DThree medals-less than three hours: at the German Sailing Association (DSV), you have never experienced such a day. At lunch time on Tuesday, Paul Korhoff and Erica Sturmer fell into the 26-degree warm water of Sagami Bay on Enoshima Island. They cheered and held hands. This is how German sailors have participated in the Olympic Games since the 2000 Sydney Olympics. The most successful result achieved on the previous year. 57 years after Willy Kuhweide won the gold medal at the same location in the 1964 Olympics, the sailing area about an hour south of Tokyo has proven to be very suitable for fulfilling the German sailing dream, winning a silver medal and Two bronze medals.
Tina Lutz and Susann Beucke caused the biggest cheers in the DSV team. Because the Dutch team leading the Germans in the 13th and final game before the final medal game only finished ninth, Lutz and Burke were able to jump to fifth place in a tense and tense match. The second step on the podium. As in 2016, the Brazilian duo Martine Grael / Kahena Kunze won the gold medal. “No one could tell us whether it was silver or bronze in the beginning-but we just celebrated anyway,” Lutz said in the first minute after crossing the finish line when the two 30-year-olds were only 4.99 meters long each. The ship shook for the other few minutes and lay in their arms.
Since 2007, the 2017 and 2020 European Championship duo have actually been on the same boat. After the 2012 London Olympics and the 2016 Rio Olympics were almost absent, Susann Beucke’s fibula fracture almost prevented her from participating in the Tokyo Olympics in early 2020, and the huge pressure disappeared from them.
“It’s been an incredibly long road for us, and we have really gone through a lot. But now we can finally use our potential, it’s just a wonderful feeling,” Beucke said, with tears in his eyes. I remembered a common bet: 12 years ago, the two sailors vowed that one day they would let their daughters be named after them. If they have ever won an Olympic medal.
Erik Heil and Thomas Plößel were less excited about their reaction to their second bronze medal at the Olympics, but they were still very satisfied. After their success at the Rio Olympics five years ago, the duo from Berlin sailing for the North German Yacht Club confidently flirted with “better medals” before the Tokyo race. But before the final medal competition, the 12th and 14th places in the competition had minimized the chances of winning the gold medal.
Heil, 31, and Plößel, who is one and a half years older than him, in addition to a strong start, good tactical management, and the Spaniard’s poor performance, should also be on the championship podium. The duo gave up the bronze medal in seventh place in the medal competition. “I am ten times happier than it was at the time, because it is harder and tighter,” Voroter Plößel said afterwards. The British Dylan Fletcher-Scott and Stuart Bithell unexpectedly won the gold medal, and they won the gold medal in the New Zealand superstar who has dominated since 2012. Peter Burling / Blair Tuke sprinted to the finish line in a dramatic sprint.
Alica Stuhlemmer and Paul Kohlhoff fought for their lives in Nacra-17 due to a cerebral hemorrhage a few years ago. They made a mistake at the beginning and left the mixed duo at the beginning of the final game to 10th, behind the leader. 250 meters. But the two 21-year-old and 26-year-old sports fighters fought back, and they won the bronze medal in eighth place. “We are very proud to be part of this cool team,” Korkhov said. The Nacra Olympic champion is Ruggero Tita / Caterina Banti from Italy, followed by John Gimson / Anna Burnet from the United Kingdom.
On Wednesday, 470-mile Luise Wanser and Anastasiya Winkel will enter the last race of Enoshima, ranking eighth in the overall standings and have no chance of winning a medal. Germany succeeded in the Tokyo Regatta, with laser sailor Philipp Buhl finishing fifth and Svenja Wegner finishing 16th in Laser Radial. However, on DSV, people will first remember these three hot lunchtimes on Tuesday.




