2010 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships


The 2010 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships were held 19–22 August 2010 in Poznań, Poland, on Lake Malta. This is the third time that the Polish city will host the championships, having done so previously in 1990 and 2001. Paracanoe and the women's C-1 200 m events that were exhibition events at the previous world championships in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada, became official events at these championships.
Germany and Hungary won the most medals at the championships with twelve each though the Hungarians won six golds, the most of the championships, compared to the Germans' five golds. Brazil, Japan and Tahiti won their first ever championship medals. Ronald Rauhe of Germany became the winningest medalist in men's kayak with his 21st career medal, earning that in a K-1 200 m silver. Rauhe eclipsed that record he had tied at the previous championships with fellow German Torsten Gutsche. In women's kayak, Hungary's Katalin Kovács tied Germany's Birgit Fischer for most career medals with 38 with three medals earned though Kovács 29th gold passed Fischer's 28 career golds. For the first time since 1975, a tie occurred in the medals only this time it was for the bronze in the C-1 200 m event between Canada's Richard Dalton and Ukraine's Yuriy Cheban. Canada also won the first gold medal in women's canoe with Laurence Vincent-Lapointe winning gold. Paracanoe's big winners were Brazil and Canada with three medals each.

Explanation of events

competitions are broken up into Canadian canoe, an open canoe with a single-blade paddle, or in kayaks, a closed canoe with a double-bladed paddle. Each canoe or kayak can hold one person, two people, or four people. For each of the specific canoes or kayaks, such as a K-1, the competition distances can be,, or long. When a competition is listed as a C-2 500 m event as an example, it means two people are in a canoe competing at a distance.

Preliminaries to the event

Poznań was awarded the 2010 championships at an ICF board of directors meeting in Madrid, Spain, on 23 October 2003.

Event format changes

At the 2009 ICF board of directors meeting in Windsor, Berkshire, England, women's C-1 200 m was added for these championships while women's C-2 500 m will remain a demonstration event like it had the previous championships. The relay events, started at the previous championships, and 5000 m events, included for the first time since their discontinuation after the 1993 championships in Copenhagen, will also occur. Paracanoe will have four events covering three classifications with LTA, TA, and A. The events were confirmed following successes at the previous world championships on 18 December 2009. The schedule for the championships was released on 10 June 2010.

Visit from the ICF

During the week of 1 March 2010, the ICF visited Lake Malta to meet with the Host Organizing Committee to see how event preparations were progressing. Some items discussed were broadcasting, event promotion, athlete services, and communications. 2.5 hours of live television coverage on a daily basis is planned for the semifinal and final event as provided in the contract to meet the needs of the European market. 61 million people watched last year's championships in Canada. ICF Secretary General Simon Toulson expressed his support of the HOC and his hope that the 2010 championships will be a good one.

Event progress

After opening ceremonies on the 18th, the first round of events took place on the 19th with 1000 m events completing their heats and the semifinals. Paracanoe heats were suspended later that day to high winds and weather conditions.

Participating nations

75 nations were listed on the preliminary entry list. The numbers in parentheses shown are for those who competed for each respective nation.
Russia had the most overall attendees with 42.
The media guide listed 75 nations as participating, but four nations listed did not compete.

