Timothy Masters (rower)

Timothy Masters
Personal information
Born (1992-01-02) 2 January 1992
Education Melbourne Grammar School
Sport
Country Australia
Sport Rowing
Club UTS Haberfield Rowing Club
Achievements and titles
National finals King's Cup 2016-2018

Timothy Masters (born 2 January 1992) is an Australian rower. He is a national champion, a representative at World Championships, and a three-time silver medallist at U23 World Rowing Championships.

Club and state rowing

Raised in Melbourne, Masters was educated and introduced to rowing at Melbourne Grammar School His early club rowing was from the Banks Rowing Club in Melbourne. After relocating to Sydney during his Australian representative years he joined and raced for the UTS Haberfield Rowing Club.

He debuted at state representative level for Victoria in the 2010 youth eight who contested the Noel Wilkinson Trophy at the Interstate Regatta within the 2010 Australian Rowing Championships.[1] He first rowed in the Victorian men's senior eight when they won the 2016 King's Cup at the Interstate Regatta. [2] He rowed at seven in the 2017 Victorian King's Cup crew and he stroked the 2018 eight. [3] Both those crews finished second to New South Wales.[4]

International representative rowing

Masters made his Australian representative debut in the U23 eight at the 2011 U23 World Rowing Championships in Amsterdam where that eight finished in seventh place. [5] In 2012 and 2013 he rowed in an Australian coxless four at the U23 World Rowing Championships and both years rowed to a silver medal. [5] In 2014 he was back in the U23 Australian eight and that crew also took the silver medal at 2014 U23 World Rowing Championships in Varese. [5]

Masters made his first national senior squad appearance in the Australian men's eight who were unsuccessful in attempting to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics at the final FISA qualification regatta.[5]. He held his seat in the Australian eight throughout 2017 and 2018. He raced in 2017 in that boat at two World Rowing Cups in Europe before contesting the 2017 World Rowing Championships in Sarasota where the eight missed the A final and placed eighth overall. [5] In 2018 he rowed in the six seat at the World Rowing Cup II in Linz and the WRC III in Lucerne where the Australians took a silver medal in a thrilling finish 0.14 seconds behind Germany. [5] The stage was set for the close competition that played out at the 2018 World Championships in Plovdiv. In their heat the Australian eight finished 5/100ths of a second behind the USA and then in the final, Germany dominated and took gold but 2/10ths of a second separated 2nd through to 4th and the Australians took silver, a bowball ahead of Great Britain with the US out of the medals.[5] Masters rowed in the six seat and came home with a silver world championship medal.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.