Katie Vincent wins 2 gold medals, falls shy of 200m repeat win at sprint canoe worlds | CBC Sports
Two out of three ain’t bad.
After Katie Vincent was unsuccessful in repeating as C1 women’s 200-metre champion, she picked up the pace after a slow start with partner Connor Fitzpatrick to win a gold medal in the mixed 500 event on Sunday at the ICF canoe sprint and paracanoe world championships in Dartmouth, N.S.
Then, the 26-year-old won another gold alongside Sloan MacKenzie, Julia Osende and Sophia Jensen in comeback fashion in the C4 500 race. Earlier in the day, Vincent was fifth in the 200 one year after winning her first world sprint title in Copenhagen.
The native of Mississauga, Ont., clocked 50.63 seconds after ranking No. 1 in Thursday’s heats in 46.50.
On Saturday, Vincent and MacKenzie of Cheema Aquatic Club in Waverley, N.S., placed sixth in the C2 women 500 in 2:07.40, more than six seconds behind (2:01.26) the winning Chinese duo of Sun Mengya and Xu Shixiao.
In May, Vincent opened her World Cup season tying for a silver medal in the women’s C1 200-metre A final in Racice, Czech Republic and followed with silver in Poznan, Poland.
‘Crazy fight to the end’
Meanwhile, the 20-year-old Jensen reached the finish line in two minutes 23.21 seconds in the women’s C1 500, trailing only Ukrainian winner Liudmyla Luzan (2:22.34) by 87-100ths of a second. Jensen qualified for Sunday’s final by winning her heat in 2:12.82 on Thursday.
WATCH | Jensen misses gold medal by less than 1 second:
The paddler was exuberant with Sunday’s result, saying the crowd’s cheers alongside Lake Banook kept her aware she was vying for a medal and lifted her adrenaline in “a crazy fight to the end.”
Jensen, originally from Edmonton and now living in Chelsea, Que., collected silver in C1 500 and C1 200 at junior worlds in 2017.
In another race Sunday, Bret Himmelman of Hammonds Plains, N.S., and Craig Spence of Waverley finished third in a grueling 1,000 canoe final in intense midday heat.
WATCH | Himmelman, Spence realize ‘dream’ in podium finish:
They reached the finish line in 4:06.13, trailing the victorious Sebastian Brendel and Tim Hecker of Germany by 11.22 seconds (3:54.91). China’s Ji Bowen and Liu Hao were second (3:55.34).
An exhausted Spence had to sit on the wharf with ice on his neck after race but said winning a medal on his home lake before friends and family was “a dream come true.”
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