Germany at the Summer Olympics

Germany at the
Summer Olympics
IOC codeGER
NOCGerman Olympic Sports Confederation
Websitewww.dosb.de (in German, English, and French)
Medals
Gold
438
Silver
457
Bronze
491
Total
1,386
Summer Olympics appearances (overview)
Other related appearances
1906 Intercalated Games

––––

 Saar (1952)
 United Team of Germany (1956–1964)
 East Germany (1968–1988)
 West Germany (1968–1988)

Athletes from Germany (GER) have appeared in 27 of the 30 Summer Olympic Games, having competed in all Games except[1] those of 1920, 1924 and 1948, when they were not permitted to do so. Germany has hosted the Summer Olympic Games twice; the 1936 Games in Berlin, and the 1972 Games in Munich.

The nation appeared 15 times as a single country (IOC code GER), before World War II and again after German reunification in 1990. Three times, from 1956 to 1964, German athletes from the separate states in West and East competed as a United Team of Germany, which is currently listed by the IOC as EUA, not GER.

Due to partition under occupation that resulted in three (until 1957) post-war German states, two concurrent Olympic teams with German athletes appeared on five occasions, in 1952, from 1968 to 1976, and in 1988. The all-time results of German athletes are thus divided among the designations GER, EUA, FRG, GDR and SAA (the Saarland, which only took part in the 1952 Summer Games and won no medals).

Including the Summer Games of 2020, German athletes have won 1384 medals: 438 gold, 456 silver and 490 bronze. The IOC currently splits these results among four codes, even though only the German Democratic Republic (East Germany; GDR) from 1968 to 1988 had sent a separate team to compete against the team of the German NOC that represented Germany (GER) since 1896.

Timeline of Germany at the Summer Olympics[edit]

1896–1912[edit]

1896–1912

Germany entered all Olympic Games starting in 1896, even though the relations between the German Empire under Kaiser Wilhelm II, and the French Third Republic where Pierre de Coubertin revived Olympic games and held the 1900 Summer Olympics, were strained following the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. The country's overall medal ranks varied from second through seventh.

The worst result, seventh, occurred in the 1900 Paris Olympics. The German gymnasts were judged no better than 53rd in the single gymnastic contest organized by the French, behind dozens of Frenchmen, who occupied the first 18 places and thus won all three medals. In contrast, the Gymnastics at the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens had seen eight contests, with Germans scoring five gold, three silver and two bronze medals.

The anticipated 1916 Summer Olympics, which were to be officially known as the Games of the VI Olympiad, were to have been held in Germany's capital, Berlin. At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, organization continued, as no one foresaw the war dragging on for four years. Eventually, though, the games were canceled.

1920–1948[edit]

1928–1932

After World War I, the German Empire became a republic informally known as Weimar Republic, a change which was reflected in a new flag of Germany that in fact was older than the former one, dating back to early 19th century democratic movements. In the Paris Peace Conference, the outbreak of the war was blamed on Germany and other Central Powers allies. These nations, which by now had new governments, were banned from the 1920 Summer Olympics. While all other banned nations were invited again for the 1924 Summer Olympics, held for the second time in Pierre de Coubertin's home town of Paris, the ban on Germany was not lifted until 1925. This was likely related to French Occupation of the Ruhr and the Rheinland between 1923 and 1925.[citation needed]

After 16 years of absence, a new generation of German athletes returned in the 1928 Summer Olympics, scoring second overall. Four years later, the worldwide Great Depression prevented many athletes from competing in the 1932 Games in Los Angeles. Winning only three gold medals, the German team was ranked ninth, though it did finish tied in silver medals, with 12.

