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Four-medal day for Canada ends Para Nordic World Cup Finals

Para athletes say goodbye to Prince George after eight days of racing over two weeks at Otway Nordic Centre

Collin Cameron of Bracebridge, Ont., highlighted a four-medal day for Canada in the distance races Sunday with silver to conclude the Para Nordic World Cup Finals.

Derek Zaplotinsky of Smoky Lake, Alta., Natalie Wilkie of Salmon Arm and Christina Picton of Fonthill, Ont., each added a bronze.

Canada ends the competition with 10 medals (three gold, two silver and five bronze) for third overall at the 16-country event.

In the men’s 18-kilometre sitting race, Giuseppe Romele of Italy won gold in one hour and one minute and 24.8 seconds. Cameron, the sprint victor on Saturday, followed in 1:02:12.7 and Zaplotinsky, the five km winner Thursday, took third in 1:02:15.9.

‘’I just wanted to go out and have a solid race,’’ said Cameron, who ends his only World Cup appearance this season with a gold, silver and bronze. ‘’As we kept going I just felt better and better and it was exciting to move into second on the very last lap.’’

Picton, a member of the 2022 Paralympic team, was third in the women’s sitting race with Lyne-Marie Bilodeau of Sherbrooke, Que., in fourth. Anja Wicker of Germany was the winner.

‘’To get some hardware at the end of a race like that is a bonus,’’ said Picton, who, like Cameron, missed most of the season with illness. ‘’The conditions got sloppier so it was important for me to stick to my line and not fall on the sketchy areas.”

Temperatures soared above 20 C, which had most of the racers down to their T-shirts during the race.

Wilkie marched to the podium for the third time this week in the women’s standing 20 km race with her second bronze. Vilde Nilsen of Norway was the victor.  

Wilkie was also third in the sprint and second in the five km. She placed second to Nilsen in the World Cup cross-country season standings in the race for the Crystal Globe.

‘’For me today was more mentally tough,’’ said Wilkie. ‘’Every lap I just wanted to withdraw because my body wasn’t feeling good but I just kept telling myself to keep going. It was worth it in the end. I’m so happy I finished.’’

Emma Archibald of Fall River, N.S. was eighth.

Taiki Kawayoke of Japan won the men’s standing 20 km. Mark Arendz of Hartsville, PEI, a double medallist this week, was fourth, less than a minute from the podium.

Jesse Bachinsky of Pemberton and his guide Levi Nadlersmith of Boissevain, Man., were seventh in the men’s visually impaired 20 km.

Zaplotinsky, Archibald and Bilodeau all ranked third in their respective categories in the final FIS World Cup cross-country standings.

Sunday’s events completed eight days of racing over the past two weeks at Otway, which started with last week’s Para Biathlon World Championships.

- with files from The Citizen