2000 Canoe Slalom World Cup

The 2000 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of six races in 4 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 13th edition. The series consisted of 5 regular world cup races and the world cup final.

Calendar

Label Venue Date
World Cup Race 1 Penrith 29–30 April
World Cup Race 2 Ocoee 17–18 June
World Cup Race 3 Saint-Pé-de-Bigorre 1–2 July
World Cup Race 4 La Seu d'Urgell 8–9 July
World Cup Race 5 Prague 21–23 July
World Cup Final Augsburg 29–30 July

Final standings

The winner of each world cup race was awarded 30 points. The points scale reached down to 1 point for 20th place in the men's K1, while in the other three categories only the top 15 received points (with 6 points for 15th place). Only the best two results of each athlete from the first 5 world cups plus the result from the world cup final counted for the final world cup standings. Furthermore, an athlete or boat had to compete in the world cup final in order to be classified in the world cup rankings. If two or more athletes or boats were equal on points, the ranking was determined by their positions in the World Cup Final.[1]

C1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Michal Martikán (SVK)85
2 Juraj Minčík (SVK)80
3 Patrice Estanguet (FRA)70
4 Stuart McIntosh (GBR)54
5 Sören Kaufmann (GER)48
6 Mariusz Wieczorek (POL)41
7 Robin Bell (AUS)41
8 Stefan Pfannmöller (GER)37
9 David Hearn (USA)36
10 Dejan Stevanovič (SLO)35

C2 men

Pos Athletes Points[1]
1 Pavol Hochschorner/Peter Hochschorner (SVK)85
2 Krzysztof Kołomański/Michał Staniszewski (POL)75
3 André Ehrenberg/Michael Senft (GER)60
4 Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder (CZE)58
5 Andrzej Wójs/Sławomir Mordarski (POL)54
6 Kai Walter/Frank Henze (GER)49
7 Stuart Bowman/Nick Smith (GBR)46
8 Milan Kubáň/Marián Olejník (SVK)45
9 Christophe Luquet/Pierre Luquet (FRA)40
10 Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert (CZE)37

K1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)76
2 Scott Shipley (USA)67
3 Pierpaolo Ferrazzi (ITA)67
4 Helmut Oblinger (AUT)65
5 Eric Giddens (USA)53
6 Thomas Schmidt (GER)52
7 Thomas Becker (GER)46
8 Benoît Peschier (FRA)43
9 Floris Braat (NED)43
10 Christian Rickert (GER)40

K1 women

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Elena Kaliská (SVK)80
2 Mandy Planert (GER)80
3 Susanne Hirt (GER)60
4 Rebecca Giddens (USA)60
5 Marcela Sadilová (CZE)57
6 Gabriela Brosková (SVK)43
7 Gabriela Stacherová (SVK)42
8 Margaret Langford (CAN)41
9 Sandra Friedli (SUI)41
10 María Eizmendi (ESP)31

Results

World Cup Race 1

The first world cup race of the season took place at the Penrith Whitewater Stadium, Australia from 29 to 30 April.[2]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK)227.05  Juraj Minčík (SVK)229.47  Tony Estanguet (FRA)232.10
C2 men  France
Frank Adisson
Wilfrid Forgues
 Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
 Poland
Krzysztof Kołomański
Michał Staniszewski
K1 men  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)216.76  Pierpaolo Ferrazzi (ITA)218.90  Scott Shipley (USA)219.13
K1 women  Mandy Planert (GER)243.20  Elena Kaliská (SVK)243.92  Susanne Hirt (GER)249.31