1936

In the spring of 1931 the 1936 Summer Olympics were awarded to Berlin, 20 years later than originally planned. From 1933 onwards, the Nazi Party ruled Germany, a change being marked by the use of the Nazi flag. In the games, the 348 German athletes not only outnumbered the 310 Americans, but outscored them for the first time in the medal count in which Germany ranked first. Also, German gymnasts Konrad Frey and Alfred Schwarzmann won the most medals, with six and five in total, of which three each were gold, while American Jesse Owens had won four gold medals himself. Leni Riefenstahl documented the games in the film Olympia.

The 1940 Summer Olympics as well as the 1944 Summer Olympics were canceled due to World War II. For the 1948 Summer Olympics, with the war a recent memory, Germany and Japan were not invited.

Separate German teams 1952–1988[edit]

1952–1956
since 1972

A United Team of Germany with athletes from two states appeared three times at the Olympic games from 1956 to 1964. The IOC currently does not attribute these results to Germany (GER), but lists them separately as the Equipe Unifiée Allemande (EUA).

In the 1952 Games, only athletes from West Germany and the Saar Protectorate took part. The former represented the Federal Republic of Germany (GER), which as the only independent democratic state, covering the largest part of Germany, claimed exclusive mandate to represent the entire country. Athletes from the Saar Protectorate (SAA) competed as a separate team, as the French-occupied region would not join the Federal Republic of Germany until 1955.

West Germany used the code GER at the Games from 1968 to 1976, although its athletes' participation is now coded as FRG by the IOC, a code introduced in 1980.

Athletes from the Soviet-occupied German Democratic Republic (GDR) appeared in a separate team after the United Team effort was discontinued. In five Games, from 1968 to 1980 and again in 1988, they represented the GDR before the East German states joined the Federal Republic of Germany in 1990, and the GDR ceased to exist.

Since 1990, the enlarged Federal Republic of Germany has been simply called Germany (GER). West Germany's six Olympic teams (from 1952, 1968, 1972, 1976, 1984 and 1988) are still listed by the IOC under FRG, though, and not attributed to GER.

In the 1980s, each of the two states participated in one of the multinational boycotts of Summer Games. Many Western countries, including the Federal Republic of Germany, boycotted the Moscow Games of 1980 due to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan the year before. In return, 14 Eastern Bloc states, including the GDR, boycotted the Los Angeles Games in 1984. Thus, only one German team was present in each of these two Olympics.

FRG (West Germany)[edit]

The Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), often called West Germany during the Cold War, was founded in 1949 as the largest of the three German states formed under occupation after the division of Germany following World War II. The West German NOC continued the tradition of the German NOC that had joined the IOC in 1895, and continued to represent the Germany that was enlarged after the Saar Protectorate (SAA) joined the Federal Republic of Germany in 1956, and after the states of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR) (East Germany) had joined in the process of German reunification in 1990.

German teams competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics under the designations of GER and SAA. In the Games of 1956, 1960 and 1964, German athletes competed as a United Team of Germany (EUA), but 1968 until the end of the Cold War, the two states sent independent teams designated as West and East Germany, until the separate East German state ceased to exist.

United Team of Germany 1956–1964[edit]

1960–1968

After three German states had been founded in Germany under occupation after World War II, athletes from the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG, West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (GDR, East Germany) competed together as the United Team of Germany (EUA for French: Équipe unifiée d'Allemagne, German: Gesamtdeutsche Mannschaft) in the 1956, 1960, and 1964 Winter and Summer Olympics.

Prior to that, German athletes from West Germany and the French-occupied Saar Protectorate took part in the 1952 Summer Olympics organized in different teams designated as GER and SAA. The Saar Protectorate joined the Federal Republic after 1955, while the East German authorities, which had not taken part in the 1952 Games, agreed in 1956 to let their athletes compete in a united team that used the black-red-gold tricolour, but with additional Olympic rings in white placed upon the red middle stripe, as East German politicians were eager not to compete under the traditional German flag used both by West Germany and even themselves. Only in 1959, the GDR added socialist symbols to create a distinct Flag of East Germany. As the use of the Deutschlandlied, dating back to 1841 and 1797, of the recently created East German anthem, or of possible combinations was also rejected, Beethoven's melody to Schiller's Ode an die Freude (Ode to Joy) was played for winning German athletes as a compromise in lieu of a national anthem.

