Cecilie Moe Weinreich (DEN): Long-serving star Canoe Polo player – and coach

Cecilie Moe Weinreich (DEN): Long-serving star Canoe Polo player – and coach

published on 14 May

In the national team when 18, and now aged 30, Cecilie Moe Weinreich has been at the top of the tree in women’s Canoe Polo for a very long time. “From 2012 to 2015 I was a player, from 2015 to 2019 I was the captain and from 2020 to 2023 I was actually a player and a coach at the same time,” she tells. “I was not ready to quit playing in 2020, so I balanced both roles for four years.”

“We have a coach on land this year, and I am very grateful to be able to focus on my playing, and interacting with the team solely as a team-mate.”

For Weinreich, pure enjoyment now carries high priority: “Not that I didn’t enjoy it previously – I did! But to prolong my time in the sport I try to absorb all the great things like the fun of a game, an important victory and maybe most importantly the social bond and the freedom. Playing Canoe Polo, I forget all else in life. I am just there, in the moment, giving all I have. I try to enjoy that feeling and just enjoy that my life dream, of competing in The World Games, is coming true.”

Denmark’s clear target for The World Games

With a Golden Goal win against Great Britain at the World Championships 2024 in China, Denmark’s women’s team secured 7th place and thereby the last qualifying place for The World Games 2025. The big target is to reach the semi-final. The seven other women’s teams competing in Chengdu are China, Germany, Iran, Italy, The Netherlands, New Zealand and Spain.

“In 2023, my last year as a player-coach, we managed to get 5th at the European Championships, the highest ever placement for the team. We were very close to reaching the semi-final – and it is definitely within reach now,” says Weinreich. “Five years ago, it seemed impossible that we could ever qualify for The World Games. But here we are! A hard and solid team effort!”

“I’m proud of my achievements as a coach”

“Canoe Polo is a very small sport, and sometimes it can be hard to find qualified volunteers that can help for example with coaching. Combining playing and coaching was very tough, but also very rewarding. I am so grateful for all that I have learned about myself, team sports and coaching during this period,” says Weinreich.

“But it was also very taxing on a personal level, and it cost me a lot of energy to balance the role of playing and coaching at the same time.”

“Even though I know I made some mistakes from time to time, I always aimed to do what was best for the team, and therefore I am very proud of what I achieved with the national team as the player-coach.”

She is typical of the thousands of devoted individuals in small sports, who make great sacrifices because of pure love for the sport, despite no salary.

Team tactics matter

“For our sport, technique and tactics are very important. We can do technical drills both on land and in the kayak, and tactics are best studied on land by watching and analyzing games and situations – then using the analysis on water during our training sessions. We do spend a good amount of time talking tactics and practicing. It is vital to be a good team!”

“We do consider each opponent separately,” continues Weinreich, “but it is different from team to team and coach to coach how much the opponent is studied. When I was coaching, we tried to develop Excel sheets with statistics from other teams and players, so we could write down ‘Number 1 from Switzerland shoots like this – so we can block her shot like that’. That’s my own ideal approach.”

And so to Chengdu

“Our strongest opponents are probably the Dutch, Italian and Spanish teams,” concludes Weinreich.

“They are in our group, and we want a good start in the group, for a better quarter-final opponent. But I believe anything can happen at The World Games. It really depends on who shows up with the right mental game.”

The International World Games Association (IWGA) is a non-profit-making international sports organisation recognised and supported by the International Olympic Committee. The IWGA comprises 40 International Member Sports Federations. It administers and promotes The World Games (TWG), a multi-sport event held every four years that features around 35 sports on its programme. The next edition of TWG will be in Chengdu (CHN) from 7-17 August 2025. 5,000 participants from more than 100 countries are expected to take part in this 12th edition. The latest Games were hosted by Birmingham, Alabama (USA).

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