Results

Men's

Non-Olympic classes

Canoe

Russia won the most medals with four. The people with the most medals were two with Ivan Shtyl, Alexandru Dumitrescu, Victo Mihalachi, Vadim Menkov, Dzianis Harasha, Ronald Verch, and Paweł Baraszkiewicz. For the second time in the history of the championships, a tie occurred for a medal in the C-1 200 m bronze between Canada's Richard Dalton and Ukraine's Yuriy Cheban. The first occurred thirty-five years earlier, in the K-1 1000 m gold between Italy's Oreste Perri and Poland's Grzegorz Śledziewski.
EventHeatsSemifinalsFinalGoldTimeSilverTimeBronzeTime
C-1 200 m21 August21 August22 August39.16139.729
39.953
C-1 500 m20 August20 August22 August1:47.7011:48.3171:48.457
C-1 1000 m19 August19 August21 August3:51.7213:51.9213:53.837
C-1 5000 mNANA21 August23:24.34223:26.39823:38.070
C-1 4 × 200 m relay22 AugustNA22 August
Ivan Shtyl
Mikhail Pavlov
Nikolay Lipkin
Evgeny Ignatov
2:48.143
Oleksandr Maksymchuk
Yuriy Cheban
Stanislav Shymansky
Vyacheslav Tsekhosh
2:50.675
Adam Ginter
Roman Rynkiewicz
Mariusz Kruk
Paweł Baraszkiewicz
2:51.059
C-2 200 m21 August21 August22 August
Raimundas Labuckas
Tomas Gadeikis
36.019
Evgeny Ignatov
Ivan Shtyl
36.411
Paweł Skowroński
Paweł Baraszkiewicz
36.551
C-2 500 m20 August20 August22 August
Alexandru Dumitrescu
Victor Mihalachi
1:40.781
Sergiy Bezugliy
Maksym Prokopenko
1:41.277
Pavel Petrov
Alexander Kostogold
1:41.345
C-2 1000 m19 August19 August21 August
Alexandru Dumitrescu
Victor Mihalachi
3:37.317
Andrei Bahdanovich
Aliaksandr Bahdanovich
3:37.325
Márton Tóth
Róbert Mike
3:38.057
C-4 1000 m19 August19 August21 August
Dzmitry Rabchanka
Dzmitry Vaitsishkin
Dzianis Harasha
Aliaksandr Vauchetski
3:18.724
Gabriel Gheoca
Nicolae Bogdan
Mihail Simon
Florin Comanici
3:20.548
Chris Wend
Tomasz Wylenzek
Ronald Verch
Erik Rebstock
3:20.616

Kayak

Germany and Great Britain were the big medal winners with four each. Germany won the most golds with two. Ronald Rauhe won his record twenty-first world championship medal, eclipsing the record he tied last year with fellow German Torsten Gutsche. Ten canoeists each won two medals from five different countries.
EventHeatsSemifinalsFinalGoldTimeSilverTimeBronzeTime
K-1 200 m21 August21 August22 August34.80735.15535.195
K-1 500 m20 August20 August22 August1:38.4571:38.9611:39.005
K-1 1000 m19 August19 August21 August3:29.5443:30.0403:30.128
K-1 5000 mNANA21 August20:01.33820:03.57420:06.670
K-1 4 × 200 m relay22 AugustNA22 August
Saúl Craviotto
Francisco Llera
Pablo Andres
Carlos Pérez
2:27.409
Edward McKeever
Jon Schofield
Liam Heath
Edward Cox
2:27.897
Viktor Zavolskiy
Alexander Dyachenko
Yevgeny Salakhov
Alexander Nikolaev
2:28.753
K-2 200 m21 August21 August22 August
Arnaud Hybois
Sébastien Jouve
31.532
Saúl Craviotto
Carlos Pérez
31.540
Liam Heath
Jon Schofield
31.584
K-2 500 m20 August20 August22 August
Raman Piatrushenka
Vadzim Makhneu
1:29.230
Fernando Pimenta
João Ribeiro
1:29.970
Dusko Stanojević
Dejan Pajić
1:30.418
K-2 1000 m19 August19 August21 August
Martin Hollstein
Andreas Ihle
3:13.024
Zoltán Kammerer
Ákos Vereckei
3:13.204
Ilya Medvedev
Anton Ryakhov
3:15.736
K-4 1000m19 August19 August21 August
Arnaud Hybois
Étienne Hubert
Sébastien Jouve
Philippe Colin
2:54.103
Raman Piatrushenka
Aliaksei Abalmasau
Artur Litvinchuk
Vadzim Makhneu
2:55.843
Ondřej Horský
Jan Souček
Daniel Havel
Jan Štěrba
2:56.023