During the Games of 1956, 1960 and 1964 the traditional abbreviation GER for Germany was used, or rather the equivalents in the language of the host country. In Innsbruck in 1964, the Austrian officials used the international license plate code of D for Deutschland (Germany) for the country. The IOC code currently uses EUA (from the official French-language IOC designation, Equipe Unifiée Allemande) and applies this in hindsight for the United German Team. No reasoning is given, it may be done to allow for the political circumstances during the German divide between 1949 and 1990, and the involvement of two National Olympic Committees rather than only one.

Despite initially calling for a "united Germany" in the East German anthem, the socialist East German government intensified its separation in Germany, with the erection of the Berlin Wall in August 1961 obstructing travel within Germany even more. The travel of GDR athletes, such as to contests and training sites in the Alps, was limited due to fear of Republikflucht.

As a result of this development, in the 1968 Winter and Summer Olympics, German athletes competed as separate West and East teams, while still using the compromise flag and Beethoven anthem that year. The French organizers of the Grenoble Games used the codes ALL (Allemagne, Germany) and ADE (Allemagne de l'Est, East Germany), which roughly correspond to the IOC codes of GER and GDR.

1968–1988

The separation was completed at the 1972 Winter and Summer Olympics (the latter was hosted by West Germany), when the two countries used separate flags and anthems. This continued until the German Reunification of 1990 where the German Democratic Republic became part of the Federal Republic of Germany.

Overview of Olympic participation[edit]


Medalists[edit]

Archery[edit]

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Silver Barbara Mensing
Cornelia Pfohl
Sandra Wagner-Sachse
United States 1996 Atlanta Archery Women's team
 Bronze Barbara Mensing
Cornelia Pfohl
Sandra Wagner-Sachse
Australia 2000 Sydney Archery Women's team
 Silver Lisa Unruh Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Archery Women's individual
 Bronze Michelle Kroppen
Charline Schwarz
Lisa Unruh
Japan 2020 Tokyo Archery Women's team

Athletics[edit]

