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The women's KL2 competition at the 2016 ICF Paracanoe World Championships took place in Duisburg.[1]
Women's KL2 at the 2016 ICF Paracanoe World Championships | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Location | Duisburg, Germany | |||||||||
Dates | 17–19 May | |||||||||
Competitors | 17 from 12 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 53.691 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
The schedule was as follows:[2]
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Tuesday 17 May 2016 | 14:50 | Heats |
Wednesday 18 May 2016 | 11:15 | Semifinal |
Thursday 19 May 2016 | 11:10 | Final |
All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
The fastest three boats in each heat advanced directly to the final. The next four fastest boats in each heat, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the semifinal.[3][4]
Rank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Emma Wiggs | Great Britain | 51.696 | QF |
2 | Susan Seipel | Australia | 54.779 | QF |
3 | Nadezda Andreeva | Russia | 55.214 | QF |
4 | Wang Danqin | China | 55.763 | QS |
5 | Alana Nichols | United States | 1:00.506 | QS |
6 | Debora Benevides | Brazil | 1:01.718 | QS |
7 | Pascale Bercovitch | Israel | 1:02.051 | QS |
8 | Shao Shasha | China | 1:12.321 | qS |
9 | Monica Taylor | United States | 1:14.504 |
Rank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nicola Paterson | Great Britain | 56.431 | QF |
2 | Christine Gauthier | Canada | 57.500 | QF |
3 | Nataliia Lagutenko | Ukraine | 57.587 | QF |
4 | Rimma Egorkina | Russia | 1:00.163 | QS |
5 | Anke Molkenthin | Germany | 1:01.357 | QS |
6 | Brenda Sardón | Argentina | 1:05.778 | QS |
7 | Wang Chen | China | 1:39.046 | QS |
– | Katalin Varga | Hungary | SO |
The fastest three boats advanced to the final.[5]
Rank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wang Danqin | China | 54.380 | QF |
2 | Rimma Egorkina | Russia | 55.631 | QF |
3 | Alana Nichols | United States | 56.246 | QF |
4 | Debora Benevides | Brazil | 58.091 | |
5 | Anke Molkenthin | Germany | 58.189 | |
6 | Brenda Sardón | Argentina | 59.904 | |
7 | Pascale Bercovitch | Israel | 1:03.857 | |
8 | Wang Chen | China | 1:25.159 | |
– | Shao Shasha | China | SO |
Competitors raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.[6]
Rank | Name | Country | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Emma Wiggs | Great Britain | 53.691 | |
Nicola Paterson | Great Britain | 56.533 | |
Susan Seipel | Australia | 57.032 | |
4 | Nadezda Andreeva | Russia | 57.726 |
5 | Christine Gauthier | Canada | 57.751 |
6 | Wang Danqin | China | 58.575 |
7 | Rimma Egorkina | Russia | 59.281 |
8 | Alana Nichols | United States | 1:00.647 |
9 | Nataliia Lagutenko | Ukraine | 1:01.256 |
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