Women's

Non-Olympic classes

Canoe

The first women's event was won by Canada's Laurence Vincent-Lapointe.
EventHeatsSemifinalsFinalGoldTimeSilverTimeBronzeTime
C-1 200 m21 August21 August22 August48.18848.99251.724

Kayak

Hungary was the big medal winner, medaling in all nine events including six golds. The big individual winner was Natasa Janics of Hungary with five. Her teammate Katalin Kovács, won three medals to bring her career total to 38, matching that of Germany's Birgit Fischer though Kovacs did break Fischer's career gold medal count to 29, eclipsing Fischer's 28. Japan earned their first medal at the championships with Shinobu Kitamoto's bronze in the K-1 200 m event. Rachel Cawthorn became the first British woman to medal at the championships with her bronze in the K-1 500 m event.
EventHeatsSemifinalsFinalGoldTimeSilverTimeBronzeTime
K-1 200 m21 August21 August22 August40.18140.79740.917
K-1 500 m20 August20 August22 August1:50.4611:50.6251:50.929
K-1 1000 m19 August19 August21 August3:57.5444:00.1244:00.280
K-1 5000 mNANA21 August22:44.92722:53.07923:07.683
K-1 4 × 200 m relay22 AugustNA22 August
Nicole Reinhardt
Conny Waßmuth
Tina Dietze
Katrin Wagner-Augustin
2:50.315
Nataša Janić
Zomilla Hegyi
Ninetta Vad
Tímea Paksy
2:52.211
Natalia Lobova
Anastasia Sergeeva
Natalia Proskurina
Anastasia Panchenko
2:52.959
K-2 200 m21 August21 August22 August
Katalin Kovács
Nataša Janić
36.886
Marta Walczykiewicz
Ewelina Wojnarowska
37.766
Ivana Kmeťová
Martina Kohlová
37.778
K-2 500 m20 August20 August22 August
Gabriella Szabó
Danuta Kozák
1:40.064
Juliana Salakhova
Anastasia Sergeeva
1:41.628
Yvonne Schuring
Viktoria Schwarz
1:42.684
K-2 1000 m19 August19 August21 August
Gabriella Szabó
Tamara Csipes
3:34.306
Carolin Leonhardt
Silke Hörmann
3:37.426
Juliana Salakhova
Anastasia Sergeeva
3:37.554
K-4 500 m20 August20 August22 August
Nataša Janić
Tamara Csipes
Katalin Kovács
Dalma Benedek
1:31.607
Fanny Fischer
Nicole Reinhardt
Katrin Wagner-Augustin
Tina Dietze
1:32.795
Karolina Naja
Aneta Konieczna
Sandra Pawelczak
Magdalena Krukowska
1:33.815

Paracanoe

Italy won the most medals with four though none of them were gold. Canada and Brazil each won two golds and three overall. All three of Brazil's medals were the first in the history of the world championships. Tahiti's Patrick Viriamu became the first medalist from his country at the world championships as well.
EventHeatsSemifinalsFinalsGoldTimeSilverTimeBronzeTime
Men's K-1 200 m ANANA20 August56.1511:06.2151:07.179
Men's K-1 200 m LTA19 AugustNA20 August44.17644.44845.440
Men's K-1 200 m TANANA20 August44.61753.43756.281
Men's V-1 200 m LTA, TA, A19 AugustNA20 August54.91857.0461:00.918
Women's K-1 200 m LTANANA20 August53.1901:04.3341:04.346
Women's K-1 200 m TANANA20 August1:02.9421:04.5341:06.090
Women's V-1 200 m LTA, TA, ANANA20 August1:12.0961:12.5201:20.444

Exhibition

Women's canoe

Medal table

Shown for the non-exhibition events only.
Source: – from official website. Retrieved 22 August 2010.