Ronald Rauhe
 Rauhe in 2007 |
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| Nationality | German |
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| Born | (1981-10-03) 3 October 1981 West Berlin, West Germany |
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| Height | 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in) |
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| Weight | 82 kg (181 lb) |
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| Country | Germany |
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| Sport | Sprint kayak |
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| Event(s) | K-1 200 m, K-1 500 m, K-2 500 m, K-4 500 m |
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| Club | KC Potsdam |
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Ronald Rauhe (born 3 October 1981) is a German sprint canoeist who has competed since 1997. Competing in six Summer Olympics, he won a complete set of medals in the K-2 500 m event (gold: 2004, silver: 2008, bronze: 2000). Rauhe has won 16 world championship gold medals, the most by a male kayaker; now with 26 World medals, in 2011 he exceeded the 20 of his compatriot, Torsten Gutsche.
Early career
Rauhe was selected for the 1997 World Junior Championships in Lahti, Finland at the age of just fifteen years nine months. Competing against paddlers up to three years older he won two medals – gold in the K-4 500 m and silver in the K-1 500 m, an unprecedented achievement for a fifteen-year-old. After winning three more gold medals at the next edition of the world junior championships in Zagreb, Croatia, in 1999 he stepped up to the senior German national team.
Senior career
At the age of seventeen, he enjoyed immediate success, taking the bronze medal in the men's K-1 200 m World Championship final the same year.
Since 2000, the Rauhe/Wieskötter partnership has enjoyed unrivalled success, winning the major K-2 500 m race from 2001 to 2007 (six world titles and the 2004 Olympic gold). The pair have also won eight straight European championships over 500 m (2000–2008; there was no championship in 2003).
Rauhe also dominated the K-1 200 m individual sprint, winning three consecutive golds in both the world and European championships before losing out to Spain's Carlos Pérez in 2005.
If Rauhe's rivals hoped this marked the beginning of a decline in the German's fortunes they were to be disappointed. In 2006 Rauhe was back on top form and won more titles than ever before. At the European Championships in Račice, Czech Republic he won three gold medals, retaining his K-2 500 m title, regaining the K-1 200 m crown from Pérez and winning the K-2 200 m for the first time in his career.
These three victories were repeated at the World Championships in Szeged, Hungary. Rauhe's dominance was best illustrated by his victory in the K-2 200 m final in a race that was scheduled just twenty minutes after his K-1 final (and against a field of rested opponents none of whom had competed in the earlier race).
At the World Championships in his home country Germany in 2007, he and his partner Tim Wieskötter won again the K-2 500 m and came second in the K-2 200 m.
On the national level, he has won 50 national titles at the German Championships. His 50th title was the 500 m in the K-1 on 2 May 2009 in Duisburg.
In June 2015, he competed in the inaugural European Games, for Germany in canoe sprint, more specifically, Men's K-2 200m with Tom Liebscher. He earned a silver medal.
At the 2016 Summer Olympics, he won the bronze medal in the K-1 200 metres event, recording the same time (to a thousandth of a second) as Saúl Craviotto – wiping out the memory of his greatest competitive disappointment, finishing last in the final heat of this event four years previously at the London Olympics.
References
External links
Olympic kayaking champions in men's K-4 500 m |
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World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-1 500 m |
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- 1948: Gert Fredriksson (SWE)
- 1950: Johan Andersen (DEN)
- 1954: Gert Fredriksson (SWE)
- 1958: Stefan Kapłaniak (POL)
- 1963: Aurel Vernescu (ROU)
- 1966: Aurel Vernescu (ROU)
- 1970: Anatoly Tishchenko Sr. (URS)
- 1971: Nikolay Gogol (URS)
- 1973: Géza Csapó (HUN)
- 1974: Vasile Dîba (ROU)
- 1975: Géza Csapó (HUN)
- 1977: Vasile Dîba (ROU)
- 1978: Vasile Dîba (ROU)
- 1979: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS)
- 1981: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS)
- 1982: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS)
- 1983: Vladimir Parfenovich (URS)
- 1985: Andreas Stähle (GDR)
- 1986: Jeremy West (GBR)
- 1987: Paul MacDonald (NZL)
- 1989: Martin Hunter (AUS)
- 1990: Sergey Kalesnik (URS)
- 1991: Renn Crichlow (CAN)
