The 1997 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of five races in 4 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 10th edition. The series consisted of 4 regular world cup races and the world cup final.

Calendar

Label Venue Date
World Cup Race 1 France Bourg-Saint-Maurice 21–22 June
World Cup Race 2 Sweden Björbo 28–29 June
World Cup Race 3 Slovakia Bratislava 4–6 July
World Cup Race 4 United States Ocoee 27–28 July
World Cup Final Canada Minden 2–3 August

Final standings

The winner of each world cup race in the men's K1 was awarded 30 points while in the other three categories the winner was awarded 25 points. The points scale reached down to 1 point for 20th place in the men's K1 (15th place in the other three categories). Only the best two results of each athlete from the first 4 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 Patrice Estanguet (FRA)65
2 David Hearn (USA)50
3 Gareth Marriott (GBR)44
4 Michal Martikán (SVK)37
5 Stanislav Ježek (CZE)36
6 Tony Estanguet (FRA)33
7 Hervé Delamarre (FRA)32
8 Yves Narduzzi (FRA)31
9 Gregor Terdič (SLO)27
10 David Jančar (CZE)25

C2 men

Pos Athletes Points[1]
1 Frank Adisson/Wilfrid Forgues (FRA)62
2 Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder (CZE)60
3 Miroslav Šimek/Jiří Rohan (CZE)60
4 Éric Biau/Bertrand Daille (FRA)41
5 Roman Štrba/Roman Vajs (SVK)32
6 Jérôme Daille/Nil Georgel (FRA)27
7 François Letourneau/Benoît Gauthier (CAN)26
8 Stuart Bowman/Nick Smith (GBR)17
9 Thierry Saidi/Emmanuel del Rey (FRA)17
10 Luke Moore/Fred Coriell (USA)12

K1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Scott Shipley (USA)75
2 Ian Wiley (IRL)70
3 Thomas Becker (GER)70
4 Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)68
5 Manuel Köhler (AUT)58
6 David Ford (CAN)49
7 Fedja Marušič (SLO)45
8 Shaun Pearce (GBR)42
9 Peter Nagy (SVK)40
10 Jochen Lettmann (GER)35

K1 women

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Irena Pavelková (CZE)65
2 Cristina Giai Pron (ITA)49
3 Cathy Hearn (USA)45
4 Brigitte Guibal (FRA)41
5 Lynn Simpson (GBR)39
6 Heather Corrie (GBR)37
7 Anne Boixel (FRA)36
8 Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)30
9 Anouk Loubie (FRA)23
10 Kara Weld (USA)21

Results

World Cup Race 1

The first world cup race of the season took place in Bourg-Saint-Maurice, France from 21 to 22 June.[2]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)  David Hearn (USA)  Danko Herceg (CRO)
C2 men  France
Frank Adisson
Wilfrid Forgues
 Czech Republic
Miroslav Šimek
Jiří Rohan
 Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
K1 men  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)  Thomas Becker (GER)  Fedja Marušič (SLO)
K1 women  Anne Boixel (FRA)  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)  Irena Pavelková (CZE)

World Cup Race 2

The second world cup race of the season took place in Björbo, Sweden from 28 to 29 June.[3]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Hervé Delamarre (FRA)224.28  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)224.86  Yves Narduzzi (FRA)231.55
C2 men  Poland
Krzysztof Kołomański
Michał Staniszewski
232.94  France
Frank Adisson
Wilfrid Forgues
232.99  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
235.18
K1 men  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)203.95  Shaun Pearce (GBR)207.08  Scott Shipley (USA)208.32
K1 women  Cristina Giai Pron (ITA)249.57  Cathy Hearn (USA)249.64  Margaret Langford (CAN)250.57

World Cup Race 3

The third world cup race of the season took place at the Čunovo Water Sports Centre, Slovakia from 4 to 6 July.[4]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK)241.17  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)241.27  Martin Lang (GER)253.89
C2 men  Slovakia
Milan Kubáň
Marián Olejník
259.29  Czech Republic
Miroslav Šimek
Jiří Rohan
264.96  Slovakia
Ľuboš Šoška
Peter Šoška
270.00
K1 men  Manuel Köhler (AUT)232.70  Thomas Becker (GER)234.52  Fedja Marušič (SLO)234.72
K1 women  Lynn Simpson (GBR)269.41  Irena Pavelková (CZE)273.34  Kordula Striepecke (GER)278.96

World Cup Race 4

The fourth world cup race of the season took place at the Ocoee Whitewater Center, Tennessee from 27 to 28 July.[5]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Gareth Marriott (GBR)291.38  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)297.07  David Hearn (USA)299.40
C2 men  France
Frank Adisson
Wilfrid Forgues
302.88  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
304.27  France
Éric Biau
Bertrand Daille
305.47
K1 men  Ian Wiley (IRL)271.10  Scott Shipley (USA)273.30  Ludovic Boulesteix (FRA)278.23
K1 women  Brigitte Guibal (FRA)314.96  Irena Pavelková (CZE)324.56  Cristina Giai Pron (ITA)329.65

World Cup Final

The final world cup race of the season took place at the Minden Wild Water Preserve, Ontario from 2 to 3 August.[6]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA)242.41  Patrice Estanguet (FRA)242.50  David Hearn (USA)242.75
C2 men  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
251.83  Czech Republic
Miroslav Šimek
Jiří Rohan
254.81  France
Éric Biau
Bertrand Daille
259.99
K1 men  Scott Shipley (USA)224.83  Ian Wiley (IRL)227.61  Thomas Becker (GER)231.15
K1 women  Irena Pavelková (CZE)265.26  Heather Corrie (GBR)270.52  Cathy Hearn (USA)283.66

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 1997 World Cup standings Final Results - accessed December 28, 2011
  2. Results - World Cup Race 1 - accessed December 31, 2011
  3. "Official results - World Cup Race 2" (PDF). Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  4. "Official results - World Cup Race 3" (PDF). Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  5. Results - World Cup Race 4 - accessed January 14, 2012
  6. Results - World Cup Final - accessed January 14, 2012
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.