Jon Schofield (canoeist)

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Jon Schofield
Jon Schofield in 2013 (cropped) 1.jpg
Personal information
Birth nameJonathan Schofield
Nationality British
Born (1985-05-10) 10 May 1985 (age 37)
Petersfield, Hampshire, England [1]
Height1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight82 kg (181 lb) [1]
Sport
Country United Kingdom
Sport Canoeing
Event(s)Canoe sprint
Coached byAlex Nikonorov

Jon Schofield (born 10 May 1985) is a British canoeist. He partnered with Liam Heath in the men's kayak double 200m sprint event, and they have won a bronze in K-2 200 at the 2012 Summer Olympics, and a silver at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the same event. [2] They have also won gold at the European Championships three times as well as silver and bronze medals at the World Championships. [3]

Contents

Early life and education

Schofield was born in Petersfield, Hampshire to Maggie and Peter Schofield. [4] [5] The family moved to Spain when he was six, where he took up taekwondo and later judo. [6] After coming back to Clitheroe, Lancashire, he was introduced to canoeing when he was nine in a taster session through the Chatburn Cubs. [6] He initially competed in the cub scout racing league, later he took up wildwater racing. [7]

Schofield attended Clitheroe Royal Grammar School from 1996 to 2003. [8] He studied Human Biology at Loughborough University, but took two years out in an attempt to get to the 2008 Beijing Games. [9] He graduated in June 2010. and He also has an MSc in Applied Physiotherapy and Biomechanics from Brunel University. [10] He resides in Maidenhead, Berkshire. [5]

Career

Schofield was active in wild water canoeing as a junior, and made it into the national junior team. He won the Junior World Championships in Bala, North Wales in 2002. [7] He was the overall World Cup winner in 2006. [11] He became European champion in 2007. [1] [7]

Schofield switched to flatwater sprint in 2007 as wild-water sprint canoeing events are not part of the Olympic Games, and he considered becoming an Olympic champion his ultimate goal. [11] In the flatwater sprint kayaking discipline, he competed with Ben Brown in the 500m K2 at the 2007 World Championships, but in finishing in 9th place, they failed to qualify for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. [7]

Schofield was a member of the Soar Valley Canoe Club and coached by Alex Nikonorov. [12]

2010–2011

Schofield partnered up with Liam Heath in the sprint double event after Heath decided to return to the sport in 2009. [13] [14] In their first season competing together in 2010 they won gold medals in the K2 200m at the 2nd World Cup in Szeged and the 3rd World Cup in Duisburg and became European Champions in July 2010. They won two medals at the 2010 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Poznań with a silver in the K-1 4 x 200m relay and a bronze in the K-2 200m event.

In the 2011 international season Schofield and Heath won two silver medals at World Cups 1 and 2 at Poznan and Račice and retained their K2 200m title at the European Championships in Belgrade in June 2011.[ citation needed ] At the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Szeged in August they won the silver medal, thereby gaining qualification for the GB K2 boat in the Men's 200m event at the 2012 Olympics. A fortnight after the World Championships Heath and Schofield took part in the London Invitational Olympic Canoe Sprint test event at Eton-Dorney where they won the Bronze medal in the K2 200m. At the end of 2011 Liam and Jon received Olympic Athlete of the Year award in canoeing from the British Olympic Association. [15]

2012

At the National Regatta in Nottingham in April 2012, Schofield and Heath met GB Canoeing's K2 200m nomination criteria to compete in the 2012 Summer Olympiad. They won silver medals in World Cup 1 in Poznan and World Cup 2 in Duisburg and were part of the four-man GB 200m relay team that won the gold medal in Duisburg. [16] Schofield and Heath formally became members of Team GB on 14 June 2012. A week later, at the European Canoe Sprint Championships in Zagreb they won the K2 200m title for the third year in a row. [17]

Representing Great Britain at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the Men's K-2 200 metres, he and Liam Heath finished 2nd in their heat, 4th overall, qualifying for the semifinals. [18] [19] They won the bronze in the kayak K2 200m final after being edged out of the silver by the Belarus team. [20]

2013–2015

During the 2013 international canoe sprint season Schofield and Heath won the K2 200m silver medals at the first two World Cup regattas in Szeged and Racice respectively but missed out on a medal when they came 4th at the European Championships in Montemor-o-Velho, Portugal. Two months later at the World Championships in Duisburg the pair came second behind the Russians Postrigay and Dyachenko and were part of the fourth placed GB men's 4 × 200 m team.

At the British Canoe Union's National Canoe Sprint Championships in April 2014, Schofield and Heath won the K2 200m title. At World Cup 3 in Szeged Schofield and Heath won silver. Schofield won a bronze medal with Heath, Ed McKeever and Kristian Reeves in the Men's K1 4 × 200m relay in Moscow.

In April 2015, the duo won the K2 200m selection races at the BCU Canoe Sprint Regatta at Holme Pierrepont, Nottingham. At World Cup 2 in Duisburg, they won bronze, followed by a gold in and at World Cup 3 in Copenhagen. At the World Championship in Milan in August, Schofield and Heath came 5th, thereby qualifying Team GB to enter a boat in the Men's K2 200m event at the 2016 Olympics. [21]

2016

At the Olympic Selection event for canoe sprint in April 2016 in Nottingham, Heath and Schofield won the K2 200m race and set a new course record, thereby guaranteeing their nomination to the BOC to compete at the Rio Olympics. [22]

At the 2016 Summer Olympics, Schofield and Heath won the silver K-2 200 event, finishing behind Spain. [23]

The K-2 200m event was dropped for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Schofield therefore focused his attention on the single Kayak events in the following seasons. [24]

Retirement

In March 2019, Schofield announced that he would be retiring that year to take up a post in Scotland as Head of Performance and Pathways at the Scottish Canoe Association in June. [25]

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References

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