Tokyo 2020 Olympics: Liam Heath earns bronze medal in men's K1 200m canoe sprint for Britain

Liam Heath wins medals at three consecutive Olympics and is the most successful British paddler of all-time with four podium appearances at the Games; the 36-year-old from Guildford earns Britain's 49th medal in Tokyo after finishing behind Hungary's Sandor Totka and Italian Manfredi Rizza

Image: Liam Heath collects his bronze medal on the podium after finishing third in the men's K1 200m canoe sprint final

Great Britain's Liam Heath won a bronze medal in the men's K1 200m canoe sprint at Sea Forest Waterway.

The 36-year-old defending Olympic champion clocked 35.202 seconds to finish third behind Hungary's Sandor Totka, with Italian Manfredi Rizza taking silver.

Heath, who set an Olympic-best time of 33.985 seconds during Wednesday's qualifying, took second in the opening semi-final to set up his medal challenge.

And while he could not make it successive golds, it was Guildford-based Heath's fourth Olympic medal following previous K2 sprint success at the Rio Games and London 2012.

Drawn in lane three, Heath delivered a consistent performance, but could not quite threaten the top two.

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Image: Heath (R) came in third behind gold medallist Sandor Totka (C) and Italian Manfredi who won silver (L)

Totka and Rizza were separated by just 45-hundredths of a second, with Heath leading the charge behind them.

Heath, Team GB's most successful paddler of all time, added to K1 200m gold in Rio, K2 200m silver at London 2012 and K2 200m bronze in 2016.

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He earned Britain's 49th medal of the Tokyo Olympics and added more canoeing success following Mallory Franklin's silver in the women's C1 slalom during the first week of the Games.

Heath said: "You don't know where you've placed, you've done your best and pushed it as hard as you can do.

Image: Heath reacts after his bronze medal finish in men's kayak single 200m final

"If you can say that, getting off the water is a decent effort.

"The last 100m has always been the strongest part of my race. Everyone can accelerate quickly and reach top speeds, it's all about maintaining that.

"I was a little hesitant off the start and didn't reach my potential in terms of peak speed, I'm still happy with the performance.

"To win a medal at a third Games, it's hard to put it into words. It's what you're working towards, just to be at your best for these events, I've learnt so much about my journey.

"Each Games, each competition, you learn so much about you, about people you compete against, the people you work with day in, day out.

"A massive thanks to everyone watching at home. It's not gold but I'm happy with my performance."

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