This article includes alist of references,related reading, orexternal links,but its sources remain unclear because it lacksinline citations. Please helpimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Rauhe in 2007 | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | German |
| Born | (1981-10-03)3 October 1981 (age 44) West Berlin, West Germany |
| Height | 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in) |
| Weight | 82 kg (181 lb) |
| Sport | |
| Country | |
| Sport | Sprint kayak |
Event(s) | K-1 200 m, K-1 500 m, K-2 500 m, K-4 500 m |
| Club | KC Potsdam |
Medal record | |
Ronald Rauhe (born 3 October 1981) is a Germansprint canoeist who has competed since 1997. Competing in sixSummer Olympics, he won a complete set of medals in the K-2 500 m event (gold:2004, silver:2008, bronze:2000). Rauhe has won 16world 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.
Rauhe was selected for the 1997 World Junior Championships inLahti, 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 inZagreb, Croatia, in 1999 he stepped up to the senior German national team.[citation needed]
At the age of seventeen, he enjoyed immediate success, taking the bronze medal in the men's K-1 200 mWorld 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 the2004 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'sCarlos 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 inRačice, 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 theWorld Championships inSzeged, 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 theWorld 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 theinaugural European Games, forGermany incanoe sprint, more specifically, Men's K-2 200m withTom Liebscher. He earned a silver medal.
At the2016 Summer Olympics, he won the bronze medal in theK-1 200 metres event, recording the same time (to a thousandth of a second) asSaúl 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.