website statistics
Jump to content

Slalom Canoeing Qualification to Summer Olympic Games Paris 2024


Totallympics
 Share

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, dodge said:

I don’t know how, but Ireland has received a place in women’s C1 event

 

We had qualified in the other 3, but we’re sending a full team including wc1

 

The initial Canoe Ireland team “nomination” announcement didn’t include her. So it’s obviously a late development 

 

EDIT; todays announcement states they’ll all do the cross too

 

 

 

Yeah I noticed it 2 days ago as well, the only explanation is :POL rejected the W C1 quota since they have only one female paddler listed

 

https://www.canoeicf.com/canoe-slalom-olympics/paris-2024/athletes

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, hckošice said:

Yeah I noticed it 2 days ago as well, the only explanation is :POL rejected the W C1 quota since they have only one female paddler listed

 

https://www.canoeicf.com/canoe-slalom-olympics/paris-2024/athletes

 

3 hours ago, dodge said:

I don’t know how, but Ireland has received a place in women’s C1 event

 

We had qualified in the other 3, but we’re sending a full team including wc1

 

The initial Canoe Ireland team “nomination” announcement didn’t include her. So it’s obviously a late development 

 

EDIT; todays announcement states they’ll all do the cross too

 

Looks like China got a reallocated quota in women's K1 (Li Shiting), seems to be they aren't counting Jessica Fox's quota in that event since she is qualified in both C1 and K1. @hckošice is that right?

 

 

 

Edited by OlympicIRL
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, dodge said:

They never counted Australia’s K1 quota as it was won by Jessica Fox at the 2023 worlds after she won the c1 quota.
 

She can still enter both (and will)

Same as Poland then.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, OlympicIRL said:

Same as Poland then.

Except Australia would have won the k1 “as of right” in the world championships if Fox hadn’t already won the quota at C1, where as Poland’s C1 was a reallocation. Technically Australia never had a quota to refuse

 

The effect is the same (same paddler does both events) but Poland’s was a re-allocated spot so it wasn’t known if they would have accepted it or not. 


I see Wikipedia lists Australia as a reallocated K1 spot but I think that’s wrong (or at the very least they were never going to accept it)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, dodge said:

Except Australia would have won the k1 “as of right” in the world championships if Fox hadn’t already won the quota at C1, where as Poland’s C1 was a reallocation. Technically Australia never had a quota to refuse

 

The effect is the same (same paddler does both events) but Poland’s was a re-allocated spot so it wasn’t known if they would have accepted it or not. 


I see Wikipedia lists Australia as a reallocated K1 spot but I think that’s wrong (or at the very least they were never going to accept it)

 

I mean Poland is the same, their paddler is entering both K1 and C1, they didn't refuse the quota, least not according to our Polish friend here.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, dodge said:

Except Australia would have won the k1 “as of right” in the world championships if Fox hadn’t already won the quota at C1, where as Poland’s C1 was a reallocation. Technically Australia never had a quota to refuse

 

The effect is the same (same paddler does both events) but Poland’s was a re-allocated spot so it wasn’t known if they would have accepted it or not. 


I see Wikipedia lists Australia as a reallocated K1 spot but I think that’s wrong (or at the very least they were never going to accept it)

Ok I think the penny finally dropped for me. Poland could have technically occupied another quota if they chose another paddler. Forgot about the qualifying the boat rather than the athlete rule in canoeing :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, OlympicIRL said:

 

 

Looks like China got a reallocated quota in women's K1 (Li Shiting), seems to be they aren't counting Jessica Fox's quota in that event since she is qualified in both C1 and K1. @hckošice is that right?

 

 

 

While J. Fox ended indeed as best Australian at World Champs it was Kate Eckhardt who won :AUS quota in W K1 (as C1 was competed first and had priority, Fox earned already that Canoe Singles quota and thus was ineligible to win another one in Kayak Single), this Eckhardt´s quota was later rejected because her majesty Jessica the sole, wanted to compete in all events, so bad luck for Katie, you stay at home. That quota was indeed reallocated to China.

