Canoeing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification

This article details the canoeing at the 2020 Summer Olympics qualifying phase. Similar to 2012 and 2016 format, a qualification system has been set up for both slalom and sprint canoeing at these games. The quotas have already been set for each event by the International Canoe Federation in October 2018.

Summary

NOCSlalomSprintTotal
K1
M
C1
M
K1
W
C1
W
MenWomenBoatsAthletes
K1
200
K1
1000
K2
1000
K4
500
C1
1000
C2
1000
K1
200
K1
500
K2
500
K4
500
C1
200
C2
500
 AlgeriaX11
 AndorraX11
 ArgentinaX11
 AustraliaXXXXXXXXX918
 AustriaXXX33
 BelarusXXXXXXX712
 BelgiumX12
 BrazilXXXX44
 CanadaXXXXXX612
 ChileXX22
 ChinaXXXXX511
 Cook IslandsXXX33
 CroatiaX11
 CubaXX24
 Czech RepublicXXXXXXXX88
 DenmarkXXX34
 EgyptXX22
 FranceXXXXXXXXX914
 GermanyXXXXXXXXX918
 Great BritainXXXXX55
 HungaryXXXXXX613
 IrelandX11
 ItalyXXXXX56
 JapanXXXXXXXX811
 NetherlandsX11
 New ZealandXXXXXXX79
 NigeriaX11
 PolandXXXXXXXX811
 PortugalXXXX47
 RomaniaX12
 RussiaXXXXXXXX815
 SamoaXX22
 São Tomé and PríncipeX12
 SerbiaXXX32
 SlovakiaXXXXX58
 SloveniaXXXXX56
 SpainXXXXXXX712
 SwedenXX22
 SwitzerlandXX22
 TunisiaXXX34
 UkraineXXXXXX610
 United StatesXXX33
 UzbekistanX12
Total: 43 NOCs191319126981081010991299172258

Slalom

For the slalom events, the men and women competed for each in C-1 and K-1. Qualifications were allocated to NOCs, not to specific competitors. NOCs were limited to one boat per event. Qualification spots were earned as follows:

  • World Championships: The top placed boats (considering only one boat per NOC) earned their NOCs a qualification. 18 qualification spots were available in the K-1 events, and 11 in the C-1.
  • Continental Qualification Events: Only NOCs that did not earn qualification in a given event through the World Championships were eligible. For the K-1 and C-1 events, 1 qualification spot was available for each continent.
  • Host country: Japan, as the host country, is guaranteed one entry in each event if not already qualified.
  • Tripartite Commission: Canoeing (both slalom and sprint) has a total of 2 qualification spots that would be awarded through Tripartite Commission invitations.
  • Reallocation: Unused quota spots were reallocated.

Timeline

EventDateVenue
2019 ICF Canoe Slalom World ChampionshipsSeptember 25–29, 2019 La Seu d'Urgell, Spain
2020 Oceania Canoe Slalom ChampionshipsFebruary 1–3, 2020 Auckland, New Zealand
African Canoe Slalom ChampionshipsTBA[2]TBA[2]
Asian Canoe Slalom Championships
European Canoe Slalom Championships
Pan American Canoe Slalom Championships

Qualification table

EventMen's K-1Men's C-1Women's K-1Women's C-1
Host nation Japan Japan Japan Japan
2019 World Championships  Czech Republic
 Great Britain
 Portugal
 Russia
 Australia
 Spain
 Slovakia
 France
 Germany
 Canada
 Italy
 Austria
 Switzerland
 Slovenia
 United States
 Brazil
 Sweden
 New Zealand
 France
 Poland
 Slovenia
 Slovakia
 Switzerland
 Ireland
 Spain
 Canada
 Croatia
 Czech Republic
 Great Britain
 Czech Republic
 Slovakia
 Austria
 Ukraine
 France
 Great Britain
 New Zealand
 Poland
 Netherlands
 Germany
 Andorra
 Spain
 Slovenia
 Italy
 Russia
 Cook Islands
 Canada
 China
 Spain
 Australia
 Germany
 Czech Republic
 Austria
 Brazil
 United States
 Great Britain
 Italy
 France
 Slovenia
2020 Oceania Championships Australia
ICF World Rankings (Africa)
ICF World Rankings (Americas)
ICF World Rankings (Asia)
ICF World Rankings (Europe)
Tripartite Invitation
Reallocation
Total24172417

Italic: National federation has qualified a boat but the athlete that did this was already counted in another boat
* No continental qualifying race held as less than three nations are eligible.
** National federation is limited to two athlete quota places at a continental qualifying event.