World Cup Race 2

The second world cup race of the season took place at the Ocoee Whitewater Center, Tennessee from 17 to 18 June. The C2 event in Ocoee did not count for the world cup standings due to only 4 federations competing in the event.[1][3]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)242.94  Joe Jacobi (USA)258.79  Hervé Delamarre (FRA)266.34
C2 men
(no points awarded)[1]
 France
Philippe Quémerais
Yann Le Pennec
261.92  United States
Scott McCleskey
David Hepp
263.26  France
Christophe Luquet
Pierre Luquet
269.54
K1 men  Eric Giddens (USA)231.69  Jean-Yves Cheutin (FRA)233.13  Scott Parsons (USA)234.57
K1 women  Rebecca Giddens (USA)271.95  Susanne Hirt (GER)273.87  Anne-Lise Bardet (FRA)284.13

World Cup Race 3

The third world cup race of the season took place in Saint-Pé-de-Bigorre, France from 1 to 2 July.[4]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA)210.53  Emmanuel Brugvin (FRA)212.76  Sören Kaufmann (GER)215.84
C2 men  Poland
Krzysztof Kołomański
Michał Staniszewski
226.95  France
Frank Adisson
Wilfrid Forgues
 Poland
Andrzej Wójs
Sławomir Mordarski
232.53


232.53
-
K1 men  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)202.33  Helmut Oblinger (AUT)204.79  Thomas Schmidt (GER)204.80
K1 women  Brigitte Guibal (FRA)230.99  Mandy Planert (GER)232.43  Susanne Hirt (GER)233.47

World Cup Race 4

The fourth world cup race of the season took place at the Segre Olympic Park in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain from 8 to 9 July.[5]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK)203.73  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)204.07  Tony Estanguet (FRA)209.52
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
214.54  Poland
Krzysztof Kołomański
Michał Staniszewski
215.38  United Kingdom
Stuart Bowman
Nick Smith
219.30
K1 men  Floris Braat (NED)196.87  Helmut Oblinger (AUT)196.97  Manuel Köhler (AUT)198.49
K1 women  Rebecca Giddens (USA)215.99  Elena Kaliská (SVK)227.50  Brigitte Guibal (FRA)228.16

World Cup Race 5

The fifth world cup race of the season took place at the Prague-Troja Canoeing Centre, Czech Republic from 21 to 23 July.[6]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA)205.80  Juraj Minčík (SVK)208.28  Stuart McIntosh (GBR)209.16
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
219.37  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
222.75  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Volf
Ondřej Štěpánek
224.83
K1 men  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)200.12  Pierpaolo Ferrazzi (ITA)201.54  Mathias Röthenmund (SUI)202.17
K1 women  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)218.64  Mandy Planert (GER)222.92  Marcela Sadilová (CZE)226.36

World Cup Final

The final world cup race of the season took place at the Augsburg Eiskanal, Germany from 29 to 30 July.[7]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Juraj Minčík (SVK)207.54  Michal Martikán (SVK)208.04  Nico Bettge (GER)209.69
C2 men  Germany
André Ehrenberg
Michael Senft
217.13  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
217.62  Poland
Krzysztof Kołomański
Michał Staniszewski
218.71
K1 men  Scott Shipley (USA)193.06  Thomas Schmidt (GER)193.26  Thomas Becker (GER)195.35
K1 women  Elena Kaliská (SVK)220.16  Mandy Planert (GER)226.04  Marcela Sadilová (CZE)226.62
gollark: `BUY BUY BUY` - a retrospective of the gold bubble of 2018The Gold Crash was triggered by a crash in the price of golds after TJ09 probably broke something (it's either a feature or just an isolated incident). Previously very valuable "Gold" eggs became cheap, with nebulae (a previously cheap and common item) attaining incredible heights of price.
gollark: Brokenitude.
gollark: It's either a feature or an isolated incident, of course.
gollark: I mean, nebulae costing more than golds?
gollark: Honestly, no, that seems unlikely.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2000-10-19. Retrieved 2011-12-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  2. "Official results - World Cup Race 1" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  3. "Official results - World Cup Race 2" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  4. "Official results - World Cup Race 3" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  5. "Official results - World Cup Race 4" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  6. "Official results - World Cup Race 5" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  7. "Official results - World Cup Final" (PDF). Retrieved 18 September 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.