Noic Garioud picked up New Caledonia’s second gold medal of the weekend and Russian Elena Prokhorova ended a 20-year world championship drought by winning the sprint titles at the International Canoe Federation’s stand up paddling titles in Hungary on Saturday.
19-year-old Garioud pipped reigning world champion Connor Baxter in a thrilling men’s finish to the 200 metre race, while Prokhorova worked her way through the field after a slow start to win the women’s race.
Both paddlers picked up minor medals in Friday’s long distance races, with Garioud taking silver behind countryman Titouan Puyo, and Prokhorova winning bronze behind American Fiona Wylde.
Garioud said the world title came as a surprise to him.
“I wasn’t expecting the gold medal, you always expect something but I wasn’t sure of the result,” Garioud said.
“I did train for the sprint, I was feeling confident, I knew I was good, but Connor is super fast and you never know what can happen. I just pushed it right to the end and I got him right on the line, so I’m pretty happy with that.
“I wasn’t expecting the second place yesterday because I didn’t train for the distance race, so it was kind of a surprise, so I’m pretty happy with both results.”
Baxter finished one second behind for the silver, with Italy’s Claudio Nika following up his silver medal performance from the 2019 ICF world championships with the bronze.
33-year-old Prokhorova wondered after Friday’s bronze medal if she was destined to go through her paddling career without a world title, but on Saturday she became an ICF world champion with a slashing women’s sprint win.
“In my background as a kayak paddler, I was always third or second at a European or a world championships, and never gold in 20 years,” Prokhorova said.
“Yesterday I thought maybe this was the way I will finish, I thought this was my fate. I just hope that I deserve this.
“I still want to fight, because I am an athlete, and of course I want to fight on the distances that I have prepared. I’m really in love with this kind of sport.”
Russian teammate Nataliia Novitskaya won the silver, with American April Zilg finishing with the bronze medal.
There was more celebration for the Russians in the inflatable race, with Andrey Kraitor winning the men’s gold, while two-time ICF SUP world champion Olivia Piana won the gold in the women’s her only event in Hungary this weekend.
RESULTS
SPRINT – WOMEN
- PROKHOROVA Elena (ROC) 1.02:21
- NOVITSKAYA Nataliia (ROC) 1.02:95
- ZILG April (USA) 1.04:36
SPRINT – MEN
- GARIOUD Noic (FNC) 48:01
- BAXTER Connor (USA) 49:00
- NIKA Claudio (ITA) 50:79
INFLATABLES – WOMEN
- PIANA Olivia (FRA) 51.25:10
- FOURNEL Emilie (CAN) 52.36:66
- HORVATH Noemi (HUN) 53.08:76
INFLATABLES – MEN
- KRAITOR Andrey (ROC) 46.49:38
- KOVER Marton (HUN) 46.51:46
- TAUCHER Christian (AUT) 46.55:51
SPRINT WOMEN 50+
- TSAOUTOU Penny (GRE) 1.13:09
- ODDERA Sara (ITA) 1.13:88
- PYFFRADER Petra (AUT) 1.14:55
SPRINT MEN 50+
- PARRES Daniel (ESP) 1.01:66
- FORASTER Marc (ESP) 1.04:29
- ROJNOV Vladislav (MDA) 1.04:68
SPRINT WOMEN 40+
- LIER Susanne (GER) 1.07:60
- RASZTOTZKY Eszter (HUN) 1.08:12
- KAMMERER Andrea (GER) 1.11:40
SPRINT MEN 40+
- WEIDERT Peter (GER) 57:10
- MORA Salvador (ESP) 1.00:10
- AVRAMENKO Arterm (UKR) 1.00:11
SPRINT JUNIOR WOMEN
- GORDILLO Duna (ESP) 1.11:62
- SLEKTA Reka (HUN) 1.14:00
- CAIMARI Sonia (ESP) 1.14:19
SPRINT JUNIOR MEN
- SANCHEZ Aaron (ESP) 1.00:79
- SIMONCELLI Lucas (ESP) 1.01:58
- SEIDENGLANZ Vojtech (CZE) 1.02:15
Pics by Dezso Vekassy