The 2003 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 16th edition. The series consisted of 4 regular world cup races and the world cup final.

Calendar

Label Venue Date
World Cup Race 1 Australia Penrith 10–11 May
World Cup Race 2 Spain La Seu d'Urgell 5–6 July
World Cup Race 3 Slovenia Tacen 12–13 July
World Cup Race 4 Slovakia Bratislava 30–31 July
World Cup Final Slovakia Bratislava 2–3 August

Final standings

The winner of each world cup race was awarded 30 points. Semifinalists were guaranteed at least 5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 2 points each. The world cup final points scale was multiplied by a factor of 1.5. That meant the winner of the world cup final earned 45 points, semifinalists got at least 7.5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 3 points apiece. Only the best four results of each athlete counted for the final world cup standings.[1]

C1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Tony Estanguet (FRA)92
2 Michal Martikán (SVK)89.5
3 Robin Bell (AUS)83.5
4 Stefan Pfannmöller (GER)80
5 Juraj Minčík (SVK)72
6 Tomáš Indruch (CZE)71
7 Stuart McIntosh (GBR)68.5
8 Justin Boocock (AUS)57.5
9 Jan Mašek (CZE)55.5
10 Stanislav Ježek (CZE)51

C2 men

Pos Athletes Points[1]
1 Pavol Hochschorner/Peter Hochschorner (SVK)130
2 Jaroslav Pospíšil/Jaroslav Pollert (CZE)86
3 Marek Jiras/Tomáš Máder (CZE)84
4 Philippe Quémerais/Yann Le Pennec (FRA)58
5 Marcus Becker/Stefan Henze (GER)53.5
6 Ľuboš Šoška/Peter Šoška (SVK)51
7 Stuart Bowman/Nick Smith (GBR)50
8 Jaroslav Volf/Ondřej Štěpánek (CZE)48.5
9 Scott McCleskey/David Hepp (USA)46
10 Mark Bellofiore/Lachie Milne (AUS)45.5

K1 men

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 David Ford (CAN)91
2 Julien Billaut (FRA)83
3 Helmut Oblinger (AUT)77.5
4 Andrej Nolimal (SLO)69.5
5 Fabien Lefèvre (FRA)67.5
6 Michael Kurt (SUI)63
7 Peter Cibák (SVK)61.5
8 Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)57.5
9 Thomas Schmidt (GER)57
10 Pierpaolo Ferrazzi (ITA)44.5

K1 women

Pos Athlete Points[1]
1 Elena Kaliská (SVK)99.5
2 Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)95
2 Gabriela Stacherová (SVK)95
4 Rebecca Giddens (USA)87.5
5 Violetta Oblinger-Peters (AUT)80
6 Irena Pavelková (CZE)65
7 Gabriela Zamišková (SVK)53.5
8 Vanda Semerádová (CZE)52.5
9 Cristina Giai Pron (ITA)49
10 Margaret Langford (CAN)46

Results

World Cup Race 1

The first world cup race of the season took place at the Penrith Whitewater Stadium, Australia from 10 to 11 May.[2]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Justin Boocock (AUS)180.71  Robin Bell (AUS)181.54  Michal Martikán (SVK)184.39
C2 men  Slovakia
Milan Kubáň
Marián Olejník
193.00  United Kingdom
Stuart Bowman
Nick Smith
196.29  Slovakia
Ladislav Škantár
Peter Škantár
206.71
K1 men  David Ford (CAN)169.34  Campbell Walsh (GBR)170.04  Peter Cibák (SVK)170.37
K1 women  Rebecca Giddens (USA)196.19  Mia Farrance (AUS)201.88  Gabriela Stacherová (SVK)202.53

World Cup Race 2

The second world cup race of the season took place at the Segre Olympic Park in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain from 5 to 6 July.[3]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Michal Martikán (SVK)202.30  Stefan Pfannmöller (GER)204.27  Jan Benzien (GER)205.16
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
212.97  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
215.37  United Kingdom
Stuart Bowman
Nick Smith
217.47
K1 men  Fabien Lefèvre (FRA)192.39  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)193.31  Julien Billaut (FRA)196.46
K1 women  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)218.13  Rebecca Giddens (USA)221.16  Margaret Langford (CAN)224.00

World Cup Race 3

The third world cup race of the season took place at the Tacen Whitewater Course, Slovenia from 12 to 13 July.[4]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tomáš Indruch (CZE)205.15  Simon Hočevar (SLO)206.84  Robin Bell (AUS)207.15
C2 men  Czech Republic
Marek Jiras
Tomáš Máder
214.01  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
218.93  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Pospíšil
Jaroslav Pollert
223.72
K1 men  Andrej Nolimal (SLO)193.90  Loris Minvielle (FRA)198.84  Michael Kurt (SUI)199.93
K1 women  Gabriela Zamišková (SVK)225.48  Marie Řihošková (CZE)227.33  Elena Kaliská (SVK)228.88

World Cup Race 4

The fourth world cup race of the season took place at the Čunovo Water Sports Centre, Slovakia from 30 to 31 July.[5]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA)208.81  Stefan Pfannmöller (GER)209.83  Juraj Minčík (SVK)210.00
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
218.86  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Volf
Ondřej Štěpánek
219.34  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Pospíšil
Jaroslav Pollert
240.03
K1 men  Fabien Lefèvre (FRA)190.82  Thomas Schmidt (GER)195.88  Paul Ratcliffe (GBR)197.20
K1 women  Gabriela Stacherová (SVK)227.11  Elena Kaliská (SVK)231.89  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)234.72

World Cup Final

The Čunovo Water Sports Centre in Bratislava also hosted the final race of the season from 2 to 3 August.[6]

Event Gold Score Silver Score Bronze Score
C1 men  Tony Estanguet (FRA)214.41  Michal Martikán (SVK)220.50  Stefan Pfannmöller (GER)224.70
C2 men  Slovakia
Pavol Hochschorner
Peter Hochschorner
226.55  Germany
Marcus Becker
Stefan Henze
235.53  Czech Republic
Jaroslav Pospíšil
Jaroslav Pollert
236.50
K1 men  Julien Billaut (FRA)209.72  Andrej Nolimal (SLO)211.22  David Ford (CAN)211.74
K1 women[7]  Štěpánka Hilgertová (CZE)234.57  Elena Kaliská (SVK)237.48  Violetta Oblinger-Peters (AUT)237.86

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "2003 World Cup Final Rankings" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  2. "Official results - World Cup Race 1" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  3. "Official results - World Cup Race 2" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  4. "Official results - World Cup Race 3" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  5. "Official results - World Cup Race 4" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  6. "Official results - World Cup Final" (PDF). Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  7. Results K1W - World Cup Final Archived 2012-03-31 at the Wayback Machine - accessed November 5, 2011
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