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Louise Trappitt

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Nationality
  
New Zealand

Weight
  
68 kg

Height
  
1.74 m

Role
  
Rower

Name
  
Louise Trappitt


Louise Trappitt Louise Trappitt New Zealand Olympic Team

Born
  
15 October 1985 (age 38) (
1985-10-15
)

Residence
  
Wellington, New Zealand

Louise Trappitt doet verslag van het WK Roeien 2014


Louise Trappitt (born 15 October 1985) is a New Zealand rower. She has won bronze medals at World Rowing Championships in the women's quadruple scull in 2011, and in the women's pair in 2014.

Contents

Family and private life

Trappitt was born in 1985 in Dunedin, but raised in Wellington. She holds a degree in physical education from the University of Otago (2004–2007), and later studied extramurally post graduate studies in rehabilitation through the same university (2010–2012). Trappitt did her undergraduate degree before she started concentrating on rowing. She now lives in Cambridge and is engaged to Olympic rower John Storey.

Rowing career

National coach Dick Tonks placed her in a women's quadruple scull for the 2011 season, together with Sarah Gray, Fiona Bourke and Eve MacFarlane. The four surprised themselves by winning bronze at the regattas in Hamburg (Germany) and Lucerne (Switzerland). They maintained their form and won a bronze at the 2011 World Rowing Championships at Lake Bled in Bled, Slovenia.

In 2012, Trappitt competed with the women's quad at regattas in Lucerne (Switzerland; fourth place) and Munich (Germany; fifth place). The quad then went to the 2012 Summer Olympics in London with a strong expectation for a medal when Trappitt "caught a crab" and snapped an oar at the 1500 m mark in the repechage. This cost the team their place in the final (they would have had to be within the first four but came last in the repechage), and they subsequently came first in the B final. Trappitt took the 2013 rowing season off.

At the 2014 World Rowing Championships held at Bosbaan in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Trappitt won a bronze medal in the women's pair partnering with Rebecca Scown.

References

Louise Trappitt Wikipedia