 

This :IRL reallocation in W C1 could have occurred only from Poland´s rejected original reallocation. There no other possible explanation.

 

 

Edited by hckošice
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Out of curiosity, I listened to a few podcasts about Turkmenistan today. This country has very large deposits of natural gas. In the 1990s, a simple a ordinary people lived quite well there. In the early 21st century, Turkmenistan signed several unfavorable gas deals with China and has practically gone bankrupt since then. 1/3 of the population (about 2 million out of 6 million- mostly young people) emigrated, mainly to Turkey, India, etc. The future of this country is blacka and uncertain. I don't know what other options they have? Russia, Turkey, the EU? Of course, in terms of selling gas. Perhaps sanctions of Russia's and isolation due to the war in Ukraine would be a chance for Turkmenistan to establish economic relations with the EU, but the new president would probably have to loosen and a little liberate up his country's domestic politics.
    • A friend of mine who visited 97 countries of the world be in Turkmenistan (with Kunshamara, are the onlyones i know) and he tell me something that never see in another country: his presence was enough to make nervous to all the people, in restaurants, markets, etc, the presence of an "outsider" generate that.
    • 2024 Triathlon World Cup | Tongyeong, South Korea  (26 october)   Men’s: 1.  Dylan McCullough 2.  David Cantero 3.  Maciej Bruzdziak 4.  Maxime Hueber-Moosbrugger 5.  Roberto Sanchez 6.  Ben Dijkstra 7.  Aurelien Jem 8.  Nathan Grayel 9.  Sebastien Pascal 10.  Liam Donnelly   Women’s:   1.  Jolien Vermeylen 2.  Summer Rappaport 3.  Sian Rainsley 4.  Sandra Dodet 5.  Lea Coninx 6.  Gina Sereno 7.  Marta Pintanel 8.  Costanza Arpinelli 9.  Alissa Konig 10.  Beatrice Mallozzi    
    • 2024 African Championships | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia  (12-19 october)   Men’s Singles: 1.  Omar Assar 2.  Youssef Abdel-Aziz 3.  Mahmoud Helmy 3.  Darara Mokonen Dufera 5.  Milhane Jellouli 5.  Aly Ghallab 5.  Mohamed El-Beialy 5.  Kokou Dodji Fanny   Women’s Singles: 1.  Hana Goda 2.  Mariam Al-Hodaby 3.  Hend Fathy 3.  Yousra Helmy 5.  Marwa Al-Hodaby 5.  Fatimo Bello 5.  Malissa Nasri 5.  Lynda Loghraibi   Men’s Doubles: 1.  Muizz Adegoke & Abdulbasit Abdulfatai 2.  Matthew Kuti & Olajide Omotayo 3.  Mohamed El-Beiali & Youssef Abdel-Aziz 3.  Aly Ghallab & Mahmoud Helmy   Women’s Doubles: 1.  Hend Fathy & Hana Goda 2.  Yassamine Bouhenni & Malissa Nasri 3.  Mariam Al-Hodaby & Marwa Al-Hodaby 3.  Fatimo Bello & Hope Udoaka   Mixed Doubles: 1.  Youssef Abdel-Aziz & Mariam Al-Hodaby 2.  Milhane Jellouli & Amina Kessaci 3.  Mahmoud Helmy & Hend Fathy 3.  Matthew Kuti & Ajoke Ojomu   Men’s Teams: 1.  Nigeria (Aruna, Abdulfatai, Kuti, Omotayo, Adegoke) 2.  Algeria (Kherouf, Jellouli, Azzala, Bella) 3.  Ethiopia (Habteyes, Mindahun, Dufera, Bireba, Hadsh) 3.  Tunisia (Sabhi, Khaloufi, Essid, Chaieb)   Women’s Teams: 1.  Egypt (Goda, Al-Hodaby Mariam, Helmy, Al-Hodaby Marwa, Fathy) 2.  Nigeria (Sezuo, Rabiu, Ojomu, Udoaka, Bello) 3.  Uganda (Nangonzi, Nakawala, Anyango) 3.  Algeria (Bouhenni, Kessaci, Nasri, Loghraibi, Merzoug)
