Jessica Fox hung on by her fingernails to win a second gold medal on Sunday at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup Final in Prague, and in doing so underlined her dominance of women’s canoeing by sealing her third consecutive overall C1 world cup title.

After Jessica Fox’s staggering, record-breaking results in 2018 it was hard to imagine she could repeat the performance in 2019. But the NSW Institute of Sport athlete stepped up on the final weekend of the five-event world cup season, winning both the K1 and C1 gold medals, and successfully defending both overall world cup titles.

But the 25-year-old only just held on to win on Sunday, posting a time 0.04 seconds quicker than Great Britain’s Kimberley Woods in the C1. Czech Tereza Fiserova was third.

“I think every race has been pretty tough and challenging, and I think after yesterday’s win, it was such a big win for me, so I wanted to come back today and go through the process again and stay grounded,” Fox said.

“It wasn’t perfect, and it was a fight to the finish. My goal is always to put down my best runs, not win the overall world cup, that’s a bonus of doing consistent races.

“It wasn’t the perfect season like last year, but I’ve learned so much from every race that I’ve done. The competition in the C1 category is getting better and better, the girls are hungry and improving a lot, it makes me really proud to be in this category.”

Fox finished well ahead in the overall standings, finishing with 312 points to Brazil’s Ana Satila on 225 to make it three C1 titles in a row. Fiserova was third on 222 overall points.

It is her fifth overall world cup title in the women’s C1, the boat class which will premier on the Olympic program at the Tokyo 2020 Games.

Saturday’s win in the women’s K1 marked Jessica Fox second consecutive overall world cup win in the class she won Olympic silver (London 2012) and Olympic bronze (2016) in.

The two-time Olympian heads to La Seu in Spain now, determined to also defend the world championship C1 and K1 titles she won last year

“I’m really happy to finish off this way, especially in the last world cup, it’s double points, it’s Prague, which is always really challenging, but there’s been an amazing atmosphere and I’ve really enjoyed racing,” she said.

“That’s what will keep me fresh and happy and hungry to keep training harder for the next couple of weeks. But I know the girls who might not have done as well as they liked here will be hungrier than ever for Seu, so I’m looking forward to getting back to Spain.”

Sister Noemie Fox (NSWIS) also made it through to her first C1 final of the season, but picked up four gate touches to finish eighth overall.

Rosalyn Lawrence (NSWIS) just missed the final, finishing 12thin the semi-final.

“It’s always hard to pick if it is going to be a close semi-final or final, or if people will make mistakes, and unfortunately I was one of the ones who made mistakes,” Lawrence said.

 

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.