Sprint

NOCs are limited to one boat per event, and in kayaking to 6 men and 6 women positions. Qualification enables an NOC to participate, not necessarily in the person of the paddler who gained the place. Quotas given are for boats.[3] Qualification spots were earned as follows:

  • World Championships: The top placed boats (considering only one boat per NOC) earned their NOCs a qualification. 5 boat qualification spots were available in the K-1 events with an additional place reserved for the host country each in the men's 1000 m and women's 500 m, 6 in the K-2 events, 10 in the K-4 events, 6 in the C-1 events (1 of which was reserved for the host country in the 1000 metre event), and 8 in the C-2 event.
  • World Cup 2: The top placed boat (considering only one boat per NOC) in each individual event earned their NOCs a qualification.
  • Continental Qualification Events: Only NOCs that did not earn qualification in a given event through the World Championships were eligible. For the K-1 and C-1 events, 1 boat qualification spot was available for each continent (except that Europe received 2 spots). For the K-2 events, Europe was guaranteed two boat qualification spots but only 6 total qualification spots were available for the remaining 4 continents; these were assigned to continents based on World Championship results: the best ranked non-qualifying NOCs from four different continents at the World Championships earned their continent one boat qualification place.
  • Host country: Japan, as the host country, was guaranteed entries in certain events as listed in the World Championship section.
  • Tripartite Commission: Canoeing (both slalom and sprint) had a total of 2 qualification spots that would be awarded through Tripartite Commission invitations.
  • Reallocation: Unused quota spots were reallocated. In practice, this was used where some of an NOC's competitors in a larger boat category also competed in a smaller category, freeing up the athlete quota spot that NOC had earned in the smaller category.

Timeline

EventDateVenue
2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World ChampionshipsAugust 21–25, 2019 Szeged, Hungary
2019 African GamesAugust 26–31, 2019 Rabat, Morocco
2020 Oceania Canoe Sprint QualifierFebruary 14–16, 2020 Penrith, Australia
Asian Canoe Sprint ChampionshipsTBA[2]TBA[2]
European Canoe Sprint Qualifier
Pan American Canoe Sprint Qualifier
ICF Canoe Sprint World Cup

Qualification table

The following boats and athletes qualified.[4]

Event2019 World
Championships
Continental qualification2020 World
Cup 2
Total
Men KayakEuropeAmericasAsiaAfricaOceania
K-1 200 m  Great Britain
 Serbia
 Spain
 France
 Italy
 South Africa
 Egypt
 Samoa 12
K-1 1000 m  Hungary
 Czech Republic
 Portugal
 Slovakia
 Russia
 Belarus
 Argentina
 Tunisia  Cook Islands 13
K-2 1000 m  Germany
 Spain
 France
 Czech Republic
 Australia
 Italy
 Russia
 New Zealand 10
K-4 500 m  Germany
 Spain
 Slovakia
 Russia
 Hungary
 Portugal
 Belarus
 Australia
 Japan
 Canada
10
Event2019 World
Championships
Continental qualification2020 World
Cup 2
Total
Men CanoeEuropeAmericasAsiaAfricaOceania
C-1 1000 m  Brazil
 Poland
 France
 Germany
 Czech Republic
 Japan*
 Tunisia  Australia 12
C-2 1000 m  China
 Cuba
 Brazil
 Germany
 Romania
 Poland
 Russia
 Ukraine
 Czech Republic
 São Tomé and Príncipe 13
Event2019 World
Championships
Continental qualification2020 World
Cup 2
Total
Women KayakEuropeAmericasAsiaAfricaOceania
K-1 200 m  New Zealand
 Poland
 Denmark
 Spain
 Ukraine
 Hungary
 Serbia
 Portugal
 Algeria  Cook Islands 12
K-1 500 m  New Zealand
 Belarus
 Hungary
 Serbia
 Denmark
 Sweden
 Japan*
 Egypt  Samoa 13
K-2 500 m  Belarus
 Poland
 Slovenia
 Belgium
 France
 UkraineAQ
 China
 South Africa
 Tunisia
 Australia 10
K-4 500 m  Hungary
 Belarus
 Poland
 New Zealand
 France
 Germany
 Australia
 Ukraine
 China
 Canada
 Russia
 Denmark
10
Event2019 World
Championships
Continental qualification2020 World
Cup 2
Total
Women CanoeEuropeAmericasAsiaAfricaOceania
C-1 200 m  United States
 Russia
 Belarus
 Chile
 Canada
 Poland
 Japan*
 Nigeria  New Zealand 12
C-2 500 m  China
 Hungary
 Belarus
 Germany
 Uzbekistan
 Cuba
 Ukraine
 Chile
 Australia 13

