2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships

Canoe slalom event in Tacen, Slovenia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships were held 8–12 September 2010 at Tacen Whitewater Course, Slovenia under the auspices of International Canoe Federation for the record-tying third time. It was the 33rd edition. Tacen hosted the event previously in 1955 and 1991 when it was part of Yugoslavia, and joins the following cities that have hosted the event three times: Spittal, Austria (1963, 1965, and 1977); Meran, Italy (1953, 1971, and 1983); Bourg St.-Maurice, France (1969, 1987, and 2002); and Augsburg, Germany (1957, 1985, and 2003). Women's single canoe (C1W) events became a medal event after being an exhibition in the previous championships.

Logo of the 2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships.

Ten nations won medals at the championships, the most since the 2005 championships in Penrith. Slovakia was the big winner with five medals including three golds and two silvers. Men's canoe top medalists were Slovak Michal Martikán and France's Denis Gargaud Chanut and Fabien Lefèvre, each with two medals (one gold and one silver). Lefèvre became the first canoeist to medal in both canoe and kayak disciplines at the same championship while Jana Dukátová of Slovakia became the first woman to win gold in the C1 event and the first woman to medal in both canoe and kayak disciplines at the same championship. Dukátová won silver in the K1 women's event the day before. Italy's Daniele Molmenti won two medals in men's kayak with gold in K1 and bronze in K1 team.

Weather conditions forced schedule changes when flow from the River Sava increased water flow fivefold, resulting in course damage that delayed competition for nearly a day on 9 September.

Event's corporate images

The logo comprised elements connected to the sport and the event's organization.[1] Main motif of two paddles that made up the letter X, which was the Roman numeral for 10 which is for 2010.[1] It also is for the Roman Empire settlement of Emona, located in present-day Ljubljana, located near Tacen.[1] The paddles in the middle of the boat are not connected deliberately to communicate both canoeing and kayaking.[1]

Main motif is framed by a crest which comprises two lines.[1] The bottom line is a copy of the boat in the transverse section while the top line is a copy of the boat in the vertical section.[1] The crest carries a sense of nobility and that the sport in the past was connected with both townspeople and aristocrats along with environmental protection.[1] Waves shown flanking the crest link the event's organizer with the ICF.[1]

Short name

SLOKA has two names: SLalOm KAyak and Canoe Championships or SLOvene KAyak and canoe.[1] It is acceptable in foreign languages that does not contain any special Slovene characters.[1]

Slogan

The slogan Wild water, pure joy (Divja voda, čisti užitek is (in Slovene)) describes the essence of conquering the rapids refers to wild water and pleasure simultaneously.[1] This slogan is in green and blue that combines water pleasures and ecology.[1]

Mascot

The crawfish is a symbol of clean water and life in and around that water.[1] It is also an independent and distinctive character to enhance the story of motion and vivacity that also evokes positive motions.[1]

Schedule

This was the schedule listed as of 15 August 2010.[2] All times listed are CEST (UTC+2).[2]

More information Event date, Starting time ...
Event dateStarting timeEvent details
7 September16:00Official team leaders team meeting
20:00Opening ceremony
8 September10:00Demonstration run for heats
14:30Heats C2 and K1W
9 September10:00Heats C1M and C1W
15:00Heats K1M
20:00Reception for team leaders and officials
10 September10:00Heats team events in all categories
15:00Finals team events in all categories
16:40Medal ceremonies for team events
18:00Demonstration run for finals
20:00VIP and Team Leaders reception
11 September11:00Semifinals C2 and K1W
14:30Finals C2 and K1W
15:30Medals presentation C2 and K1W
12 September09:30Semifinals C1M, C1W, and K1M
14:30Finals C1M and C1W
15:25Medal ceremony C1M and C1W
15:35Finals K1M
16:10Medal ceremony for K1M
16:30Closing ceremony
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K1 heats for 9 September were postponed due to the River Sava water flows exceeding 250 m3/s (8,800 cu ft/s). K1 heats were moved to 10 September at 14:30.[3] Two days earlier, the schedule was also revised for all individual events to flow along the river rising from a level of 50 to 250 m3/s (1,800 to 8,800 cu ft/s).[4]

A revised schedule was issued on 10 September. The C1W team event was canceled as a result of the schedule change.[5]

More information Event date, Starting time ...
Event dateStarting timeEvent details
10 September11:00Team leaders meeting
14:30Heats K1M
16:40Officials meeting
20:00VIP and Team Leaders reception
11 September11:00Semifinals C2 and K1W
14:30Finals C2 and K1W
15:30Medals presentation C2 and K1W
16:30Team finals C2 and K1W
17:30Medals presentation team C2 and K1W
12 September09:30Semifinals C1M, C1W, and K1M
14:30Finals C1M, C1W, and K1M
16:00Medal presentation C1W
16:30Team finals C1M and K1M
17:45Medal presentation C1M, K1M
18:00Medal presentation team C1M, K1M
18:17Closing ceremony
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Medal summary

Men's

Canoe

Kayak

More information Event, Gold ...
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Women's

Canoe

More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Points Silver Points Bronze Points
C1[12]  Jana Dukátová (SVK)125.71  Leanne Guinea (AUS)131.90  Jessica Fox (AUS)134.18
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Kayak

More information Event, Gold ...
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Medal table

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Slovakia (SVK)3205
2 France (FRA)2204
3 Czech Republic (CZE)1214
 Germany (GER)1214
5 Austria (AUT)1012
 Italy (ITA)1012
7 Australia (AUS)0112
8 Slovenia (SLO)0022
9 Great Britain (GBR)0011
 Spain (ESP)0011
Totals (10 entries)99927
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References

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