Tom Jenkins 

Paddles and medals: Canoe Slalom World Championships – photo essay

More than 300 of the world’s top canoeists and kayakers from five continents headed to Lee Valley, on the outskirts of north London, to compete on the white water rapids
  
  

Jessica Fox of Australia on her way to winning bronze in the women's canoe final.
Jessica Fox of Australia on her way to winning bronze in the women's canoe final. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

The Canoe Slalom World Championship returned to the Lee Valley White Water Centre in London last week for the first time since 2015. The venue was originally built for the 2012 London Olympic Games and many of this year’s competitors say the Games inspired them to pick up a paddle for the first time.

  • Tadeusz Kuchno of Poland battles with Ondrej Tunka of the Czech Republic as they practise kayak cross technique on the Legacy Loop during the final day of practice (top) Jonny Dickson of Great Britain waits to weigh his boat at boat (above). Lea Baldoni of Canada in action and Iris Sommernes of Norway gets into trouble getting through a gate on the Olympic Course during the final day of practice (below).

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Amir Rezanejad Hassanjani, originally from Iran, came to Lee Valley to practice on the course, and hopes eventually to qualify for the Paris Olympics. Three years ago, in pursuit of a safer life, he fled the country of his birth and walked for 16 days and nights through the mountains which border Iran and Turkey. Eventually he made his way to Germany where he now lives and trains.

“Since last year everyone around the world knows the situation in Iran, how the government was treating all the people, even the athletes. That happened to me three years ago, I had to leave my country and I didn’t have the chance to stay. I thought my career would stop and I would have to do something else.”

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Six months ago he was told by the ICF that they wanted him to compete again this year as a refugee athlete. “It was another chance and very emotional for me,” he said.

“I was ten years old when I saw the Olympic Games in London. That was like a dream. When I got the email inviting me to compete here, I was crying. It was a dream again. All my family are still in Iran but they know what I’m doing this week.”

  • Alja Kozorog of Slovenia taking part in the women’s canoe semi-final.

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Another competitor inspired by the London Olympics was 22-year-old GB canoe slalom athlete James Kettle. It was his birthday on the opening day when he won silver in the canoe teams event, his first senior world championship medal.

In 2012 he lived a 15-minute drive from the course and started paddling there when the venue was built. He went with his father Paul and brother William to the Olympics, and saw Etienne Stott and Tim Baillie win Britain’s first ever canoe slalom gold medal.

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James Kettle with Etienne Stott in 2023 and in 2012 with his father Paul and brother William, who is part of the GB junior canoe team.

“Before 2012 I didn’t know much about slalom,” he said. “I came along to the Olympics, a huge event on my doorstep. I was here when the C2 won gold and silver, it was amazing. That day had a real impact on me and my love for the sport. Soon after I joined a club here and from there gradually worked my way up. Now this, to be on the podium myself winning a medal, it’s a dream come true.”

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Ziga Lin Hocevar, a 16-year-old from Slovenia, in the men’s kayak semi-final (top/first two), Luuka Jones of New Zealand in the women’s kayak semi-final (next) and Quan Xin of China in the men’s kayak semi-final (fourth), Alexander Slafkovsky of Slovakia taking part in the men’s canoe semi-final (below left), Joe Clarke of Great Britain taking part in the men’s kayak team event (below right).

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After winning her second gold medal of these championships in the C1, Mallory Franklin said: “It’s really cool, especially in front of a home crowd, it’s amazing to come away with gold.”

Asked about the 2024 Olympics she replied: “It’s really exciting, it’s just around the corner. I’ve been over to Paris a lot and I love it. It’s really cool to be at this level so close to the Games. Hopefully it stays that way but we’ll keep pushing on to Paris.”

  • Mallory Franklin deep in thought as she takes the elevator up to the top of the course before competing in the women’s canoe team event and with Ellis Miller and Kimberley Woods as they realise they have won gold (top). Franklin narrowly avoids hitting a gate on her way to the gold medal in the women’s canoe final.

She has been around the senior GB canoe team since 2009. “I came here [to Lee Valley] when it first opened and I’ve been paddling here for 13 years now. It’s an amazing venue that the Games gave us. Having access to a venue like this and the setup we’ve got, it’s just world class. You can really see it in the quality of the paddlers we have and the strength in depth. As a team we are in a strong place right now.”

