South Africa pip GB to gold in men's four
Olympics rowing: British lightweight four win silver
Great Britain's lightweight men's four won silver as South Africa beat them to gold by just a quarter of a second in a thrilling final at Eton Dorney.
Richard and Peter Chambers, Rob Williams and Chris Bartley won Britain's third rowing medal, with defending champions Denmark taking bronze and Australia fourth.
Silver medal race was brutal - men's four
The Chambers duo became the first British brothers to win an Olympic medal since Greg and Jonny Searle took bronze in the coxless four at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.
Richard Chambers said: "That was really, really brutal. We were just fighting, fighting through the whole thing to get ourselves back into contention.
"We struggled to keep with the pace of the other crews in the first quarter of the race but we dug our heels in and fought really hard."
GB rowing glory: End of day six
- Women's pair - gold medal
- Men's eight - bronze
- Lightweight men's four - silver
Peter Chambers said: "We are gutted. We were unlucky to get a silver with those conditions. We're delighted with silver but we wanted to get gold.
"Fair play to the South Africans, they won that fair and square."
Williams said: "We wanted to win. We have to be happy to get a medal at our home Olympics. It's a shame we didn't win but what can you do? It's a shame."
The British quartet, who took bronze at last year's World Championships, arrived having won at the final World Cup regatta in Munich.
Friday's hopes
- Men's single sculls final - Alan Campbell (09:30 BST)
- Men's quadruple sculls final - Stephen Rowbotham, Charles Cousins, Tom Solesbury, Matthew Wells (10:10 BST)
- Men's pair final - George Nash and William Satch (10:20 BST)
- Women's double sculls final - Anna Watkins and Katherine Grainger (10:30 BST)
They followed up an emphatic victory in the heats, where they overhauled Australia in the final 250m, with the fastest time in the semi-finals to progress to the final.
They were slow out of the blocks and were down in fifth as Denmark took an early lead at 500m.
The British boat fought back and were close to level with Denmark and a resurgent South African crew as they entered the final 500m.
But they just missed out on the final push, getting pipped on the line by South Africa.
It was the first Olympic rowing gold for South Africa and the first medal of any kind for the Chambers brothers, Williams and Bartley.
Final Results
| Rank | Athlete | Country | Medal moment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Thompson, Brittain, Smith, Ndlovu |
|
|
| 2 | Chambers, Williams, Chambers, Bartley |
|
|
| 3 | Winther, Jorgensen, Barsoe, Ebbesen |
|
Comments
Jump to comments paginationAll posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
More from Olympics
Elsewhere on the BBC
-
A novel idea?
How US libraries are responding to the change from printed books to digital publishing
-
~RS~q~RS~v=~RS~z~RS~32~RS~)

Comment number 17.
ML3rd August 2012 - 10:29
Tough, tough event. Well done to the team, silver still an excellent result although I'm sure they would have loved the gold.
Link to this (Comment number 17)
Comment number 16.
robmax3rd August 2012 - 7:50
I've been to Eton-Dorney this olympics and its been great - this race was so close and whatever the wind conditions all the teams are to be congratulated - they are the best in the world - GB, SA and Denmark provided us with a thrilling race - well done boys - all 3 medals richly deserved.
Link to this (Comment number 16)
Comment number 15.
DrCajetanCoelho3rd August 2012 - 7:09
Hearty congratulations to
Richards, Peter,
Williams
and Bartley.
Dr. Cajetan Coelho
Link to this (Comment number 15)
Comment number 14.
vanhunks3rd August 2012 - 6:15
South Africa beat GB fair and square. Get over it.
Link to this (Comment number 14)
Comment number 13.
jedgore933rd August 2012 - 2:18
Many more chances coming up tomorrow! Hopefully the women's double sculls can take gold... about time for Katherine Grainger, and maybe Campbell could push for a win as well... you never know
http://jedidiahgore.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/brits-hoping-to-beat-high-medal-target.html
Link to this (Comment number 13)
Comments 5 of 17