Charlotte Henshaw completed the KL2 Grand Slam with a dominant performance at the European Championships in Czechia on a day which also saw Hope Gordon and David Phillipson take home gold.
Henshaw earlier claimed second in the VL3 Final before she stormed to victory in the KL2 showpiece, registering a time of 48.218.
It now means the 38-year-old holds the Paralympic, World and European titles simultaneously, after finishing nearly four seconds ahead of Katalin Varga in second, while Anja Adler took bronze.
On winning the Grand Slam, Henshaw said: “It was something that we had in the back of out minds going forwards in this competition.
“We don’t always race at the Europeans so to have a bite at the cherry is really nice.
“To deliver when you’re feeling very human is something that I’m very proud of.”
Earlier, Gordon produced a superb performance in the VL3 women’s final to finish first with a time of 54.221, ahead of Henshaw who was 1.27 seconds further back in second.
Gordon, the 2024 Paralympic silver medallist, established herself out in front early on and never relinquished her lead, winning by half a length.
“I’ve just seen the time and I couldn’t believe how quick it was,” said Gordon post-race.
“I thought I messed up the start as well. I just had to move past the first 30 metres and then almost reset.
“I’m genuinely shocked by that time. It’s a great course, good conditions, but to do that, at this point of the year with what I’ve done so far in training with a bit of a different approach to this year, I can’t ask for more than that.
“I’m quite excited to see where I can take that.”
The following race saw Phillipson dig deep to finish first in the paracanoe KL2 men’s final in a time of 41.516.
The 36-year-old, who also took a silver in Paris last summer, held off Italy’s Christian Volp by 0.8 seconds with Mykola Syniuk of Ukraine taking the final spot on the podium.
“[It feels] awesome,” said Phillipson on the triumph. “I wanted to get that gold. I did what I needed to do. The start could have probably been a bit better.
“Overall, I’m not my fittest and I was 0.3 of a second off my PB. We’ve worked on a lot of back-end technique, bringing the rate down and lengthening it out. It just makes the boat move. I’m pleased.”
Jonny Young claimed silver in the men’s KL3 final with a sterling performance to come through the pack with a time of 41.022, just over a second behind winner Serhii Yemelianov.
Compatriot Rob Oliver was also in the mix for the podium places but eventually came home in fourth, pipped by Spain’s Juan Valle to third.
Taylor Gough fought hard during the men’s VL1 final and was rewarded for his efforts with a bronze medal thanks to a time of 1.11.016 in what his international debut was.
“I’m absolutely buzzing with that,” said Gough. “I heard my mates shouting the whole way and that gave me that energy to find that second, third and fourth gear. It’s great to represent my country.”
In the K4 women’s final, British quartet Emily Lewis, Deborah Kerr, Emma Russell and Zoe Clark put in a solid effort as they came home in seventh place.
The full results from the weekend can be found here.