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Fox's father delighted after golden slalom double

PARIS: Of the 12,000 or so spectators who watched Jessica Fox win her second slalom gold of the Paris Games on Wednesday, few are better placed to critique her performance than her father Richard, and the 10-time former slalom world champion loved what he saw.

The 64-year-old spoke to Reuters as his daughter made her way through the TV cameras in the mixed zone at the Vaires-sur-Marne whitewater venue, where she has won both gold medals up for grabs so far in the canoe and kayak single slalom events in stunning style.

Second-last to descend the tricky course and with a time of 1:03.54 seconds by Elena Lilik to beat, Fox attacked the course like a dervish, ultimately snatching the gold from the German by nearly 2.5 seconds.

"I was amazed in a way, like humanly, that she had that capability to dig deep enough to go better - and not only go better, to go a lot better," Fox said.

"It's a hard course, and it's a good field, and it doesn't matter how many titles you've won before, you've got to stay on the wave, basically, and she had an amazing run," he added.

While each canoeist gets two runs in the heats, the semi-finals and finals in kayak slalom and canoe slalom at the Olympics are one-shot affairs - make a mistake, and there are no second chances to fall back on.

Fox's only blip of her staggering run came when she clipped the 19th of the 23 gates on the course, but such was her speed that the two-second penalty made no difference.

For her father, the competition was almost a re-run of the Tokyo Olympics where she scorched the field with a flawless run in the final to take gold ahead of Britain's Mallory Franklin.

"I was surprised to an extent, but then not at all because she did it in Tokyo in a very challenging situation, and she did it on Sunday," Fox said.

Sunday's success in the kayak increased the expectations on the French-born Aussie to take another medal, but her father said that she was very relaxed in the days in between and dealt well with the pressure.

"I think she's just filtered all of that out and was able to deliver what she's capable of on the river. It's not like she played it safe. She had to be brave, courageous," he said.

With one event left to go - the hair-raising kayak cross race, where four racers descend the course at the same time, another gold medal is still a possibility, but the Fox family aren't getting greedy.

"Hey, I'll be surprised, but I won't be either. Of course, people will be asking that question, but we're pretty happy with what we got there," Richard Fox said. --REUTERS

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