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Geoff Horan

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Name
  
Geoff Horan


Geoffrey Raymond Horan (born 18 May 1960) is a retired New Zealand rower.

Contents

Early life

Horan was born in 1960 in Hamilton, New Zealand. He received his education at Otumoetai College in Tauranga.

Rowing career

Starting his career as a high school and club rower at 15, New Zealand, At the Maadi Cup regatta in 1977, Horan won the New Zealand schoolboy single sculls title, and came second in the U18 coxed four, with his younger brother Allan Horan as a crew member. He joined the Waikato rowing club in 1978 and enjoyed many years of success at New Zealand Championships, firstly in pairs rowing at senior level, then in eights at the Premier "red coat" level. He was first selected for New Zealand as a stroke of the 1979 "Colts" under-21 team coxed eights, against N.S.W. Australia, and won the series. In 1980 Horan was once again selected as stroke for the "Colts" eight, successfully defending the series.

Horan represented New Zealand in the coxless pair, with his brother Allan Horan, at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. They came ninth in the competition. He is listed as New Zealand Olympian number 449. He was once again selected as stroke for the New Zealand eight at the 1985 World Rowing Championships in Hazewinkel, Belgium. The crew missed a medal, beaten by the United States to fourth place. Horan retired from rowing in 1986 after six straight years of New Zealand titles in the eight oar from 1981 to 1986.

Personal life

Horan's wife Gay was a competitive rower from Sydney, and she moved to New Zealand in the early 1980s and then competed for her husband's country, including winning national championships. Horan has worked as a steel fabricator and they have lived in Papua New Guinea before moving to Thailand in 1996. Gay Horan established a coaching programme for rowing while there. A lightweight women's quad scull team from Thailand competed at the 2010 World Rowing Championships on Lake Karapiro, New Zealand, and Gay Horan still looked after them at the time, even though they had moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada by then. The Thai team came sixth in their event.

References

Geoff Horan Wikipedia