2015 ICF World Championships Slalom
 
1
2
3
K1M
CZ J. PRSKAVEC
PL M. POLACZYK
US M. SMOLEN
K1W
CZ K. KUDEJOVA
DE R. FUNK
DE M. PFEIFER
C1M
GB D. FLORENCE
SI B. SAVSEK
GB R. WESTLEY
C1W
AU J. FOX
CZ K. HOSKOVA
ES N. VILARRUBLA
C2
DE ANTON/BENZIEN
FR PICCO/BISO
FR KLAUSS/PECHE

Canoe Slalom

Articles

Hochshorners, Lefèvre/Gargaud make history at Slalom Worlds

The wind may have delayed by two days the start of the 2011 International Canoe Federation Slalom World Championships but it couldn't dampen the fan enthusiasm or quell the excitement as officials crammed a five-day schedule into three action-packed days.

Excitement was ratcheted up by the fact these Worlds also served as an important Olympic qualification event.

Highlights from the event were many including two especially historic achievements. Under the glare of the media spotlight and the high hopes of their hometown fans, Slovakia's beloved C2 Men's Team, Peter and Pavol Hochschorner won an unprecedented fifth World title, their fourth in a row. 

The momentous achievement inspired a crack in the brothers' usually stoic demeanor as they smiled broadly and raised their hands over their heads as they crossed the finish line.

Also sharing in this weekend's spotlight were Frenchmen Fabien Lefèvre and Denis Gargaud Chanut who swept up a fistful of shiny new medals as the two men combined to take home six medals in three disciplines. Yesterday, during the first final of these Championships, Lefevre and Gargaud teamed to win Silver in Men's C2. Then today the duo followed it up with more hardware. Lefèvre won bronze in K1 Men, then Gargaud won Gold in C1 Men. Climbing once again into their two-man boat at the end of the day, the duo won the C2 Men's Team event, then Lefèvre earned Silver in the K1 Team Event. Gargaud finished just out of the medals in his C2 Team event, settling for fourth.

Another headline maker from this week's event was the fresh faces that took home medals in the C1 Men's event. For the first time since 1993 neither Tony Estanguet or Michal Martikan took to the podium on the World stage. Estanguet was stopped at the semi and Martikan stunned adoring Slovakian fans by finishing in seventh. Instead a new trio served notice that they think it could be time for a change of guard. Joining the aforementioned Gargaud, was Germany's Nico Bettge taking home Silver while rising Slovakian star Matej Benus earned bronze. Gargaud said it's too early to discount the threat Estanguet and Martikan could still pose at next year's Olympics giving obvious respect to the the two legends.

Clearly the headliner in the women's contests was Corinna Kuhnle who not only defended her title but did so in convincing style, powering across the finish line a full 3.28 seconds ahead of a perfect run by Slovakia's Jana Dukatova. Kuhnle's time of 110.05, included a 2-second penalty, causing more than a few slalom insiders to remark that Kuhnle is in a league of her own.

Highlights from other divisions.

K1 Men - Peter Kauzer (SLO) reclaimed the title Daniele Molmenti took from him last year setting up the possibility for the continuation of the rivalry in London next year. Kauzer was joined in the medals ceremony by Mateusz Polaczyk (POL), earning his first-ever individual medal at a World Championships. Bronze was earned by Lefèvre, as mentioned above.

C1 Women - The second-ever Gold medal fittingly was awarded to the only finalist to have a clean run on the way to the finish line. Katerina Hoskova, who won a K1 Under-23 World title on this course a few years ago, was all smiles to take Gold home again, this time in a different class.

As proof of the evolution of the sport, all ten of today's C1 Women's finalists earned a shot at a medal by being free of 50-point penalties; not the case last year. Unfortunately 50s reared their ugly head again in the final, dousing the medal hopes of three pioneering athletes.