Australian rowing will give their men's and women's eight crews a final chance to qualify for the Rio Olympics by sending them to the remaining qualification regatta.
Both crews failed to automatically qualify through the world championships last year but selectors said they had met the grade to push for a spot at the "Regatta of Death" in Lucerne, Switzerland, in May.
Rhys Grant will try to qualify in the men's single scull and Hannah Every-Hall and Georgia Nesbitt will compete in the women's lightweight double while the men's lightweight four didn't meet the required standard to get a crack at qualification.
Rowing Australia on Friday named squads of 12 rowers in both events with that to be cut down in a month to the competing eight.
Head coach Chris O'Brien said they decided it was worth taking some extra time to ensure they got the best possible combination.
Australia has had a men's eight crew at every Olympics since 1948 and have won six medals.
Both men's and women's crews must finish top two in Lucerne.
"We'd rather make a good decision than hurry for the sake of making a decision," O'Brien said.
"We could have established an eight now but possibly wouldn't have hit our standards to actually do the job of qualifying."
Rowers, including world champion Kim Brennan (nee Crow), who will fill the seven boats already qualified for Rio were also named at the end of trials on Friday.
They will compete in two World Cups before the August Olympics.
Selectors also kept their options open in the men's four - the event originally made famous by the gold medal-winning Oarsome Foursome back in 1992 in Barcelona.
They named a six-man squad of Will Lockwood, Joshua Dunkley-Smith, Spencer Turin, Alex Hill, Joshua Booth and Alex Lloyd with two of those rowers to become the men's pair.
The men's four won silver at last year's world championships in France but did so with a late crew change when Lloyd was replaced by Dunkley-Smith after breaking his collarbone in a fall while training on his bike.
"We want to make sure we put together the crew that's our best chance of winning a gold medal," O'Brien said.
"We won a silver medal at the London Olympics, silver in 2013, bronze in 2014, silver in 2015 and we can roll out the same process and we might win another medal but we want a gold medal prospect."
O'Brien said he had been pleased overall with how the rowers were tracking as they look to improve on their London medal haul of three silver medals and two bronze.
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