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Canoe Slalom World Cup From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2023 Canoe Slalom World Cup was the highest level season-long series of competitions across six canoe slalom disciplines organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 36th edition and featured five stops (or races) in five different venues.
Canoeists competed for the title of the overall world cup champion in each of the six disciplines (3 for men and 3 for women), which was determined by the total number of points obtained from the five races.
The series opened with World Cup Race 1 in Augsburg, Germany (1–4 June) and concluded with the World Cup Final in Vaires-sur-Marne, France (5-8 October).[1]
Label | Venue | Date |
---|---|---|
World Cup Race 1 | Augsburg | 1–4 June |
World Cup Race 2 | Prague | 8–11 June |
World Cup Race 3 | Tacen | 15–18 June |
World Cup Race 4 | La Seu | 31 August – 3 September |
World Cup Final | Vaires-sur-Marne | 5–8 October |
The winner of each race was awarded 60 points (with double points awarded for the World Cup Final). Points for lower places differed from one category to another. Every participant was guaranteed at least 2 points for participation and 5 points for qualifying for the semifinal.[2]
C1 men
|
C1 women
|
K1 men
|
K1 women
|
Kayak cross men
|
Kayak cross women
|
Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 M | 60 | 55 | 50 | 46 | 44 | 42 | 40 | 38 | 36 | 34 |
C1 W | 60 | 55 | 50 | 46 | 44 | 42 | 40 | 38 | 36 | 34 |
K1 M | 60 | 55 | 50 | 44 | 43 | 42 | 41 | 40 | 39 | 38 |
K1 W | 60 | 55 | 50 | 46 | 44 | 42 | 40 | 38 | 36 | 34 |
Kayak cross | 60 | 55 | 50 | 45 | 40 | 35 | 30 | 25 | 19 | 17 |
1–4 June in Augsburg, Germany
Event | Gold | Score | Silver | Score | Bronze | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 men[3] | Sideris Tasiadis (GER) | 98.25 | Matej Beňuš (SVK) | 101.33 | Jiří Prskavec (CZE) | 101.44 |
C1 women[4] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 105.04 | Angèle Hug (FRA) | 111.55 | Elena Lilik (GER) | 112.10 |
K1 men[5] | Giovanni De Gennaro (ITA) | 90.71 | Joseph Clarke (GBR) | 93.69 | Hannes Aigner (GER) | 93.74 |
K1 women[6] | Elena Lilik (GER) | 101.66 | Stefanie Horn (ITA) | 105.95 | Viktoria Wolffhardt (AUT) | 106.14 |
Kayak cross men[7] | Benjamin Renia (FRA) | Martin Dougoud (SUI) | Joseph Clarke (GBR) | |||
Kayak cross women[8] | Stefanie Horn (ITA) | Ana Sátila (BRA) | Mònica Dòria Vilarrubla (AND) |
8–11 June in Prague, Czech Republic
Event | Gold | Score | Silver | Score | Bronze | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 men[9] | Benjamin Savšek (SLO) | 97.65 | Matej Beňuš (SVK) | 101.26 | Jules Bernardet (FRA) | 102.90 |
C1 women[10] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 109.13 | Mònica Dòria Vilarrubla (AND) | 110.57 | Gabriela Satková (CZE) | 111.02 |
K1 men[11] | Jiří Prskavec (CZE) | 89.67 | Vít Přindiš (CZE) | 90.55 | Giovanni De Gennaro (ITA) | 90.82 |
K1 women[12] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 98.95 | Ricarda Funk (GER) | 103.58 | Mallory Franklin (GBR) | 104.90 |
Kayak cross men[13] | Dimitri Marx (SUI) | Jan Rohrer (SUI) | Titouan Castryck (FRA) | |||
Kayak cross women[14] | Kimberley Woods (GBR) | Tereza Fišerová (CZE) | Stefanie Horn (ITA) |
15–18 June in Tacen, Slovenia. The third world cup was skipped by many of the top European paddlers in favor of preparation for the European Games in Kraków, which would also serve as the European qualifier for the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Event | Gold | Score | Silver | Score | Bronze | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 men[15] | Luka Božič (SLO) | 90.29 | Zachary Lokken (USA) | 91.43 | Benjamin Savšek (SLO) | 93.14 |
C1 women[16] | Elena Lilik (GER) | 101.97 | Viktoriia Us (UKR) | 105.27 | Eva Alina Hočevar (SLO) | 108.00 |
K1 men[17] | Jiří Prskavec (CZE) | 85.02 | Vít Přindiš (CZE) | 89.46 | Felix Oschmautz (AUT) | 90.05 |
K1 women[18] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 96.22 | Viktoriia Us (UKR) | 98.91 | Elena Lilik (GER) | 98.92 |
Kayak cross men[19] | Joseph Clarke (GBR) | Anatole Delassus (FRA) | Stefan Hengst (GER) | |||
Kayak cross women[20] | Veronika Vojtová (CZE) | Eva Terčelj (SLO) | Jessica Fox (AUS) |
31 August – 3 September in La Seu, Spain
Event | Gold | Score | Silver | Score | Bronze | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 men[21] | Raffaello Ivaldi (ITA) | 96.52 | Luka Božič (SLO) | 97.53 | Marko Mirgorodský (SVK) | 97.63 |
C1 women[22] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 107.09 | Andrea Herzog (GER) | 107.17 | Kimberley Woods (GBR) | 109.02 |
K1 men[23] | Peter Kauzer (SLO) | 89.36 | Joseph Clarke (GBR) | 90.44 | Vít Přindiš (CZE) | 90.90 |
K1 women[24] | Eliška Mintálová (SVK) | 99.36 | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 99.42 | Stefanie Horn (ITA) | 100.23 |
Kayak cross men[25] | Jan Rohrer (SUI) | Joseph Clarke (GBR) | Anatole Delassus (FRA) | |||
Kayak cross women[26] | Elena Lilik (GER) | Kimberley Woods (GBR) | Ricarda Funk (GER) |
5–8 October in Vaires-sur-Marne, France. This was the first major international competition on the new course built for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. The competition format mimicked that which would be used at the Olympics, i.e. different from regular World Cup events. With the number of participants that meant top 24 boats progressing to the semifinals from the heats (best of 2 runs) and then top 12 to the finals in the classic slalom events. The kayak cross events included repechage rounds.[2]
Event | Gold | Score | Silver | Score | Bronze | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C1 men[27] | Raffaello Ivaldi (ITA) | 95.50 | Franz Anton (GER) | 96.18 | Miquel Travé (ESP) | 96.83 |
C1 women[28] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 106.04 | Gabriela Satková (CZE) | 110.08 | Mallory Franklin (GBR) | 111.97 |
K1 men[29] | Titouan Castryck (FRA) | 89.20 | Vít Přindiš (CZE) Jonny Dickson (GBR) | 91.78 | - | |
K1 women[30] | Jessica Fox (AUS) | 100.78 | Corinna Kuhnle (AUT) | 102.37 | Klaudia Zwolińska (POL) | 102.73 |
Kayak cross men[31] | Boris Neveu (FRA) | Finn Butcher (NZL) | Felix Oschmautz (AUT) | |||
Kayak cross women[32] | Luuka Jones (NZL) | Kimberley Woods (GBR) | Jessica Fox (AUS) |
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