2011 Canoe Slalom World Cup

The 2011 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of four races in 5 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 24th edition.

Calendar

The series opened with World Cup Race 1 in Tacen, Slovenia (June 24–26) and ended with the World Cup Final in Prague, Czech Republic (August 12–14). The World Cup Final held a special status as the tie-breaker.

Label Venue Date
World Cup Race 1 Tacen 24–26 June
World Cup Race 2 L'Argentière-la-Bessée 1–3 July
World Cup Race 3 Markkleeberg 8–10 July
World Cup Final Prague 12–14 August

Final standings

The winner of each race was awarded 60 points. 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 run.[1] If two or more athletes or boats had the same number of points at the end of the series, the athletes or boats with the better result in the World Cup Final were awarded the higher position.

C1 men

Pos Athlete Points[2]
1 Stanislav Ježek (CZE)172
2 Matej Beňuš (SVK)172
3 Alexander Slafkovský (SVK)154
4 Denis Gargaud Chanut (FRA)131
5 Nicolas Peschier (FRA)126
6 Benjamin Savšek (SLO)126
7 Grzegorz Kiljanek (POL)119
8 Jan Benzien (GER)118
9 Christos Tsakmakis (GRE)115
10 Tomáš Indruch (CZE)111

C1 women

Pos Athlete Points[2]
1 Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS)225
2 Leanne Guinea (AUS)189
3 Katarína Macová (SVK)173
4 Kateřina Hošková (CZE)146
5 Caroline Loir (FRA)128
6 Jessica Fox (AUS)120
7 Mallory Franklin (GBR)117
8 Lena Stöcklin (GER)105
9 Teng Qianqian (CHN)84
10 Oriane Rebours (FRA)84

C2 men

Pos Athletes Points[2]
1 Pavol Hochschorner/Peter Hochschorner (SVK)170
2 Gauthier Klauss/Matthieu Péché (FRA)150
3 Tomáš Koplík/Jakub Vrzáň (CZE)143
4 Ladislav Škantár/Peter Škantár (SVK)141
5 Sašo Taljat/Luka Božič (SLO)138
6 Piotr Szczepański/Marcin Pochwała (POL)130
7 Pierre Labarelle/Nicolas Peschier (FRA)118
8 Mathieu Fougere/Thomas Fougere (FRA)112
9 Hugo Biso/Pierre Picco (FRA)107
10 Andrea Benetti/Erik Masoero (ITA)106

K1 men

Pos Athlete Points[2]
1 Peter Kauzer (SLO)177
2 Vavřinec Hradilek (CZE)176
3 Daniele Molmenti (ITA)163
4 Dariusz Popiela (POL)145
5 Jure Meglič (SLO)143
6 Sebastian Schubert (GER)126
7 Luboš Hilgert (CZE)123
8 Jiří Prskavec (CZE)115
9 Pierre Bourliaud (FRA)114
10 Scott Parsons (USA)107

K1 women

Pos Athlete Points[2]
1 Jana Dukátová (SVK)217
2 Dana Mann (SVK)174
3 Corinna Kuhnle (AUT)163
4 Melanie Pfeifer (GER)150
5 Irena Pavelková (CZE)133
6 Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)125
7 Eva Terčelj (SLO)118
8 Claudia Bär (GER)107
9 Kateřina Kudějová (CZE)106
10 Maialen Chourraut (ESP)105

Results

World Cup Race 1

The series opener took place in Tacen, Slovenia on June 24–26. The five gold medals went to five different countries. Slovakia was the most successful country with a gold, a silver and three bronzes. The home nation won 3 medals, one of each color.[3]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  David Florence (GBR)100.85  Stanislav Ježek (CZE)101.24  Alexander Slafkovský (SVK)101.48
C1 women  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS)126.44  Leanne Guinea (AUS)126.75  Katarína Macová (SVK)138.14
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
104.89  France
Hugo Biso
Pierre Picco
107.58  Slovakia
Ladislav Škantár
Peter Škantár
107.97
K1 men  Peter Kauzer (SLO)95.48  Jure Meglič (SLO)98.81  Sebastian Schubert (GER)99.57
K1 women  Melanie Pfeifer (GER)108.14  Dana Mann (SVK)108.66  Urša Kragelj (SLO)109.51

