Jüri Jaanson in 2011 |
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Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's rowing | ||
Representing Estonia | ||
Olympic Games | ||
2004 Athens | Single Sculls | |
2008 Beijing | Double Sculls | |
World Championships | ||
Representing Soviet Union | ||
1990 Tasmania | Single Sculls | |
1989 Bled | Single Sculls | |
Representing Estonia | ||
1995 Tampere | Single Sculls | |
2005 Gifu | Quadruple Sculls | |
2007 Munich | Double Sculls | |
European Championships | ||
2008 Marathon | Quadruple Sculls |
Jüri Jaanson (born 14 October 1965 in Tartu) is the most successful Estonian rower of all time and the winner of five medals at World Rowing Championships. He became World Champion in Tasmania 1990 in the single sculls event. 14 years later, at age 38 he won an Olympic silver medal in the single sculls event at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. In Beijing 2008 he won his second Olympic silver medal, this time in the double sculls event with Tõnu Endrekson. He is a member of the SK Pärnu rowing club located in Pärnu. In 2007, Jaanson became the oldest rower ever to win a World Cup event at the age of 41 in Amsterdam.
Jaanson had to overcome a particularly challenging childhood, brought on by a severe case of pneumonia at the age of 2. Doctors gave antibiotics which saved him, but which also left him almost completely deaf. He attended a school for the deaf until he obtained a primitive hearing aid at the age of 12, allowing him to attend a regular school. Still, being a loner, he struggled with fitting in. At Tartu University, when a coach introduced him to rowing, he took to it passionately, in fact so passionately that he left the University to focus on rowing. He wears hearing aids on a regular basis and was also seen wearing them during his rowing competitions.
Jaanson is among four athletes to compete in rowing at six Olympics, with Romanian Elisabeta Lipă in 2004, Canadian Lesley Thompson (cox) in 2008, and Australian James Tomkins.
On 18 November 2010, Jaanson announced ending his career. In July 2011 he was awarded with the Thomas Keller Medal, the highest honor in rowing.
He is also a member of the Estonian parliament, the Riigikogu for the Reform Party.