- Christian Bahmann
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Medal record Men's canoe slalom World Championships Gold 2005 Penrith C-2 Christian Bahmann (born 22 July 1981 in Plauen) is a German slalom canoer who competed in the mid first decade of the 21st century. He won a gold in the C-2 event at the 2005 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Penrith.
Bahmann also finished fourth in the C-2 event at the 2004 Summer Olympics together with former Olympic bronze medalist Michael Senft.
Christian Bahmann is the son of Angelika Bahmann, winner of the women's K-1 event at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.
References
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships - Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936-2007.
- Sports-reference.com profile
- Yahoo! Sports Athens 2004 profile
1949: France (Michel Duboille & Jacques Rosseau) · 1951: France (Claude Neveu & Roger Paris) · 1953: Switzerland (Charles Dussuet & Jean Engler) · 1955: France (Claude Neveu & Roger Paris) · 1957: East Germany (Dieter Friedrich & Horst Kleinert) · 1959: East Germany (Dieter Friedrich & Horst Kleinert) · 1961: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1963: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1965: East Germany (Günther Merkel & Manfred Merkel) · 1967: Czechoslovakia (Miroslav Stach & Zdeněk Valenta) · 1969: France (Jean-Claude Olry & Jean-Louis Olry) · 1971: East Germany (Klaus Trummer & Jürgen Kretschmer) · 1973: Czechoslovakia (Jiří Krejza & Jaroslav Pollert) · 1975: East Germany (Klaus Trummer & Jürgen Kretschmer) · 1977: East Germany (Walter Hofmann & Jürgen Kalbitz) · 1979: West Germany (Dieter Welsink & Peter Czupryna) · 1981: United States (Steve Garvis & Mike Garvis) · 1983: United States (Lecky Haller & Fritz Haller) · 1985: West Germany (Thomas Klein-Impelmann & Stephan Küppers) · 1987: France (Pierre Calori & Jacques Calori) · 1989: West Germany (Frank Hemmer & Thomas Loose) · 1991: France (Frank Adisson & Wilfrid Forgues) · 1993: Czech Republic (Jiří Rohan & Miroslav Šimek) · 1995: Poland (Krzysztof Kołomański & Michał Staniszewski) · 1997: France (Frank Adisson & Wilfrid Forgues) · 1999: Czech Republic (Marek Jiras & Tomáš Máder) · 2002: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2003: Germany (Marcus Becker & Stefan Henze) · 2005: Germany (Christian Bahmann & Michael Senft) · 2006: Czech Republic (Jaroslav Volf & Ondřej Štěpánek) · 2007: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2009: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2010: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner) · 2011: Slovakia (Pavol Hochschorner & Peter Hochschorner)
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