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Silver Fritz Hofmann Greece 1896 Athens Athletics Men's 100 metres
 Bronze Paul Weinstein United States 1904 St. Louis Athletics Men's high jump
 Silver Hanns Braun
Hans Eicke
Arthur Hoffmann
Otto Trieloff
United Kingdom 1908 London Athletics Men's medley relay
 Bronze Hanns Braun United Kingdom 1908 London Athletics Men's 800 metres
 Silver Hanns Braun Sweden 1912 Stockholm Athletics Men's 400 metres
 Silver Hans Liesche Sweden 1912 Stockholm Athletics Men's high jump
 Gold Lina Radke Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Women's 800 metres
 Silver Richard Corts
Hubert Houben
Helmut Körnig
Georg Lammers
Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 4 × 100 metres relay
 Silver Hermann Engelhard
Richard Krebs
Otto Neumann
Harry Werner Storz
Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
 Bronze Georg Lammers Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 100 metres
 Bronze Helmut Körnig Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 200 metres
 Bronze Joachim Büchner Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 400 metres
 Bronze Hermann Engelhard Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's 800 metres
 Bronze Emil Hirschfeld Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Men's shot put
 Bronze Anni Holdmann
Leni Junker
Rosa Kellner
Leni Schmidt
Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Athletics Women's 4 × 100 metres relay
 Silver Erich Borchmeyer
Friedrich Hendrix
Arthur Jonath
Helmut Körnig
United States 1932 Los Angeles Athletics Men's 4 × 100 metres relay
 Silver Ellen Braumüller United States 1932 Los Angeles Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Bronze Arthur Jonath United States 1932 Los Angeles Athletics Men's 100 metres
 Bronze Wolrad Eberle United States 1932 Los Angeles Athletics Men's decathlon
 Bronze Tilly Fleischer United States 1932 Los Angeles Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Gold Hans Woellke Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's shot put
 Gold Karl Hein Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's hammer throw
 Gold Gerhard Stöck Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's javelin throw
 Gold Gisela Mauermayer Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's discus throw
 Gold Tilly Fleischer Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Silver Lutz Long Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's long jump
 Silver Erwin Blask Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's hammer throw
 Silver Anni Steuer Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's 80 metres hurdles
 Silver Luise Krüger Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Bronze Alfred Dompert Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's 3000 metres steeplechase
 Bronze Erich Borchmeyer
Erwin Gillmeister
Gerd Hornberger
Wilhelm Leichum
Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's 4 × 100 metres relay
 Bronze Helmut Hamann
Rudolf Harbig
Harry Voigt
Friedrich von Stülpnagel
Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
 Bronze Gerhard Stöck Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Men's shot put
 Bronze Käthe Krauß Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's 100 metres
 Bronze Elfriede Kaun Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's high jump
 Bronze Paula Mollenhauer Germany 1936 Berlin Athletics Women's discus throw
 Silver Karl Storch Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Men's hammer throw
 Silver Helga Klein
Ursula Knab
Marga Petersen
Maria Sander
Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Women's 4 × 100 metres relay
 Silver Marianne Werner Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Women's shot put
 Bronze Heinz Ulzheimer Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Men's 800 metres
 Bronze Werner Lueg Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Men's 1500 metres
 Bronze Herbert Schade Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Men's 5000 metres
 Bronze Günter Steines
Hans Geister
Heinz Ulzheimer
Karl-Friedrich Haas
Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
 Bronze Maria Sander Finland 1952 Helsinki Athletics Women's 80 metres hurdles
 Gold Dieter Baumann Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Men's 5000 metres
 Gold Heike Henkel Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's high jump
 Gold Heike Drechsler Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's long jump
 Gold Silke Renk Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Silver Jürgen Schult Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Men's discus throw
 Bronze Stephan Freigang Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Men's marathon
 Bronze Ronald Weigel Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Men's 50 kilometres walk
 Bronze Kathrin Neimke Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's shot put
 Bronze Karen Forkel Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Bronze Sabine Braun Spain 1992 Barcelona Athletics Women's heptathlon
 Gold Lars Riedel United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Men's discus throw
 Gold Astrid Kumbernuss United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Women's shot put
 Gold Ilke Wyludda United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Women's discus throw
 Silver Frank Busemann United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Men's decathlon
 Bronze Florian Schwarthoff United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Men's 110 metres hurdles
 Bronze Andrej Tiwontschik United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Men's pole vault
 Bronze Grit Breuer
Linda Kisabaka
Uta Rohländer
Anja Rücker
United States 1996 Atlanta Athletics Women's 4 × 400 metres relay
 Gold Nils Schumann Australia 2000 Sydney Athletics Men's 800 metres
 Gold Heike Drechsler Australia 2000 Sydney Athletics Women's long jump
 Silver Lars Riedel Australia 2000 Sydney Athletics Men's discus throw
 Bronze Astrid Kumbernuss Australia 2000 Sydney Athletics Women's shot put
 Bronze Kirsten Münchow Australia 2000 Sydney Athletics Women's hammer throw
 Silver Nadine Kleinert Greece 2004 Athens Athletics Women's shot put
 Silver Steffi Nerius Greece 2004 Athens Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Silver Christina Obergföll China 2008 Beijing Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Gold Robert Harting United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Men's discus throw
 Silver Björn Otto United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Men's pole vault
 Silver David Storl United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Men's shot put
 Silver Betty Heidler United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Women's hammer throw
 Silver Christina Obergföll United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Silver Lilli Schwarzkopf United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Women's heptathlon
 Bronze Raphael Holzdeppe United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Men's pole vault
 Bronze Linda Stahl United Kingdom 2012 London Athletics Women's javelin throw
 Gold Christoph Harting Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Athletics Men's discus throw
 Gold Thomas Röhler Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Athletics Men's javelin throw
 Bronze Daniel Jasinski Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Athletics Men's discus throw
 Gold Malaika Mihambo Japan 2020 Tokyo Athletics Women's long jump
 Silver Kristin Pudenz Japan 2020 Tokyo Athletics Women's discus throw
 Silver Jonathan Hilbert Japan 2020 Tokyo Athletics Men's 50 kilometres walk

