Émile Ess

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Émile Ess (born January 9, 1932 in Ruswil ; † December 1990 ) was a Swiss rower who won the 1952 Olympic silver medal in a four-man with helmsman .

At the European Championships in Mâcon in 1951, the Italian four-man with helmsman won in front of a newly assembled Swiss boat with Enrico Bianchi , Karl Weidmann , Émile Ess, Heinrich Scheller and helmsman Walter Ludin .

A year later, with Walter Leiser as helmsman, the Swiss four-man won his preliminary run at the 1952 Olympic rowing regatta in Meilahti, a district of Helsinki, but lost to the Czechoslovak boat in the semifinals. In the hope race , the Swiss met the Italian boat, in which, however, only one European champion from the previous year was sitting. The Swiss won with a lead of over three seconds and made it into the final. There the Czechoslovaks proved to be superior, three seconds behind them the Swiss won the battle for silver against the boat from the United States.

The following year the Czechoslovaks also won the European Championships in Copenhagen, behind the Soviet boat the Swiss won the bronze medal. In 1954 Walter Leiser was no longer there; Bianchi, Weidmann, Ess and Scheller appeared as four without a helmsman at the European Championships in Amsterdam and won another bronze medal behind the Italians and the British boat.

Five years later, at the 1959 European Championships in Mâcon, Ess again made it onto the podium. Together with Gottfried Kottmann , Rolf Streuli and Hansrüdi Scheller , he won the four without a helmsman in front of the boats from the Federal Republic of Germany and Czechoslovakia. At the 1960 Olympic Games , Émile Ess was a member of the Swiss eight, but retired after the pre-run and hope run.

Émile Ess started for the Thalwil rowing club .

literature

Web links