2009 Canoe Slalom World Cup

The 2009 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of five races in 4 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 22nd edition. The series consisted of 2 continental championships (Oceania and Pan American) which were open to all countries and 3 world cup races. The athletes gained points for their results in the three world cup races plus their best result from any of the two continental championships. The women's single canoe was an exhibition event at the world cups.

Calendar

Label Venue Date
Oceania Championships 2009 New Zealand Mangahao January 31 – February 1
World Cup Race 1 France Pau June 27–28
World Cup Race 2 Slovakia Bratislava July 4–5
World Cup Race 3 Germany Augsburg July 10–12
2009 Pan American Championships Canada Kananaskis August 2–3

Final standings

The winner of each race was awarded 50 points. Paddlers outside the top 20 in any event were awarded 2 points for participation. If two or more athletes or boats were equal on points, the ranking was determined by their positions in the final world cup race (World Cup Race 3).[1]

C-1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1  David Florence (GBR) 160
2  Benjamin Savšek (SLO) 141
3  Jan Benzien (GER) 130
4  Tony Estanguet (FRA) 117
5  Matej Beňuš (SVK) 116
6  Alexander Slafkovský (SVK) 115
7  Sideris Tasiadis (GER) 111
8  Benn Fraker (USA) 100
9  Ander Elosegi (ESP) 100
10  Denis Gargaud Chanut (FRA) 88

C-2 men

Pos Athletes Points[1]
1  Ladislav Škantár/Peter Škantár (SVK) 134
2  Pavol Hochschorner/Peter Hochschorner (SVK) 129
3  Marcus Becker/Stefan Henze (GER) 126
4  Timothy Baillie/Etienne Stott (GBR) 112
5  Tomáš Kučera/Ján Bátik (SVK) 112
6  Fabien Lefèvre/Denis Gargaud Chanut (FRA) 111
7  Damien Troquenet/Mathieu Voyemant (FRA) 108
8  David Florence/Richard Hounslow (GBR) 107
9  Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek (CZE) 105
10  Christophe Luquet/Pierre Luquet (FRA) 90

K-1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1  Peter Kauzer (SLO) 176
2  Daniele Molmenti (ITA) 173
3  Vavřinec Hradilek (CZE) 122
4  Campbell Walsh (GBR) 122
5  Fabien Lefèvre (FRA) 115
6  Alexander Grimm (GER) 111
7  Helmut Oblinger (AUT) 102
8  David Ford (CAN) 99
9  Sebastian Schubert (GER) 98
10  Dejan Kralj (SLO) 97

K-1 women

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 182
2  Corinna Kuhnle (AUT) 140
3  Nina Mozetič (SLO) 136
4  Katrina Lawrence (AUS) 110
5  Jasmin Schornberg (GER) 105
6  Gabriela Stacherová (SVK) 100
7  Marie Řihošková (CZE) 99
8  Émilie Fer (FRA) 99
9  Li Jingjing (CHN) 98
10  Louise Donington (GBR) 97

Results

Oceania Championships 2009

The 2009 Oceania Championships took place in Mangahao, New Zealand from January 31 to February 1. The C-2 event was not held here. Three countries won 1 gold each. New Zealand paddlers managed to take 1 silver and 2 bronze medals.

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C-1 men[2]  David Florence (GBR) 97.09  Ian Borrows (AUS) 100.70  Shaun Higgins (NZL) 114.20
C-1 women (exhibition event)[3]  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS) 140.78  Madeline Toms (AUS) 232.81  Lydia Toms (AUS)
K-1 men[4]  Vavřinec Hradilek (CZE) 86.61  Daniele Molmenti (ITA) 89.20  Michael Dawson (NZL) 90.82
K-1 women[5]  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 98.22  Luuka Jones (NZL) 100.91  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS) 103.02

World Cup Race 1

The first world cup race of 2009 was held in Pau, France on June 27–28. Home paddlers took 1 gold, 2 silvers and 1 bronze to win the medal table.[6]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C-1 men  Jan Benzien (GER) 102.71  Alexander Slafkovský (SVK) 104.54  David Florence (GBR) 104.90
C-1 women (exhibition event)  Cen Nanqin (CHN) 149.56  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS) 159.92  Leanne Guinea (AUS) 204.91
C-2 men  Slovakia
Ladislav Škantár
Peter Škantár
106.86  France
Fabien Lefèvre
Denis Gargaud Chanut
107.86  United Kingdom
David Florence
Richard Hounslow
111.34
K-1 men  Peter Kauzer (SLO) 98.87  Boris Neveu (FRA) 101.48  Fabien Lefèvre (FRA) 102.77
K-1 women  Mathilde Pichery (FRA) 109.48  Melanie Pfeifer (GER) 110.41  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 113.37

World Cup Race 2

The series continued in Bratislava, Slovakia on July 4–5. Slovak paddlers won 3 out of 4 medal events and added 2 silvers and 2 bronzes to win the medal table.[7]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C-1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK) 93.99  Alexander Slafkovský (SVK) 96.93  Matej Beňuš (SVK) 99.10
C-1 women (exhibition event)  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 124.10  Leanne Guinea (AUS) 135.05  Dana Beňušová (SVK) 153.29
C-2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
99.73  Slovakia
Ladislav Škantár
Peter Škantár
101.85  Germany
Marcus Becker
Stefan Henze
104.17
K-1 men  Campbell Walsh (GBR) 92.67  Daniele Molmenti (ITA) 94.22  Alexander Grimm (GER) 94.33
K-1 women  Elena Kaliská (SVK) 103.47  Katrina Lawrence (AUS) 107.21  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 107.37

World Cup Race 3

The race in Augsburg, Germany, held on July 10–12, was the final regular world cup race of the season. Germany won the medal table with 1 gold, 2 silvers and 2 bronzes.[8]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C-1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA) 104.66  Sideris Tasiadis (GER) 106.26  Jan Benzien (GER) 107.17
C-1 women (exhibition event)  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS) 156.49  Marie Řihošková (CZE) 165.48  Cen Nanqin (CHN) 188.70
C-2 men  Germany
Marcus Becker
Stefan Henze
112.04  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
114.35  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Volf
Ondřej Štěpánek
115.38
K-1 men  Peter Kauzer (SLO) 99.81  Alexander Grimm (GER) 102.76  Daniele Molmenti (ITA) 103.03
K-1 women  Jana Dukátová (SVK) 116.00  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE) 120.16  Jennifer Bongardt (GER) 121.77

2009 Pan American Championships

The 2009 Pan American Championships were held in Kananaskis, Canada on August 2–3. Canada was the most successful country with 2 golds and 2 bronzes.

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C-1 men[9]  James Cartwright (CAN) 107.62  Benjamin Savšek (SLO) 108.98  Zachary Lokken (USA) 115.43
C-1 women (exhibition event)[10]  Sindy Audet (CAN) 187.41  Katrina Van Wijk (CAN) 319.19  Jennifer Fritz (USA) 342.70
C-2 men[11]  Canada
Ben Hayward
Cameron Smedley
130.23  Brazil
Anderson Weber
Jean f.m. Pereira
190.12  Canada
Thomas Purcell
Daniel Purcell
197.50
K-1 men[12]  Daniele Molmenti (ITA) 97.09  Peter Kauzer (SLO) 97.33  David Ford (CAN) 98.47
K-1 women[13]  Corinna Kuhnle (AUT) 107.40  Nina Mozetič (SLO) 110.34  Violetta Oblinger-Peters (AUT) 114.94

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, June 04, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.