The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Germans remain luge dynasty

Powerful program’s dominance likely to continue in Korea.

- By Tim Reynolds

There has never been a women’s luge athlete who has won more World Cup medals than Natalie Geisenberg­er. Same goes for world championsh­ip medals, same goes for Olympic medals.

Her resume is beyond compare.

So she’s the best ever to slide, right?

“No,” she says, adamantly. “I’m not the best.”

She may not think so, but plenty of people in the luge world think otherwise. There

no other athlete at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics — not Lindsey Vonn, not Mikaela Shiffrin, not Nathan Chen — more expected to win than Geisenberg­er, the star attraction of a juggernaut German luge program that has been miles ahead of the rest of the world for generation­s. “I’m not one who looks to

the number of races or being on the podium,” Geisenberg­er said.

Maybe she should. Here’s a baffling comparison: The United States, in its entire World Cup luge history, has 45 gold medals. Geisenberg­er has 43 golds in singles races alone, 64 when adding her appearance­s in relay events and 117 total medals just from World Cup events.

She has 12 world championsh­ip medals and three Olympic medals, both tying for the best ever. In Germany, she is considered an absolute sporting superstar — whether she wants the spotlight or not.

“The motivation is that I like what I do, I love what I do,” Geisenberg­er said. “I like the sport. I love to race

against other people, to fight against myself and I like to be successful. I know the feeling to stand on the podium, on the top. I know the feeling when the national anthem is playing. I’m addicted to that feeling.”

Germans don’t win every race. It just seems that way. Geisenberg­er is the defending Olympic champion who won 13 medals in 13 races in World Cup singles competitio­n this season. Two-time defending men’s Olympic champion Felix Loch led all men with eight singles medals. The doubles team of Toni Eggert and Sascha Benecken medaled in 12 of 13 events, winning gold in 10 of them.

Add up all the World Cup races from this winter, and the rest of the world won 17. Germany won 28.

“I don’t know what the

magic ingredient is,” said U.S. women’s luge veteran Erin Hamlin, a two-time world champion and the 2014 Olympic women’s bronze medalist. “They’re competitor­s. They come out on race day and you can pretty much bet they’re going to go faster than they did all week in training. Happens all the time. They’re breaking track records almost every week.” Loch is trying to be only the second man to win three

consecutiv­e Olympic luge gold medals. The other, of course, was a German — Georg Hackl did it in 1992, 1994 and 1998. Geisenberg­er could be the first woman to win three Olympic luge golds,

after winning in singles and as part of the team relay at Sochi in 2014.

“I like the sport very much and that’s the important thing,” said Loch, who’s only 28 and plans on going through at least one more Olympic cycle. “I like sliding, the feeling, the speed. That’s what’s so cool about the sport.”

They make it seem simple. It is anything but. Luge is highly technical, with the quality of equipment every bit as important as the slider’s technique. The Germans have four tracks, which is more than any other nation, so they have the best home

ice advantage in the sport. And they’re an extremely well-funded program, which never hurts.

That, along with the widespread belief that they have

some secrets to get the most out of their sleds, frustrates other sliders in countless ways.

Take Loch’s final run on the Americans’ home track in Lake Placid, New York, earlier this season: He bounced off walls, was late into some curves, didn’t exit some others on the fastest possible line, and all that often means a slider loses time. But Loch somehow crossed the line with one of the fastest times in the heat, which baffled some of his competitor­s.

“It’s tough to understand how that happens,”

U.S. men’s veteran Chris Mazdzer said.

 ?? AP ?? Felix Loch of Germany will attempt to become the second man to win three consecutiv­e Olympic luge gold medals. The other also was a German — Georg Hackl.
AP Felix Loch of Germany will attempt to become the second man to win three consecutiv­e Olympic luge gold medals. The other also was a German — Georg Hackl.

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