World Cup Race 2

The second race of the series took place in L'Argentière-la-Bessée, France on July 1–3. Slovakia was again the most successful country with 2 golds. The home team of France won one gold and one bronze medal.[4]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Matej Beňuš (SVK)111.65  Ander Elosegi (ESP)113.37  Stanislav Ježek (CZE)114.12
C1 women  Jessica Fox (AUS)136.62  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS)139.48  Leanne Guinea (AUS)}146.62
C2 men  France
Gauthier Klauss
Matthieu Péché
116.68  Slovenia
Sašo Taljat
Luka Božič
117.01  France
Hugo Biso
Pierre Picco
117.55
K1 men  Peter Kauzer (SLO)108.03  Samuel Hernanz (ESP)108.28  Luboš Hilgert (CZE)109.14
K1 women  Jana Dukátová (SVK)118.32  Maialen Chourraut (ESP)119.59  Kateřina Kudějová (CZE)119.73

World Cup Race 3

The penultimate race of the series took place in Markkleeberg, Germany on July 8–10. Michal Martikán and Tony Estanguet made their only appearance in the 2011 world cup season here. Slovakia won the medal table for the third consecutive time with three golds. Germany won one silver medal on home water.[5]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK)101.46  Jan Benzien (GER)102.68  Tony Estanguet (FRA)103.64
C1 women  Jessica Fox (AUS)136.20  Caroline Loir (FRA)141.39  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS)143.26
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
114.29  France
Pierre Labarelle
Nicolas Peschier
115.75  Poland
Piotr Szczepański
Marcin Pochwała
115.91
K1 men  Pierre Bourliaud (FRA)97.58  Boris Neveu (FRA)97.85  Dariusz Popiela (POL)99.67
K1 women  Jana Dukátová (SVK)111.17  Corinna Kuhnle (AUT)114.37  Maialen Chourraut (ESP)115.21

World Cup Final

The World Cup Final took place in Prague, Czech Republic on August 12–14. The overall world cup winners for 2011 were determined here. Slovakia took the medal table for the fourth consecutive time with two golds and a silver. The home Czech paddlers managed to win one gold and two silvers.[6]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Alexander Slafkovský (SVK)94.85  Denis Gargaud Chanut (FRA)94.93  David Florence (GBR)96.50
C1 women  Rosalyn Lawrence (AUS)118.10  Kateřina Hošková (CZE)121.20  Caroline Loir (FRA)128.77
C2 men  Slovenia
Sašo Taljat
Luka Božič
100.86  Czech Republic
Tomáš Koplík
Jakub Vrzáň
102.99  United Kingdom
David Florence
Richard Hounslow
103.34
K1 men  Vavřinec Hradilek (CZE)88.60  Daniele Molmenti (ITA)88.65  Peter Kauzer (SLO)90.02
K1 women  Elena Kaliská (SVK)105.59  Jana Dukátová (SVK)106.04  Marta Kharitonova (RUS)106.71
gollark: I vote that we abolish time and thus months and years.
gollark: As a person, I propose that your ignorance of the opinion is ignored.
gollark: No. No groups should randomly be allowed to claim entire years. Months is bad enough, but we have even fewer years available.
gollark: "Mental state" is a very general term.
gollark: I'm not sure what "mental state" is supposed to mean, but arguably that's one of the more reasonable things to discriminate based on, given that that's at least partly controlled by the person in question and maybe includes stuff like "being annoying/trolly".

References

  1. World Cup Points Allocation System Archived 2011-01-21 at the Wayback Machine - accessed September 27, 2011
  2. "ICF CANOE SLALOM WORLD CUP SERIES STANDINGS 2011" (PDF). CanoeICF.com. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  3. "Official results - World Cup Race 1" (PDF). Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  4. "Official results - World Cup Race 2" (PDF). Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  5. "Official results - World Cup Race 3" (PDF). Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  6. "Official results - World Cup Race Final" (PDF). Retrieved 3 December 2017.
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