Boxing[edit]

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Silver Ernst Pistulla Netherlands 1928 Amsterdam Boxing Men's light heavyweight
 Silver Hans Ziglarski United States 1932 Los Angeles Boxing Men's bantamweight
 Silver Josef Schleinkofer United States 1932 Los Angeles Boxing Men's featherweight
 Silver Erich Campe United States 1932 Los Angeles Boxing Men's welterweight
 Gold Willi Kaiser Germany 1936 Berlin Boxing Men's flyweight
 Gold Herbert Runge Germany 1936 Berlin Boxing Men's heavyweight
 Silver Michael Murach Germany 1936 Berlin Boxing Men's welterweight
 Silver Richard Vogt Germany 1936 Berlin Boxing Men's light heavyweight
 Bronze Josef Miner Germany 1936 Berlin Boxing Men's featherweight
 Silver Edgar Basel Finland 1952 Helsinki Boxing Men's flyweight
 Bronze Günther Heidemann Finland 1952 Helsinki Boxing Men's welterweight
 Gold Andreas Tews Spain 1992 Barcelona Boxing Men's featherweight
 Gold Torsten May Spain 1992 Barcelona Boxing Men's light heavyweight
 Silver Marco Rudolph Spain 1992 Barcelona Boxing Men's lightweight
 Bronze Jan Quast Spain 1992 Barcelona Boxing Men's light flyweight
 Silver Oktay Urkal United States 1996 Atlanta Boxing Men's light welterweight
 Bronze Zoltan Lunka United States 1996 Atlanta Boxing Men's flyweight
 Bronze Thomas Ulrich United States 1996 Atlanta Boxing Men's light heavyweight
 Bronze Luan Krasniqi United States 1996 Atlanta Boxing Men's heavyweight
 Bronze Sebastian Köber Australia 2000 Sydney Boxing Men's heavyweight
 Bronze Rustamhodza Rahimov Greece 2004 Athens Boxing Men's flyweight
 Bronze Vitali Tajbert Greece 2004 Athens Boxing Men's featherweight
 Bronze Artem Harutyunyan Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Boxing Men's light welterweight

Beach volleyball[edit]

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Bronze Jörg Ahmann
Axel Hager
Australia 2000 Sydney Beach volleyball Men's tournament
 Gold Julius Brink
Jonas Reckermann
United Kingdom 2012 London Beach volleyball Men's tournament
 Gold Laura Ludwig
Kira Walkenhorst
Brazil 2016 Rio de Janeiro Beach volleyball Women's tournament

Canoeing[edit]

