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Friday, 6th November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Canoe club is on course for great things

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Published Date: 15 May 2008
THE Forth Canoe Club is contributing to Britain's Olympic challenge this summer and expects to play an even bigger part in four years following the recent opening of a new international slalom course at Harrison Bridge in Polwarth, writes LORIN McDOUGALL.
There is a strong tartan presence in the canoeing squad for Beijing with Scots involved in every category.

Crieff's Fiona Pennie and Aberdeen's Tim Baillie will feature, but Scotland's main hope in China is 2004 kayak silver medallist Campbell Wa
lsh from Bridge of Allan, who claimed the European title in Poland last weekend.

Long-time Forth Club member David Florence finished out of the medals in Krakow in the Canadian discipline semi-finals, but he had already secured his Olympic spot.

His enduring link with FCC began more than a decade ago as a 14-year-old Stewart's Melville pupil and, although Florence does much of his training at the National Watersports Centre in Nottingham, he remains a familiar figure at the Edinburgh club.

Florence will be only 29 by the time of the 2012 London Olympics and the advent of the new slalom course means he will be guaranteed top-class training facilities whenever he returns to the Capital.

"Once we had contacted British Waterways for clearance, we built it over one weekend last month and we've been adding bits to it since," explained course manager and former GB international Robert Phillips. "It's an Olympic-style course for white-water slalom. It has all the currents and boulders with 12 regulation standard gates.

"The Scottish Sports Foundation gave us £10,000 and we've bought four new slalom boats and four new sprint boats which cost around £1000 each.

"As well as being a training venue, we'll be holding novice races there and it should be perfect for kids to get started in the sport.

"Hopefully, it'll be a stepping stone for some of them to go on and get medals at major championships. FCC is the oldest canoe club in Scotland (founded in 1934] and one of the most active. We cater for all ages and all disciplines – flat water sprint and marathon as well as wild water slalom.

"We have the facilities now. It's up to individual athletes how far they want to push themselves.

"David has made it this year, but Olympic selection is very difficult – it's the cream of the cream."









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  • Last Updated: 15 May 2008 10:06 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

David Cuthill,

Forth CC, Harrison Edinburgh 30/08/2008 13:54:15
"...following the recent opening of a new international slalom course at Harrison Bridge in Polwarth, writes LORIN McDOUGALL".
Sorry for any misunderstanding, but our cool little kid's training place on the canal is not an "international slalom course".
Scottish Politicians: Here is a Welsh blueprint of what we require:
Construction work has begun on an Olympic-standard canoe slalom and white water rafting centre at the Cardiff International Sports Village (CISV).The white water centre is part of the £700m CISV, which currently boasts a 50m swimming pool and an ice rink. Have a Look! (http://www.welsh-canoeing.org.uk/introduction/120808cardiff.htm)
Rodney Berman, Cardiff Council leader, said: "Cardiff has just been chosen to represent the UK as a European City of Sport for 2009 and it is facilities like this that will help add to the city's reputation as a genuine world-class destination."?And there's more...(http://www.welsh-canoeing.org.uk/introduction/040708cardiff_course.htm)

What FCC wants is facilities to train hundreds of new athletes in Edinburgh in Wildwater and Flatwater, and if they get to Senior British Team level we want full funding for all of them to stay in Scotland to train at a large centre of excellence. At the moment the SCA is in receipt of reduced funding, and last month issued a Policy Document. This was to increase the campsite fees to competitors at Grandtully slaloms simply to fund operations and pay for staff. Previous grant money had provided an expensive, but temporary toilet building with a very high maintenance bill. The SCA has been trying for nearly 30 years to get proper funding for Slalom Competition in Scotland, and although much voluntary money and effort has been spent, the results rather pale in comparison to WCA's Cardiff enterprise.


 

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