1987 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The 1987 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships were held in Duisburg, West Germany for the second time. The West German city hosted the championships previously in 1979.

The men's competition consisted of six Canadian (single paddle, open boat) and nine kayak events. Three events were held for the women, all in kayak.

This was the 21st championships in canoe sprint.

Medal summary

Men's

Canoe

Event Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time
C-1 500 m  Olaf Heukrodt (GDR)  Petr Procházka (TCH)  Attila Szabó (HUN)
C-1 1000 m  Olaf Heukrodt (GDR)  Martin Marinov (BUL)  
Ivan Klementiev
 (URS)
C-1 10000 m  Ivan Šabjan (YUG)  Zsolt Bohács (HUN)  Takhir Kamaletdinov (URS)
C-2 500 m  Poland
Marek Łbik
Marek Dopierała
 Soviet Union
Yuriy Gurin
Valeriy Veshko
 
Alon Lochinsky
C-2 1000 m  Soviet Union
Yuriy Gurin
Valeriy Veshko
 Poland
Marek Łbik
Marek Dopierała
 East Germany
Ulrich Papke
Ingo Spelly
C-2 10000 m  Denmark
Arne Nielsson
Christian Frederiksen
 Hungary
Róbert Rideg
Pál Pétervári
 Great Britain
Andrew Train
Stephen Train

Kayak

Event Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time
K-1 500 m  Paul MacDonald (NZL)  Andreas Stähle (GDR)  Attila Szabó (TCH)
K-1 1000 m  Greg Barton (USA)  Ferenc Csipes (HUN)  Morten Ivarsen (NOR)
K-1 10000 m  Greg Barton (USA)  Attila Szabó (TCH)  Einar Rasmussen (NOR)
K-2 500 m  Hungary
Ferenc Csipes
László Fidel
 New Zealand
Ian Ferguson
Paul MacDonald
 Sweden
Karl-Axel Sundqvist
K-2 1000 m  New Zealand
Ian Ferguson
Paul MacDonald
 France
Philippe Boccara
Pascal Boucherit
 East Germany
Thomas Gähme
Thomas Vaske
K-2 10000 m  France
Philippe Boccara
Pascal Boucherit
 Denmark
Thor Nielsen
Lars Koch
 Hungary
Ferenc Csipes
Sándor Hódosi
K-4 500 m  Soviet Union
Aleksandr Motuzenko
Sergey Kirsanov
Artūras Vieta
Viktor Denisov
 Poland
Robert Chwiałkowski
Kazimierz Krzyżański
Grzegorz Krawców
Wojciech Kurpiewski
 West Germany
Reiner Scholl
Thomas Pfrang
Volker Kreutzer
Thomas Reineck
K-4 1000 m  Hungary
Zsolt Gyulay
Ferenc Csipes
László Fidel
Zoltán Kovács
 Sweden
Karl-Axel Sundqvist
Bengt Andersson
 
K-4 10000 m  Norway
Harald Amundsen
Arne Sletsjøe
Morten Ivarsen
Arne Johan Almeland
 Hungary
Zoltán Berkes
Zoltán Böjti
László Nieberl
Kálmán Petrovics
 

Women's

Kayak

Event Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time
K-1 500 m  
Birgit Schmidt-Fischer
 (GDR)
 Izabela Dylewska (POL)  Agneta Andersson (SWE)
K-2 500 m  
Anke Nothnagel
 Netherlands
Annemarie Cox
 
Ivanka Mueriva
K-4 500 m    Hungary
Erika Géczi
Rita Kőbán
Katalin Povázsán
Éva Rakusz
 
Snieguole Nareviciute

Medals table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany (GDR)5128
2 Hungary (HUN)2529
3 Soviet Union (URS)2147
4 New Zealand (NZL)2103
5 United States (USA)2002
6 Poland (POL)1304
7 Denmark (DEN)1102
 France (FRA)1102
9 Norway (NOR)1023
10 Yugoslavia (YUG)1001
11 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0224
12 Sweden (SWE)0123
13 Bulgaria (BUL)0112
14 Netherlands (NED)0101
15 West Germany (FRG)0022
16 Great Britain (GBR)0011
Totals (16 entries)18181854

References

  • Kamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007) – Part 1: flatwater (now sprint). CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 1–41 at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 January 2010). Additional archives: BCU.org.uk.
  • Kamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007) – Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines. CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 42–83 at WebCite (archived 9 November 2009). Additional archives: BCU.org.uk.
  • Kamber, Raymond, ed. (2008). "Medal Winners – Olympic Games and World Championships (1936–2007)" (PDF). CanoeICF.com. International Canoe Federation. pp. 1–83. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 May 2018. Retrieved 25 September 2021.