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Canoe Sprint
This Olympic discipline is an adrenaline fueled race across distances of 200m, 500m, 1000m, and 5000m in boats of single, double and quadruple athletes.
Credit: International Canoe Federation
What is Canoe Sprint?
Canoe Sprint takes place on a flatwater course and races are contested by two types of boat, canoe (C) and kayak (K). In a canoe, the paddler competes in a striding position using a single-blade paddle, in contrast to the double-bladed paddle used in a sitting position in a kayak. At international level the discipline is competed at four distances from 200m to 5000m, both individually and in teams of up to four. Each discipline is categorised by boat type, number of competitors per boat, gender, and race distance, meaning the example of C2M 500m is the canoe male doubles 500m.
Competitive Canoe Sprint racing dates back to 1869 in Great Britain, but it was more than 50 years until the first international body for paddle sport was formed in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1924. Canoe Sprint made its debut at the Olympic Games in Berlin in 1936 with nine men's events, with that number reduced to eight in London 12 years later to accommodate the first women's race at the Games, the K1W 500m won by Denmark's Karen Hoff. Canoe Sprint has featured at every Games since.
The dominant force in Canoe Sprint is Hungary, winners of 228 world titles in the discipline, nearly 100 more than next-highest Germany with 141. Hungarian Canoe Sprint legend Katalin Kovács has claimed 31 of those crowns - a record for an individual. Her triumphs at the World Championships spanned from 1998 to 2011, across eight different kayak disciplines. This included the K4W 500m, and a notable victory in 1999 when she was a part of the team that beat a German boat including Birgit Fischer, winner of 11 world titles in K4W 500m - a record for an individual in a specific Canoe Sprint event.
Hungary has also won the most medals in Canoe Sprint at the Olympic Games with 86, but neither the leading male nor female gold medal winners in the discipline at the Games is Hungarian. Fischer (8) holds the overall record while Gert Fredriksson (6) of Sweden has won the most gold medals by a male. His tally claimed from 1948 to 1960 makes him his country's greatest Olympian in any sport (summer or winter) by gold medals won.
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