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Gold Ernst Krebs Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-1 10000 metres
 Gold Paul Wevers
Ludwig Landen
Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 10000 metres
 Silver Helmut Cämmerer Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-1 1000 metres
 Silver Ewald Tilker
Fritz Bondroit
Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 1000 metres
 Silver Erich Hanisch
Willi Horn
Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 (folding) 10000 metres
 Bronze Erich Koschik Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 1000 metres
 Bronze Xaver Hörmann Germany 1936 Berlin Canoeing Men's sprint K-1 (folding) 10000 metres
 Bronze Egon Drews
Wilfried Soltau
Finland 1952 Helsinki Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Bronze Egon Drews
Wilfried Soltau
Finland 1952 Helsinki Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 10000 metres
 Bronze Michael Scheuer Finland 1952 Helsinki Canoeing Men's sprint K-1 10000 metres
 Gold Elisabeth Micheler-Jones Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Women's slalom K-1
 Gold Ulrich Papke
Ingo Spelly
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Gold Kay Bluhm
Torsten Gutsche
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 500 metres
 Gold Kay Bluhm
Torsten Gutsche
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Gold Mario von Appen
Oliver Kegel
Thomas Reineck
André Wohllebe
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint K-4 1000 metres
 Gold Birgit Schmidt Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Women's sprint K-1 500 metres
 Gold Ramona Portwich
Anke von Seck
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Women's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Silver Ulrich Papke
Ingo Spelly
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 500 metres
 Silver Katrin Borchert
Ramona Portwich
Birgit Schmidt
Anke von Seck
Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Women's sprint K-4 500 metres
 Bronze Jochen Lettmann Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's slalom K-1
 Bronze Olaf Heukrodt Spain 1992 Barcelona Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 500 metres
 Gold Oliver Fix United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's slalom K-1
 Gold Andreas Dittmer
Gunar Kirchbach
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Gold Kay Bluhm
Torsten Gutsche
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Gold Thomas Reineck
Olaf Winter
Detlef Hofmann
Mark Zabel
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's sprint K-4 1000 metres
 Gold Anett Schuck
Birgit Fischer
Manuela Mucke
Ramona Portwich
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Women's sprint K-4 500 metres
 Silver Kay Bluhm
Torsten Gutsche
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 1000 metres
 Silver Birgit Fischer
Ramona Portwich
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Women's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Bronze André Ehrenberg
Michael Senft
United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's slalom C-2
 Bronze Thomas Becker United States 1996 Atlanta Canoeing Men's slalom K-1
 Gold Thomas Schmidt Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's slalom K-1
 Gold Andreas Dittmer Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 1000 metres
 Gold Birgit Fischer
Katrin Wagner
Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Women's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Gold Birgit Fischer
Manuela Mucke
Anett Schuck
Katrin Wagner
Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Women's sprint K-4 500 metres
 Silver Jan Schäfer
Mark Zabel
Björn Bach
Stefan Ulm
Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's sprint K-4 1000 metres
 Bronze Andreas Dittmer Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 500 metres
 Bronze Stefan Uteß
Lars Kober
Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Bronze Ronald Rauhe
Tim Wieskötter
Australia 2000 Sydney Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Gold Andreas Dittmer Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 500 metres
 Gold Christian Gille
Thomas Wylenzek
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Gold Ronald Rauhe
Tim Wieskötter
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Gold Birgit Fischer
Carolin Leonhardt
Maike Nollen
Katrin Wagner
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Women's sprint K-4 500 metres
 Silver Marcus Becker
Stefan Henze
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's slalom C-2
 Silver Andreas Dittmer Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's sprint C-1 1000 metres
 Silver Andreas Ihle
Mark Zabel
Björn Bach
Stefan Ulm
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's sprint K-4 1000 metres
 Silver Birgit Fischer
Carolin Leonhardt
Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Women's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Bronze Stefan Pfannmöller Greece 2004 Athens Canoeing Men's slalom C-1
 Gold Alexander Grimm China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's slalom K-1
 Gold Andreas Ihle
Martin Hollstein
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 1000 metres
 Gold Fanny Fischer
Nicole Reinhardt
Katrin Wagner-Augustin
Conny Waßmuth
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Women's sprint K-4 500 metres
 Silver Christian Gille
Thomas Wylenzek
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 1000 metres
 Silver Ronald Rauhe
Tim Wieskötter
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's sprint K-2 500 metres
 Bronze Christian Gille
Thomas Wylenzek
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's sprint C-2 500 metres
 Bronze Lutz Altepost
Norman Bröckl
Torsten Eckbrett
Björn Goldschmidt
China 2008 Beijing Canoeing Men's sprint K-4 1000 metres
 Bronze Katrin Wagner-Augustin