Can Hungary continue its dominance of long-distance paddling when the 25th edition of the ICF Canoe Marathon World Championships takes place at Camps Drift, Pietermaritzburg, next week?

It will be the second time since the inaugural event in 1988 that the global title decider will be held on the African continent, after Cape Town hosted the event in 1998. The only other southern  hemisphere country to have hosted the event is Australia.

Hungary comes to the 2017 event as the clearly dominant global marathon racing superpower, having won 131 senior medals in kayak and C-boat racing in the previous 24 editions of the marathon world champs. The Hungarians have won 30 women's K2 medals, 29 men's C2, 27 men's C1, 20 women's K1, 13 men's K2 and 9 men's K1 medals.

The Hungarian success has been built on their depth of talent in both the men's and women's ranks, and their dominance in the C boat classes as well as the kayak classes. Their paddling icon, Renáta Csay, has won no less than 27 medals, 17 of them gold in the women's K1 and K2 championships races since her first in 1999.

In C boat racing Edvin Csaba's domination after the millennium segued into the arrival on the scene of  Márton Kövér, who ensured that a Hungarian held the world title nine times in 13 years.

Spain is second on the all-time medal winners chart, thanks largely to their men's kayakers Manuel Busto, Emilio Merchán, Álvaro Fernández, Walter Bouzan and Ivan Alonso

Great Britain enjoyed consistent medals in the nineties, when Ivan Lawler and Anna Hemmings were consistently successful, keeping them in fourth place on the medal table, behind Denmark and just two ahead of the Czech Republic.

The host nation South Africa is sixth in the senior medal winners table, thanks mainly to Hank McGregor's recent dominance in the men's kayak class, and his partnership with Jasper Mocké in the K2s.

Interestingly the first medal won by a South African was earned by Dutch born Robbie Herreveld, in Amsterdam in 1994, two years before Hank McGregor won the Junior world crown in Sweden in 1996.

The best supported marathon world championships was in Singapore in 2011, when 39 different countries were represented. With the global title decider destined to return to Asia in 2019 when the champs will be staged in Shaoxing in China, participation level records could well be tested again.

Most medals won the ICF Canoe Marathon World Championships
Hungary 131
Spain 86
Denmark 32
Great Britain 29
Czech Republic 27
South Africa 23
Portugal 16
Australia, Sweden 13
France, Poland, Germany10
Italy 9
Norway 6
Netherlands 4
Soviet Union 3
East Germany, Serbia, Ukraine 2
Ireland, USA, New Zealand, Belgium, Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Slovakia, Canada 1

Previous hosts of the ICF Canoe Marathon World Championships
1988: England - Nottingham
1990: Denmark - Copenhagen
1992: Australia - Brisbane
1994: Netherlands - Amsterdam
1996: Sweden - Vaxholm
1998: South Africa - Cape Town
1999: Hungary - Győr
2000: Canada - Dartmouth
2001: England - Stockton-on-Tees
2002: Spain - Zamora
2003: Spain - Valladolid
2004: Norway - Bergen
2005: Australia - Perth
2006: France - Tremolat
2007: Hungary - Győr
2008: Czech Republic - Týn nad Vltavou
2009: Portugal - Gaia
2010: Spain - Banyoles
2011: Singapore - Singapore
2012: Italy - Rome
2013: Denmark - Copenhagen
2014: United States - Oklahoma City
2015: Hungary - Győr
2016: Germany - Brandenburg an der Havel
2017: South Africa - Pietermaritzburg

The ICF Canoe Marathon World Championships will be held at Camps Drift in Pietermaritzburg from 8 to 10 September 2017, preceded by the Masters Cup competition. More information can be found at www.wmc2017.co.za.

Dave Macleod

Canoe Marathon
#ICFmarathon