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Lithuanian rower
Aurimas Adomavičius
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Born | (1993-09-23) 23 September 1993 (age 31) Kaunas, Lithuania |
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Aurimas Adomavičius (born 23 September 1993) is a Lithuanian rower.
At the 2016 European Championships, he won silver with the Lithuanian quadruple sculls team. He was also selected to the national team to represent Lithuania in the 2016 Summer Olympics.[1]
In April 2023 Adomavičius announced about retirement from professional sport.[2]
References
External links
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- 1974: (Joachim Dreifke, Götz Draeger, Rüdiger Reiche, Jürgen Bertow)
- 1975: (Stefan Weiße, Wolfgang Güldenpfennig, Wolfgang Hönig, Christof Kreuziger)
- 1977: (Frank Dundr, Martin Winter, Karl-Heinz Bußert, Wolfgang Güldenpfennig)
- 1978: (Joachim Dreifke, Karl-Heinz Bußert, Martin Winter, Frank Dundr)
- 1979: (Peter Kersten, Klaus Kröppelien, Karl-Heinz Bußert, Joachim Dreifke)
- 1981: (Peter Kersten, Karl-Heinz Bußert, Uwe Heppner, Martin Winter)
- 1982: (Karl-Heinz Bußert, Uwe Mund, Uwe Heppner, Martin Winter)
- 1983: (Albert Hedderich, Raimund Hörmann, Dieter Wiedenmann, Michael Dürsch)
- 1985: (Doug Hamilton, Robert Mills, Paul Douma, Mel LaForme)
- 1986: (Valeriy Dosenko, Sergey Kinyakin, Mikhail Ivanov, Igor Kotko)
- 1987: (Valeriy Dosenko, Sergey Kinyakin, Mikhail Ivanov, Igor Kotko)
- 1989: (Hans Keldermann, Koos Maasdijk, Herman van den Eerenbeemt, Rutger Arisz)
- 1990: (Valeriy Dosenko, Sergey Kinyakin, Mykola Chupryna, Ģirts Vilks)
- 1991: (Valeriy Dosenko, Sergey Kinyakin, Mykola Chupryna, Ģirts Vilks)
- 1993: (Andreas Hajek, André Steiner, Stephan Volkert, André Willms)
- 1994: (Alessandro Corona, Rossano Galtarossa, Massimo Paradiso, Alessio Sartori)
- 1995: (Alessandro Corona, Rossano Galtarossa, Massimo Paradiso, Alessio Sartori)
- 1997: (Agostino Abbagnale, Giovanni Calabrese, Alessandro Corona, Rossano Galtarossa)
- 1998: (Agostino Abbagnale, Alessandro Corona, Rossano Galtarossa, Alessio Sartori)
- 1999: (Marco Geisler, Andreas Hajek, Stephan Volkert, André Willms)
- 2001: (Christian Schreiber, André Willms, Marco Geisler, Andreas Hajek)
- 2002: (René Bertram, Stephan Volkert, Marco Geisler, Robert Sens)
- 2003: (André Willms, Stephan Volkert, Marco Geisler, Robert Sens)
- 2005: (Konrad Wasielewski, Marek Kolbowicz, Michał Jeliński, Adam Korol)
- 2006: (Konrad Wasielewski, Marek Kolbowicz, Michał Jeliński, Adam Korol)
- 2007: (Konrad Wasielewski, Marek Kolbowicz, Michał Jeliński, Adam Korol)
- 2009: (Konrad Wasielewski, Marek Kolbowicz, Michał Jeliński, Adam Korol)
- 2010: (David Šain, Martin Sinković, Damir Martin, Valent Sinković)
- 2011: (Chris Morgan, James McRae, Karsten Forsterling, Daniel Noonan)
- 2013: (David Šain, Martin Sinković, Damir Martin, Valent Sinković)
- 2014: (Dmytro Mikhay, Artem Morozov, Oleksandr Nadtoka, Ivan Dovhodko)
- 2015: (Philipp Wende, Karl Schulze, Lauritz Schoof, Hans Gruhne)
- 2017: (Dovydas Nemeravičius, Martynas Džiaugys, Rolandas Maščinskas, Aurimas Adomavičius)
- 2018: (Filippo Mondelli, Andrea Panizza, Luca Rambaldi, Giacomo Gentili)
- 2019: (Dirk Uittenbogaard, Abe Wiersma, Tone Wieten, Koen Metsemakers)
- 2022: (Dominik Czaja, Mateusz Biskup, Mirosław Ziętarski, Fabian Barański)
- 2023: (Lennart van Lierop, Finn Florijn, Tone Wieten, Koen Metsemakers)
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Olympic sports | Overall (1956-2013) | |
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Men (since 2014) | |
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Women (since 2014) | |
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Men's team (2014-2019) | |
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Women's team (2014-2019) | |
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Team (since 2021) | |
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Paralympic sports | Men (since 2021) | |
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Women (since 2021) | |
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Team (since 2021) | |
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