David Cameron (rower)
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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | Australian |
| Born | 11 March 1974 Maclean, New South Wales |
| Height | 193 cm (6 ft 4 in) |
| Sport | |
| Country | Australia |
| Sport | Rowing |
| Club | Lower Clarence Rowing Club |
| Achievements and titles | |
| Olympic finals | 1996 |
Medal record | |
David Allan Cameron (born 11 March 1974) is an Australian former rower. He was an Australian national champion and an Olympian, and won a silver medal at both junior and senior World Rowing Championships.
Cameron was born in Maclean, New South Wales, and his senior rowing was initially from the Lower Clarence Rowing Club in that town.[1]
He contested and won the Australian national U23 men's single sculls title in Lower Clarence club colours at the Australian Rowing Championships.[2] in 1996, 1997 and 1998 he competed for the senior men's single sculls Australian championship.[3]
Cameron's state selection first came in 1996 when he was the New South Wales state representative single sculler who contested and won the President's Cup at the Interstate Regatta within the Australian Rowing Championships.[4] He contested the President's Cup again in 1998 in New South Wales skyblue. In 1999 he was selected in the New South Wales men's eight to race for the King's Cup in the Interstate Regatta.[5]
International representative rowing
Cameron made his Australian representative debut at the age of eighteen at the 1992 Junior World Rowing Championships in Montreal in an Australian junior coxless pair in which he took second place and won a silver medal.[6]
In 1995 he was selected as Australia's single sculler to contest the 1995 World Rowing U23 Championships in Groningen. He finished in twelfth place.[6] For the 1996 Atlanta Olympics Cameron was Australia's selected single scull and coached by Harald Jahrling he competed and finished in thirteenth place.[6]
In 1997 at the World Championships in Aiguebelette he raced the Australian coxed pair with Nick McDonald-Crowley and steered by David Colvin to second place and Cameron's sole senior World Championship medal - a silver.[6] At the 1998 World Rowing Championships in Cologne, Cameron made his final Australian representative appearance when he rowed in the seven seat of the Australian eight which achieved a sixth-place finish.[6]