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Canada's Collin Cameron sprints to Para Nordic gold

Natalie Wilkie of Salmon Arm races to another podium finish at Otway Nordic Centre

Collin Cameron of Bracebridge, Ont., won the gold medal Saturday in the men’s sitting cross-country skiing sprint at the Para Nordic World Cup Finals at Otway Nordic Centre.

Natalie Wilkie of Salmon Arm added a bronze in the women’s standing sprint. 

After three days of competition the Canadian team has three gold, one silver and two bronze to stand third overall behind Ukraine and Germany.

Sporting a black T-shirt as temperatures reached the middle teens, Cameron won the six-man final in three minutes and 1.31 seconds. Taras Rad of Ukraine was second in 3:02.21 and Cristian Ribera of Brazil third in 3:02.98.

In the sprint, the competitors race head-on around a 1.2-kilometre loop and advance through a qualifying round and then two six-man semifinals with the top three from each advancing to the final.

‘’I was just trying to keep it all together,’’ said the 35-year-old Cameron, about churning down the last stretch to the finish.

‘’I could hear all those pole plants behind me and it was just so hard with the wet snow and the sun. I didn’t want to have a breakdown in my technique.’’

On Wednesday Cameron took bronze in the 10 km biathlon. That race and Saturday’s were his only two events this season. A painful sinus infection which lasted nearly three months kept him on the sidelines most of this winter.

‘’I never thought about gold, my main concern was to start the day off well in qualification,’’ said Cameron, a six-time Paralympic Games medallist, born with shortened limbs. ‘’I love sprinting, it’s the most fun event. Today it was about coming out and being in sync where my body is at.’’

Derek Zaplotinsky, the five km cross-country skiing winner on Thursday, also reached the final, placing fifth in 3:10.02.

Ethan Hess of Pemberton was 17th and Leo Sammarelli of Vancouver was 20th.

In the women’s standing sprint, Vilde Nilsen of Norway took the gold in 3:11.48 with Liudmila Liashenko of Ukraine second in 3:14.70 and Wilkie, a seven-time Paralympic Games medallist,  third in 3:18.19

It was Wilkie’s second medal of the competition. She won silver Thursday in the five km classic.

‘’It’s a very satisfying bronze medal,’’ said the 23-year-old, who lost four fingers in a workshop accident in high school and skis with one pole. ‘’Usually I’m faster in sprinting but I really felt it out there and just didn’t have it in the legs today.’’ 

Emma Archibald of Fall River, N.S., was also in the final, placing sixth.

Lyne-Marie Bilodeau of Sherbrooke, Que., was sixth in the women’s sitting final.

Jesse Bachinsky of Kenora, Ont., and his guide Levi Nadlersmith of Boissevain, Man., were 12th in the men's visually-impaired sprint.

Jake Adicoff of Dan Jose, Calif., and guide Reid Goble sprinted to gold in the men’s event. Dmytro Suiarko (with guide Olexandr Nikonovych) of Ukraine were the silver medalists and Zebastien Modin (Emil Jonsson Haag) of Sweden won bronze.

Germany continued to dominate the women’s vision-impaired class, sweeping the podium with Linn Kazmaier (Florian Baumann) first, Leoonie Maria Walter (Christian Krasman) second and Joahnna Recktenwald (Pirmin Strecker) third.

Ukrainian men claimed all three standing medals with Serafym Drahan winning gold, Grigori Vovchynskyi capturing silver and Serhii Romaniuk wearing bronze.

In the women’s sitting sprint final, Anje Wicker of Germany won the race for gold, Kim Yunji of Korea won silver and Aline Dos Santos Rocha of Brazil claimed bronze.

Competition ends Sunday with the cross-country long distance classic technique races - 18 km for the sit-skiers and 20 km for the standing and visually-impaired racers.

Sunday’s races will mark the end of eight days of racing over the past two weeks at Otway - the site of last week’s Para Biathlon World Championships.

- with files from The Citizen