The men's KL2 competition at the 2017 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Račice took place at the Sportcentrum Račice.[1]
Men's KL2 at the 2017 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Sportcentrum Račice | |||||||||
Location | Račice, Czech Republic | |||||||||
Dates | 23–24 August | |||||||||
Competitors | 20 from 19 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 41.758 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
Schedule
editThe schedule was as follows:[2]
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Wednesday 23 August 2017 | 09:25 | Heats |
10:50 | Semifinals | |
Thursday 24 August 2017 | 12:39 | Final B |
12:44 | Final A |
All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
Results
editHeats
editHeat winners advanced directly to the A final. The next six fastest boats in each heat advanced to the semifinals.[3]
Heat 1
editRank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Curtis McGrath | Australia | 41.545 | QA |
2 | Ivo Kilian | Germany | 45.851 | QS |
3 | Igor Alex Tofalini | Brazil | 46.356 | QS |
4 | Eslam Jahedi | Iran | 49.912 | QS |
5 | Javier Reja Muñoz | Spain | 50.356 | QS |
6 | Igor Korobeynikov | Russia | 50.973 | QS |
– | Jorge Enrique Moreno | Colombia | DNS |
Heat 2
editRank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Markus Swoboda | Austria | 42.257 | QA |
2 | Azizbek Abdulkhabibov | Uzbekistan | 43.818 | QS |
3 | Federico Mancarella | Italy | 47.729 | QS |
4 | Filip Silvstrand Olsson | Sweden | 50.502 | QS |
5 | Or Adato | Israel | 52.391 | QS |
6 | Vuk Radovanović | Serbia | 52.824 | QS |
7 | Emilio Atamañuk | Argentina | 53.235 | QS |
Heat 3
editRank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mykola Syniuk | Ukraine | 44.636 | QA |
2 | Eddie Montañez | Puerto Rico | 46.409 | QS |
3 | Dejan Fabčič | Slovenia | 48.720 | QS |
4 | Robert Studzizba | Poland | 49.803 | QS |
5 | Marius Bogdan Ciustea | Italy | 52.864 | QS |
6 | Oliver Molina | Chile | 55.731 | QS |
Semifinals
editThe fastest three boats in each semi advanced to the A final.
The next four fastest boats in each semi, plus the fastest remaining boat advanced to the B final.[4]
Semifinal 1
editRank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Federico Mancarella | Italy | 45.060 | QA |
2 | Ivo Kilian | Germany | 46.071 | QA |
3 | Robert Studzizba | Poland | 47.088 | QA |
4 | Dejan Fabčič | Slovenia | 48.699 | QB |
5 | Eslam Jahedi | Iran | 48.871 | QB |
6 | Igor Korobeynikov | Russia | 50.082 | QB |
7 | Or Adato | Israel | 51.310 | QB |
8 | Emilio Atamañuk | Argentina | 52.932 | qB |
9 | Oliver Molina | Chile | 55.321 |
Semifinal 2
editRank | Name | Country | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Azizbek Abdulkhabibov | Uzbekistan | 43.857 | QA |
2 | Vuk Radovanović | Serbia | 45.190 | QA |
3 | Eddie Montañez | Puerto Rico | 45.418 | QA |
4 | Igor Alex Tofalini | Brazil | 46.312 | QB |
5 | Javier Reja Muñoz | Spain | 47.718 | QB |
6 | Marius Bogdan Ciustea | Italy | 49.340 | QB |
7 | Filip Silvstrand Olsson | Sweden | 50.218 | QB |
Finals
editFinal B
editCompetitors in this final raced for positions 10 to 18.[5]
Rank | Name | Country | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Igor Alex Tofalini | Brazil | 46.342 |
2 | Dejan Fabčič | Slovenia | 48.520 |
3 | Javier Reja Muñoz | Spain | 48.626 |
4 | Marius Bogdan Ciustea | Italy | 49.670 |
5 | Eslam Jahedi | Iran | 50.142 |
6 | Igor Korobeynikov | Russia | 50.820 |
7 | Filip Silvstrand Olsson | Sweden | 50.876 |
8 | Or Adato | Israel | 52.203 |
9 | Emilio Atamañuk | Argentina | 1:04.831 |
Final A
editCompetitors in this final raced for positions 1 to 9, with medals going to the top three.[6]
Rank | Name | Country | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Curtis McGrath | Australia | 41.758 | |
Markus Swoboda | Austria | 42.508 | |
Mykola Syniuk | Ukraine | 43.281 | |
4 | Azizbek Abdulkhabibov | Uzbekistan | 44.192 |
5 | Vuk Radovanović | Serbia | 45.531 |
6 | Federico Mancarella | Italy | 45.642 |
7 | Ivo Kilian | Germany | 46.736 |
8 | Eddie Montañez | Puerto Rico | 46.753 |
– | Robert Studzizba | Poland | DNF |
References
edit- ^ "2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS | Regatta Venue". Czech Canoe Union. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ^ "2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS". International Canoe Federation. Archived from the original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ^ 2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS | KL2 Men 200m - Heats (PDF). International Canoe Federation. pp. 5–7. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ^ 2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS | KL2 Men 200m - Semi-finals (PDF). International Canoe Federation. pp. 18–19. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ^ 2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS | KL2 Men 200m - Final B (PDF). International Canoe Federation. p. 70. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- ^ 2017 ICF CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS | KL2 Men 200m - Final A (PDF). International Canoe Federation. p. 71. Retrieved 16 June 2018.