- 1993: Mikko Kolehmainen (FIN)
- 1994: Zsombor Borhi (HUN)
- 1995: Piotr Markiewicz (POL)
- 1997: Botond Storcz (HUN)
- 1998: Ákos Vereckei (HUN)
- 1999: Ákos Vereckei (HUN)
- 2001: Ákos Vereckei (HUN)
- 2002: Nathan Baggaley (AUS)
- 2003: Nathan Baggaley (AUS)
- 2005: Nathan Baggaley (AUS)
- 2006: Marek Twardowski (POL)
- 2007: Adam van Koeverden (CAN)
- 2009: (GER)
- 2010: Anders Gustafsson (SWE)
- 2011: Marek Twardowski (POL)
- 2013: Tom Liebscher (GER)
- 2014: René Holten Poulsen (DEN)
- 2015: René Holten Poulsen (DEN)
- 2017: Josef Dostál (CZE)
- 2018: Josef Dostál (CZE)
- 2019: Tom Liebscher (GER)
- 2021: Mikita Borykau (BLR)
- 2022: Josef Dostál (CZE)
- 2023: Bálint Kopasz (HUN)
- 2024: Josef Dostál (CZE)
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World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-2 200 m |
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- 1994: Poland (Maciej Freimut & Adam Wysocki)
- 1995: United States (Stein Jorgensen & John Mooney)
- 1997: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1998: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 1999: Hungary (Vince Fehérvári & Róbert Hegedűs)
- 2001: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2002: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2003: Lithuania (Alvydas Duonėla & Egidijus Balčiūnas)
- 2005: Serbia and Montenegro (Dragan Zorić & Ognjen Filipović)
- 2006: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2007: Belarus (Raman Piatrushenka & Vadzim Makhneu)
- 2009: Belarus (Vadzim Makhneu & Raman Piatrushenka)
- 2010: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2011: France (Arnaud Hybois & Sébastien Jouve)
- 2013: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
- 2014: Serbia (Nebojša Grujić & Marko Novaković)
- 2015: Hungary (Sándor Tótka & Péter Molnár)
- 2017: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2018: Hungary (Balázs Birkás & Márk Balaska)
- 2019: Russia (Yury Postrigay & Alexander Dyachenko)
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World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-2 500 m |
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- 1948: Finland (Thor Axelsson & Nils Björklöf)
- 1950: Sweden (Lars Glassér & Ingemar Hedberg)
- 1954: West Germany (Ernst Steinhauer & Meinrad Miltenberger)
- 1958: Poland (Stefan Kapłaniak & Władysław Zieliński)
- 1963: Romania (Vasilie Nicoară & Haralambie Ivanov)
- 1966: Romania (Aurel Vernescu & Atanase Sciotnic)
- 1970: Sweden (Lars Andersson & Rolf Peterson)
- 1971: Sweden (Lars Andersson & Rolf Peterson)
- 1973: Soviet Union (Nikolay Gogol & Pytor Greshta)
- 1974: Poland (Ryszard Oborski & Grzegorz Śledziewski)
- 1975: Soviet Union (Viktor Vorobiyev & Nikolay Astapkovich)
- 1977: East Germany (Joachim Mattern & Bernd Olbricht)
- 1978: East Germany (Bernd Olbricht & Rüdiger Helm)
- 1979: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergei Chukhray)
- 1981: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergei Chukhray)
- 1982: Soviet Union (Vladimir Parfenovich & Sergey Superata)
- 1983: East Germany (Frank Fischer & André Wohllebe)
- 1985: New Zealand (Alan Thompson & Paul MacDonald)
- 1986: West Germany (Reiner Scholl & Thomas Pfrang)
- 1987: Hungary (Ferenc Csipes & László Fidel)
- 1989: East Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche)
- 1990: Soviet Union (Sergey Kalesnik & Anatoly Tishchenko)
- 1991: Spain (Juan José Roman & Juan Manuel Sánchez)
- 1993: Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche)
- 1994: Germany (Kay Bluhm & Torsten Gutsche)
- 1995: Italy (Beniamino Bonomi & Daniele Scarpa)
- 1997: Australia (Andrew Trim & Daniel Collins)
- 1998: Slovakia (Michal Riszdorfer & Juraj Bača)
- 1999: Poland (Marek Twardowski & Adam Wysocki)
- 2001: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2002: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2003: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2005: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2006: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2007: Germany ( & Tim Wieskötter)
- 2009: Belarus (Vadzim Makhneu & Raman Piatrushenka)
- 2010: Belarus (Raman Piatrushenka & Vadzim Makhneu)
- 2011: Hungary (Dávid Tóth & Tamás Kulifai)
- 2013: Portugal (Emanuel Silva & João Ribeiro)
- 2014: Slovakia (Erik Vlček & Juraj Tarr)
- 2015: Australia (Ken Wallace & Lachlan Tame)
- 2017: Spain (Rodrigo Germade & Marcus Walz)
- 2018: Russia (Artem Kuzakhmetov & Vladislav Blintsov)
- 2019: Belarus (Stanislau Daineka & Dzmitry Natynchyk)
- 2021: Spain (Marcus Walz & Rodrigo Germade)
- 2022: Hungary (Bence Nádas & Bálint Kopasz)
- 2023: Portugal (João Ribeiro & Messias Baptista)
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World Champions in Men's Canoe Sprint K-4 500 m |
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