower and Olympic medalist, who also competed for Great Britain at the 1962 World Championships.

He received a silver medal in single sculls at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.[1] He was reputed to have miscounted the distance, due to not realising the spacing of the buoys changed from 100 m to 50 m in the last 250 m of the race, and so stopped temporarily while still 100 metres from the finish.[2]

MacKenzie visited South Africa in 1958, and rowed on the Vaal River at Billabong, near Vereeniging. He took part in the SA Championships and won the double sculls event with his trainee, John Eden.

At the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games he won a gold medal in single sculls and also set a Commonwealth Games record (7:20.1 mins), and he received a silver medal in double sculls with Mervyn Wood.

He won the Diamond Challenge Sculls at Henley Royal Regatta six times, consecutively, from 1957 to 1962, and won the Silver Goblets partnering Chris Davidge in 1963, and the Double Sculls, also with Davidge, in 1959.[3] He was also noted for his gamesmanship, including going out for practice sessions wearing a bowler hat [4]

Mackenzie took part in an event of the Henley Royal Regatta where he was way ahead of all other rowers when he stopped rowing and tried to adjust his cap. However, the reason was to give time to his opponents to catch up with him as it happened. Then he started rowing again and he easily managed to get away, be faster and end first.[5]

Although favoured to win the gold medal at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome, he fell ill before the race and had to withdraw.[6]

After refusing to return to Australia from Europe for trials for the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games to be held in Perth, MacKenzie rowed for Great Britain at the 1st rowing World Championships in Lucerne, finishing second to his great rival Vyacheslav Ivanov

MacKenzie was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985.[7]

References

External links

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