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GB's Clarke wins World Cup gold in kayak cross

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CitrixNews Staff
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GB's Clarke wins World Cup gold in kayak cross
Great Britain's Joe Clarke competing in AugsburgImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption,

Joe Clarke won gold on his Olympic debut at Rio 2016

ByMandeep SangheraBBC Sport journalist
  • Published11 minutes ago

Great Britain's Joe Clarke won a first World Cup gold medal of the season as he claimed victory in the kayak cross final in Germany.

The 33-year-old benefited from the misfortune of compatriot Ben Haylett, who had crossed the line ahead of the pack in his first World Cup final, but was penalised for a fault and dropped down to fourth place.

"It was hard earned, there was a lot of scrapping out there," said Clarke, whose success moved him second in the overall World Cup kayak cross standings - a point behind leader, Slovenian teenager Ziga Lin Hocevar.

He claimed his first World Cup medal 12 years ago in Augsburg and won the second of his four kayak cross world titles at the same venue in 2022.

Clarke added: "It wasn't the usual style of win that I go for, the 'fly out the blocks and stay out front', but it was special to be on the start line with Ben.

"I'm hungry for more [at the World Championships] in Oklahoma. I know everyone will up their level even more, so the next few weeks are about refining our processes and hopefully the outcome will take care of itself."

Fellow Briton Adam Burgess won a silver medal in Augsburg in the men's canoe slalom, with Italian Raffaello Ivaldi beating him to the gold by just 0.07 seconds.

Henshaw leads triple gold haul for GB

In the European sprint and Para-canoe championships Portugal, Charlotte Henshaw starred with two gold medals, while another Briton Dave Phillipson had another.

Henshaw, a three-time Paralympic champion, had to set a world record of 53.49 seconds to beat compatriot Hope Gordon by 0.15 seconds to triumph in the women's VL3 200m contest.

The 39-year-old then beat fellow Briton Emma Wiggs to first place in the KL2 200m race.

Henshaw said: "It was about digging deep, trusting my engine and trusting the training, that even though it might not be pretty, I can dig in and get the job done.

"It's a real privilege to still be here in my 10th year racing at Para-canoe, racing with the girls."

Phillipson claimed victory ahead of Italian Christian Volpi in the men's KL2 200m.

"There were obviously a bit of nerves but it worked out in my favour," he said. "I just did the race I planned and went out strong."

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Originally reported by BBC Sport. Read the full story at the original source.