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Freestyle Kayak World Championships Welcomes Three New Countries

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Freestyle Kayak World Championships Welcomes Three New Countries - _kayak0257_1308561249

Industry News

Release Date
June 20, 2011
Brand
ICF
Location
Plattling, Germany

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#ICFplattling - Addition of Argentina, India and Slovenia Point to Overall Health of Sport.
The addition of three new countries to freestyle kayaking’s loftiest world stage is helping make the case that the relatively new sport deserves to become an official Olympic discipline.

Every two years since 1991, the world’s best whitewater kayakers are attracted to celebrate their sport and test their skill against the best in the world at the International Canoe Federation Freestyle Kayak World Championships. This year, some 225 paddlers from 30 nations have traveled to this town in Lower Bavaria. Pending acceptance as an Olympic discipline, for now, World Championships represent the pinnacle of competition for freestyle kayakers.

Most observers agree the addition of three new countries – Slovenia, India and Argentina – reflects the growing stature and appeal of the sport. ICF Freestyle Kayak Chairman Lluis Rabaneda explained why more and more national sport federations are beginning to support freestyle kayaking. “I think the most progressive federations recognize that freestyle has a huge potential to be a key discipline for the ICF, especially since the same skills paddlers use in kayaking translate to other Olympic disciplines such as slalom and sprint.”

Talking with the athletes at the tent village on the banks of the Isar River, mere steps from the whitewater hole that is the competition venue, finds unanimous enthusiastic support for the sport and the competition. Representing Argentina on that country’s first foray into freestyle, 26-year-old Pablo Rial, explained he has spent the past three years putting the formal pieces in place to make Argentina’s debut here a reality. “This is the official beginning of freestyle for Argentina,” Rial proudly proclaimed. Teammate Matias Lopez, 21, said competing at Worlds is like “living a dream.”

Hailing from the most remote part of the world represented here this week, Tsering Chotak from Ladakh and Ayodhya Prasad of Uttrakhand are India’s first representatives to Worlds. The pair earned their berths here, which is also their first time traveling outside India, by scoring the top two results at India’s first-ever national team trials. Experienced kayakers, neither calls themselves a freestyle specialist, though they hope to bring skills learned here back to fellow paddlers when they return home.

Long known worldwide as a powerhouse in slalom, this is Slovenia’s first entry into freestyle. Tomaz Murko and Bostjan Gomboc were so excited, they arrived in Plattling a day before the rest of their country’s eight-man team. Before discovering kayaking 15 years ago, Murko, 34, was a competitive snowboarder and ski jumper. Gomboc, 40, learned to kayak from his father, who was among the first Slovenians to embrace kayaking when the sport was just being introduced in that country. A longtime playboater, Gomboc is competing in the squirt discipline, something he said he’s been dreaming of doing for a long time though only started practicing four months ago.

At the other end of the experience spectrum is former Slalom Olympian and International Whitewater Hall of Fame inductee Eric “EJ” Jackson. Jackson, 47, who hopes to win his fifth World title in this his tenth Worlds appearance, said the ever-changing playing field illustrates the healthy progress of the sport. “It gets harder to make the podium every time,” Jackson said. “The depth of field gets deeper and the top competitors do tougher moves and keep pushing the scores higher.”

If he is to earn his elusive fifth title, Jackson must first take it back from son-in-law Nick Troutman (CAN) who, in defeating Jackson two years ago, won his first World title the same year he married Jackson’s daughter, Emily, who is defending the senior women’s World title she earned also that year. This is the last year Jackson is safe from another threat to his pursuit of a record number of World titles as son Dane, 17, competes in his fourth and final Worlds as a junior this year. Uniquely, Dane is the only person of any age vying for medals in all four whitewater disciplines: kayak, canoe, open canoe and squirt.

For more info, schedules, results and images, visit http://www.icf-freestyle.de

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