Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Shane O'Brien (rower)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Shane Joseph O'Brien

Height
  
2.03 m

Sport
  
Rowing

Weight
  
96 kg

Born
  
27 September 1960 (age 56) (
1960-09-27
)
Auckland, New Zealand

Shane Joseph O'Brien (born 27 September 1960) is a former New Zealand rower who won an Olympic gold medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, USA.

Contents

Early life

O'Brien was born in 1960 in Auckland, New Zealand. He received his secondary school education at Mount Albert Grammar School from 1974 to 1978, where he was prefect and captain of the rowing team.

Rowing career

Along with Les O'Connell, Conrad Robertson and Keith Trask he won gold in the coxless four at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. O'Brien also competed at the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland, winning a silver medal in the coxless four and a bronze medal in the eights. At the 1985 World Rowing Championships at Hazewinkel in Belgium, he came fourth with the coxless four. He is listed as New Zealand Olympian number 482. His three medals were stolen in a burglary in 2006.

Teaching career

O'Brien is a trained teacher. In the late 1980s, he went back to his old school to teach there. He also taught at an intermediate school in Auckland. He moved to England in the early 1990s where he worked as a teacher and coached rowing at Latymer Upper School, Hammersmith. He worked closely with the Latymer Upper School boatman at the time, Coyne T. Mullen. In 1999, he went on to Shiplake College, on the River Thames south of Henley-on-Thames; he was the deputy headmaster there. One of the Shiplake College rowers who had trained under him, William Satch, went to win Olympic bronze at the 2012 Summer Olympics (coxless pair) and gold four years later (eight). Before he left Shiplake College, a new coxless four boat purchased by the school was named for O'Brien. He became headmaster of Jumeirah English Speaking School (Dubai, UAE) in mid-2011.

References

Shane O'Brien (rower) Wikipedia