    • 2024 European Championships | Linz, Austria   (15-20 october)   Men’s Singles: 1.  Alexis Lebrun 2.  Benedikt Duda 3.  Dimitrij Ovtcharov 3.  Truls Moregard 5.  Felix Lebrun 5.  Patrick Franziska 5.  Dang Qiu 5.  Anton Kallberg   Women’s Singles: 1.  Sofia Polcanova 2.  Bernadette Szocs 3.  Maria Xiao 3.  Nina Mittelham 5.  Charlotte Lutz 5.  Jia Nan Yuan 5.  Yuan Wan 5.  Sabine Winter   Men’s Doubles: 1.  Alexis Lebrun & Felix Lebrun 2.  Anton Kallberg & Truls Moregard 3.  Maciej Kolodziejczyk &  Vladislav Ursu 3.  Mattias Falck & Kristian Karlsson   Women’s Doubles: 1.  Hana Matelova &  Barbora Balazova 2.  Sofia Polcanova &  Bernadette Szocs 3.  Izabela Lupulesku & Sabina Surjan 3.  Natalia Bajor &  Tatiana Kukulkova   Mixed Doubles: 1.  Alvaro Robles & Maria Xiao 2.  Robert Gardos & Sofia Polcanova 3.  Simon Gauzy & Prithika Pavade 3.  Annett Kaufmann & Patrick Franziska    
    • High levels of mercury found in tinned tuna posing a 'colossal risk to public health' in Europe   https://www.euronews.com/health/2024/10/29/colossal-risk-to-public-health-ngos-warn-about-risk-of-mercury-in-canned-tuna
    • 2024 Pan American Championships | San Salvador, El Salvador  (13-20 october)   Men’s Singles: 1.  Hugo Calderano 2.  Vitor Ishiy   3.  Horacio Cifuentes 3. Leonardo Iizuka  5.  Kanak Jha 5.  Guilherme Teodoro 5.  Francisco Sanchi 5.  Edward Ly   Women’s Singles: 1.  Adriana Diaz 2.  Bruna Takahashi 3.  Giulia Takahashi 3.  Amy Wang 5.  Laura Watanabe 5.  Jessica Reyes Lai 5.  Paulina Vega 5.  Zhiying Zeng     Men’s Doubles: 1.  Horacio Cifuentes & Santiago Lorenzo 2.  Andy Pereira & Jorge Campos 3.  Vitor Ishiy & Guilherme Teodoro 3.  Edward Ly & Simeon Martin   Women’s Doubles: 1.  Giulia Takahashi & Laura Watanabe 2.  Paulina Vega & Daniela Ortega 3.  Clio Barcenas & Arantxa Cossio Aceves 3.  Daniela Fonseca & Estela Crespo   Mixed Doubles: 1.  Guilherme Teodoro & Giulia Takahashi 2.  Hugo Calderano & Bruna Takahashi 3.  Jishan Liang & Amy Wang 3.  Nicolas Burgos & Paulina Vega   Men’s Teams: 1.  United States (Naresh N., Liang, Naresh S., Jha) 2.  Argentina (Cifuentes, Lorenzo, Bentancor, Sanchi) 3.  Cuba (Perez, Martinez, Campos, Pereira) 3.  Chile (Martinez, Gomez, Burgos, Olave)   Women’s Teams: 1.  Cuba (Perez Gonzalez, Fonseca, Aguiar, Crespo) 2.  Chile (Zeng, Morales, Vega, Ortega) 3.  Brazil (Takahashi B., Watanabe, Strassburger, Takahashi G.) 3.  United States (Reyes Lai, Ke, Moyland, Wang)
×
×
  • Create New...