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Great Britain’s Woods wins Olympic kayak single bronze

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Great Britain’s Woods wins Olympic kayak single bronze
Great Britain’s Woods wins Olympic kayak single bronze

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Great Britain’s Kimberley Woods clinched Olympic bronze in a dramatic women’s kayak single (K1) final at the Vaires-Sur-Marne Nautical Stadium.

The 28-year-old qualified third-fastest with an impressive semi-final performance and produced another clean run in the final, clocking 98.94 seconds to clinch her first Olympic medal.

Woods, third from last to start, moved into second behind Australia’s gold medal winner Jessica Fox but was pushed down into bronze by Poland’s Klaudia Zwolinska.

With Woods’ fate in the hands of Germany’s reigning champion Ricarda Funk, the Tokyo gold medallist made a major mistake, receiving a 50-second penalty for missing the 20th gate of 23 to miss out on the podium.

Woods celebrated with her team after her medal was confirmed, three years after her Olympic debut ended in tears as her final run fell apart and she finished last.

With redemption achieved, she will now target gold in kayak cross next week – a discipline making its Olympic debut in Paris and in which she is the reigning world champion.

Woods emulated Helen Reeves, winner of bronze in Athens 20 years ago, as only the second British woman to make a K1 podium at an Olympic Games.

Commentating for BBC TV, Reeves said: “What a way to start for Woods! She is like a different paddler. She has paddled brilliantly and upped her game throughout, run-on-run.

“I felt really confident coming out of the heats for her. All of the work they have been doing has all come together and it is very well deserved.”

Australian Fox only qualified eighth fastest for the final but appeared the gold medallist in waiting after crossing the line in 96.08secs, a time which remained unbeaten ahead of Zwolinska (97.53).

Woods’ Olympic medal is a fitting reward for an athlete who has displayed extraordinary resilience throughout her life, overcoming adversity and repeated setbacks in pursuit of medals in an unforgiving sport, where the biggest prizes are settled by the finest margins.

In Tokyo, she was consoled by team-mates by the side of the course after a missed gate contributed to 56 penalty seconds.

But here, at a raucous canoe slalom venue in front of an energetic crowd, misfortune befell Funk to ensure Woods’ perfect run – celebrated with a beaming smile as she launched her paddle into the water – earned her bronze.

Before Tokyo, Woods revealed she had overcome years of childhood bullying, depression and self-harm to reach her first Games, but sport has always offered an outlet.

Little over a month after those Games, Woods was involved in a car accident which left her in a wheelchair one week before the 2021 World Championships.

Not only did she compete in Slovakia, but Woods left with a women’s K1 bronze – her first individual world medal.

It was last year that Woods truly established herself as a gold-medal contender in Paris, winning her first global title in kayak cross, along with canoe single (C1) silver behind team-mate Mallory Franklin.

And so, this time, with the confidence provided by world gold and the experience of a first Games to call upon, Woods delivered the moment she had long dreamed of before celebrating an emotional success with family and friends under the Paris sun.

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