On the Olympic course at Lee Valley, she added: “Here is consistently hard, the water is bigger and bouncier and tougher physically than anywhere else. I love training here, it’s the best venue in the world. For us it’s great to be able to show this week what we can do in front of a home crowd.”

  • Monica Doria Vilarrubla, of Andorra, crosses the finish line in the women’s canoe final.

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One of the main stars at Lee Valley this year was Australia’s Jessica Fox, who is the most successful female slalom paddler ever. She had won nine individual gold medals at previous world championships, and is the reigning C1 class Olympic champion. She contested five events at this year’s world championships – C1, K1, kayak cross and canoe and kayak team – triumphing in both the K1 individual and K1 team events.

  • Jessica Fox of Australia on her way to winning gold in the women’s kayak K1 final, celebrates her victory, gives an interview in the “kiss and cry” tent and signs an autograph for fans.


Of the K1 individual win, she said: “This one is [individual] world title number 10, which is a really special one. I’ve been chasing this one for a long time and it just means so much to me. There’s been such a big build up this week, and 2018 was my last world title. I let it all out at the finish, all the joy, all the emotion. I’m always pleased to be battling it out with the best, and to be consistently up there and be on the podium.”

  • A judge looks on as Lucas Rossi of Argentina is reflected in a mirror by the big drop during the men’s kayak team event.

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Another Olympic medallist competing at the championship was Joe Clarke, who won K1 gold at Rio in 2016. He’s pictured below celebrating after triumphing in the men’s kayak final to win his first ever individual K1 world title. It almost certainly guaranteed that he will return to the Olympics in Paris.

“That celebration’s not just for today, it’s for the emotion over the last seven years since winning that gold in Rio,” he said. “I’ve been knocking on the door for that world title so finally to take that title at home, with all my family and friends here, means so, so much. It’s hard to put into words.”

Clarke wasn’t selected for the Tokyo Olympics. “I missed out on Tokyo, it was a tough pill to swallow,” he said. “Tough times don’t last but tough people do so here I am. Having messed up when the 2015 Worlds were here, I had some demons to really fight today. This is a redemption story and that’s how it panned out. It’s all down to belief. I believed in myself the whole time even when I was at the lowest low.”

  • Joe Clarke of Great Britain celebrates with his son Hugo and wife Belle after winning gold in the men’s K1 kayak final. Twenty-four hours later Clarke was back on the podium after winning the men’s kayak cross final.

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Asked if being a father has helped, Clarke said: “Maybe it’s dad strength, dad power. Every training session I think of my wife and son, they have sacrificed so much for me to be here.” On the left side of his waterproof top are two imprints of the hands of his son, Hugo. “Those hand prints are over my heart, he’s with me all the time on the course. He’s obviously bringing me good luck.”

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Kayak cross, previously known as extreme slalom, will be making its Olympic debut next summer. The category first appeared on the ICF’s World Cup program in 2015, and since then the growth has been phenomenal.

It is a combination of all canoeing’s white water disciplines, with competitors racing in identical plastic creek boats. The excitement begins from the very start, with four competitors sliding off a ramp more than two metres above the water and splashing onto the course as one.

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From there it’s a race to the first gate buoy, and anything goes as each paddler tries to steal an advantage over their opponents. Athletes need to negotiate both downstream and upstream gate buoys, and contact is allowed – adding to the thrills and spills and excitement for spectators and athletes alike.

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Ricarda Funk plants her face in a downstream buoy as the competitors battle in the women’s kayak cross semi-final, Martin Dougoud barges his team-mate Dimitri Marx out of the way at an upstream buoy in the men’s kayak cross quarter-final.
  • Kimberley Woods of Great Britain celebrates as she crosses the line in the final of the women’s kayak cross, an emotional Woods with runner-up Camille Prigent of France as she celebrates winning her fourth medal of the championship, Woods shows off her haul of two golds, one silver and one bronze.

A big crowd was on hand to lift the British paddlers Kimberley Woods and Joe Clarke to double kayak cross gold on the final day of the world championship and cement Great Britain’s place at the top of the medal table, picking up five golds, two silvers and a bronze medal. Australia, with two golds and a bronze, were second, while France had one gold and four silvers.

 

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