Canoeing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's C-1 1000 metres

The men's C-1 1000 metres sprint canoeing event at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place on 6 and 7 August 2021 at the Sea Forest Waterway.[1] At least 12 canoeists from at least 12 nations competed.[2]

Men's C-1 1000 metres
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
Canoeing pictogram
VenueSea Forest Waterway
Dates6 August 2021 (heats and quarterfinal)
7 August 2021 (semifinal & final)
Competitors33 from 20 nations
Winning time4:04.408
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Isaquias Queiroz  Brazil
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Liu Hao  China
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Serghei Tarnovschi  Moldova
← 2016
2024 →

Background edit

This was the 20th appearance of the event, one of four events to be held at every Summer Games since canoeing was introduced in 1936.

The reigning World Champion was Isaquias Queiroz of Brazil; Queiroz took silver at Rio 2016. The reigning Olympic champion is Sebastian Brendel of Germany, who is on the German team after qualifying in C-2 and is eligible to be selected as a second canoeist in C-1.[3]

Qualification edit

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could only qualify one boat (and thus earn one women's canoe quota place) in the event; however, NOCs could enter up to 2 boats in the event if they had enough women's canoe quota places from other events (that is, the C-2). A total of 12 qualification places were available, initially allocated as follows:

Qualifying places were awarded to the NOC, not to the individual canoeist who earned the place.[2]

Isaquias Queiroz of Brazil qualified in both the C-2 and the C-1, resulting in an additional quota place added to the C-2 (no additional place in C-1). This made a total of 4 World Championship places that were awarded as follows:[4]

Rank Canoeist Nation Qualification Selected competitor
1 Isaquias Queiroz   Brazil Earned quota in C-2 1000 m; quota reallocated to C-2 Could enter via C-2
2 Tomasz Kaczor   Poland Quota #1 in C-1 1000 m
3 Adrien Bart   France Quota #2 in C-1 1000 m Adrien Bart[5]
4 Sebastian Brendel   Germany Quota #3 in C-1 1000 m Conrad Scheibner[3]
5 Martin Fuksa   Czech Republic Quota #4 in C-1 1000 m

The Americas continental tournament was cancelled; that place was allocated through the World Championships, with the place going to Cuba.[6] One of the two Tripartite Commission invitational spots in canoeing was extended to Joaquim Lobo of Mozambique.[7] Asia's continental place was earned by China, Europe's by Ukraine, Africa's by Tunisia, and Oceania's by Samoa (after Australia declined the spot). Moldova earned the final spot at the World Cup.[4]:

Nation Qualification Selected competitor
  Tunisia Africa quota in C-1 1000 m
  Cuba Americas quota in C-1 1000 m
  China Asia quota in C-1 1000 m
  Ukraine Europe quota in C-1 1000 m
  Samoa Oceania quota in C-1 1000 m Rudolph Berking-Williams[8]
  Moldova World Cup quota in C-1 1000 m
  Mozambique Tripartite Invitation Joaquim Lobo[7]
  Japan Host quota for men's canoe

Nations that could enter (additional) boats due to qualifying in the C-2:

Nation Selected competitor 1 Selected competitor 2
  Brazil
  Canada
  China 2 boat limit
  Cuba 2 boat limit
  Czech Republic 2 boat limit
  Germany 2 boat limit
  Hungary
  Kazakhstan
  Poland 2 boat limit
  Romania
  ROC
  São Tomé and Príncipe
  Spain
  Ukraine 2 boat limit

Competition format edit

Sprint canoeing uses a four-round format for events with at least 11 boats, with heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals. The details for each round depend on how many boats ultimately enter.[9]

The course is a flatwater course 9 metres wide. The name of the event describes the particular format within sprint canoeing. The "C" format means a canoe, with the canoeist kneeling and using a single-bladed paddle to paddle and steer (as opposed to a kayak, with a seated canoeist, double-bladed paddle, and foot-operated rudder). The "1" is the number of canoeists in each boat. The "1000 metres" is the distance of each race.[10]

Schedule edit

The event was held over two consecutive days, with two rounds per day. All sessions started at 9:30 a.m. local time, though there were multiple events with races in each session.[11]

Legend
H Heats ¼ Quarterfinals ½ Semifinals F Final
Sprint
Event↓/Date → Mon 2 Tue 3 Wed 4 Thu 5 Fri 6 Sat 7
Men's C-1 1000 m H ¼ ½ F

Results edit

Heats edit

Progression System: 1st-2nd to SF, rest to QF.

Heat 5 edit

Rank Lane Canoer Country Time Notes
1 4 Fernando Jorge   Cuba 4:04.378 SF
2 5 Conrad-Robin Scheibner   Germany 4:04.920 SF
3 2 Connor Fitzpatrick   Canada 4:05.577 QF
4 1 Yurii Vandiuk   Ukraine 4:11.346 QF
5 6 Pablo Martínez   Spain 4:21.729 QF
6 3 Ghailene Khattali   Tunisia 4:39.791 QF

Quarterfinals edit

Progression System: 1st-2nd to SF, rest out.

Quarterfinal 3 edit

Rank Lane Canoer Country Time Notes
1 5 Sebastian Brendel   Germany 4:07.036 SF
2 3 Yurii Vandiuk   Ukraine 4:08.719 SF
3 2 Pablo Martínez   Spain 4:09.102
4 4 Vladislav Chebotar   ROC 4:18.517
5 6 Cayetano García   Spain 4:31.929
6 1 Takanori Tōme   Japan 4:38.546
7 7 Joaquim Lobo   Mozambique 5:04.687

Semifinals edit

Progression System: 1st-4th to Final A, rest to Final B.

Finals edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Canoe Sprint Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Archived from the original on 3 July 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Qualification System – Games of the XXXI Olympiad – Canoe Sprint" (PDF). International Canoe Federation. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  3. ^ a b DOSB
  4. ^ a b Canoe Sprint Quota Allocation
  5. ^ "Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Selections - Stage 11".
  6. ^ "Mexico to make Olympic slalom debut after quota allocations". ICF. 30 April 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  7. ^ a b "Belize and Mozambique awarded tripartite Olympic quotas". ICF. 21 May 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  8. ^ "Sport: Samoa's Anne Cairns secures spot in Tokyo Olympics".
  9. ^ "Canoe Sprint Progression System" (PDF). ICF. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  10. ^ "Canoe Sprint". IOC. Archived from the original on 3 July 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  11. ^ "Canoe Sprint Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2020.