^* Host quota

  • Italic: National federation has qualified a boat but the athlete that did this was already counted in another boat
  • AQ: National federation has qualified a boat but one of two athletes that did this was already counted in another boat
  • TR: National federation has received an invitation from the Tripartite Commission
  • ^: ICF decided that some of the events in Africa and Oceania needed to be reattributed to the World Championships lists because the events seen as invalid due to lack of eligible competitors.
  • º: ICF decided that two quota places were combined together and reallocated to the next best ranked NOC not qualified in a larger boat category, should they be available from team boats in the same gender and category.
  • South Africa declined all their quotas obtained in African Games 2019.

In the men's kayak category, Josef Dostál of the Czech Republic qualified in the K-1 1000m and was also a part of a qualifying K-2 1000m boat. The athlete quota spot from the K-1 was reallocated. Spain had qualifying boats in the K-4 500m, K-2 1000m, and K-1 200m; because each NOC could earn a maximum of 6 athlete spots, the K-1 athlete quota spot was reallocated. These 2 reallocated spots were not enough to fill another K-4 spot but could fill a K-2 spot; Russia was the next best NOC in that event and gained those 2 places. This put Russia in the same situation as Spain, with a K-4, a K-2, and a K-1 boat, requiring further reallocation of that K-1 spot. The spot went to the next best in K-1 1000m, but could not be allocated to France (Étienne Hubert was France's K-1 1000m athlete, but had already earned a spot in K-2) or to Spain (which already had 6 athlete quotas), so went to Argentina as the first possible recipient.

In the men's canoe category, Isaquias Queiroz of Brazil qualified in both the C-1 and C-2 events; his C-1 athlete quota spot was reallocated. This spot went to the next-best NOC in C-2, the Czech Republic, as it could fill the C-2 boat because one the two athletes (Martin Fuksa) had already earned an athlete quota spot in C-1 and only 1 spot was needed to fill the boat.

In the women's kayak category, numerous quota spots were reallocated, in a two-step process. The first step was that athletes who qualified in both K-1 events were assigned the 500m place and the 200m place was reallocated to the next boat in the 200m. Lisa Carrington of New Zealand and Emma Jørgensen fit that criterion; they were treated as qualifying in the 500m and their 200m spots reallocated to Hungary and Serbia. Because the Serbia spot would have gone to Milica Starović, who (like Carrington and Jørgensen) had qualified in the 500m, that spot was further reallocated to Portugal.

The second step in women's kayak was for athletes qualifying in multiple boat sizes. Volha Khudzenka of Belarus was part of the K-4, K-2, and K-1 500m boats that qualified, requiring reallocation of her K-2 and K-1 quota places. Maryna Litvinchuk was also in both the K-4 and K-2 boats for Belarus, so her K-2 quota place had to reallocated. Karolina Naja and Anna Puławska were in Poland's K-4 and K-2 boats; both of their quota places from the K-2 were reallocated. The same was true of Sarah Guyot and Manon Hostens of France and Mariya Povkh of Ukraine. Mariia Kichasova-Skoryk, also of Ukraine, qualified in both the K-4 boat and the K-1 200m; her K-1 spot was reallocated. Finally, Carrington was part of New Zealand's K-4 boat, so her K-1 500m spot was reallocated. These 10 spots were allocated to fill K-4 boats (Denmark netted 3, pulling Jørgensen out of the K-1 500m spot, and Canada received 4). The 3 remaining spots then went first to China in the K-2. This left 1 spot; Australia was next in the K-2 but neither athlete was qualified yet, so the spot would not fill the boat and therefore went to the K-1 500m. Sweden got the quota as next NOC in the K-1 500m.

In the women's canoe, Maria Mailliard of Chile qualified in both the C-2 and the C-1; her quota place was reallocated. The 1 reallocated spot was not enough to fill a C-2 boat (Japan did not have a qualifier in C-1), so went to the next C-1 competitor: Poland.

References

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