Gina Lückenkemper secured the EM gold medal over 100 meters with a wafer-thin lead – and can hardly believe her success afterwards. The 25-year-old sprinter almost didn’t compete in the final.
In the end, Gina Lückenkemper flew across the finish line. Only in the final meters did the 25-year-old sprinter catch up with her competitors Mujinga Kambundji from Switzerland and Neita Daryll from Britain in the final of the 100 meters and threw her upper body forward. The target photo decided. A millimeter lead was enough for the Munich Olympic Stadium to explode again after the gold medal triumph of decathlete Niklas Kaul. With 10.99 seconds, almost at the same time, but with a shoulder just ahead of the Swiss, Lückenkemper crossed the finish line on this intoxicating evening for German athletics. Expressed in numbers, Lückenkemper’s lead was five thousandths.
The fact that as soon as she crossed the finish line she stumbled and fell onto the tartan track and a wound on her thigh had to be sewn up with eight stitches – it no longer mattered. When Lückenkemper saw the result on the scoreboard, she burst out. Stunned, she opened her eyes and put her hands in front of her face, 40,000 spectators sang “Oh, how beautiful it is”. The spectacular women’s 100-meter final marked the end of a day on which the German track and field athletes were enthusiastic. Niklas Kaul won gold in the decathlon, the discus throwers Kristin Pudenz and Claudine Vita won silver and bronze. It hadn’t been this successful for a long time.
Success on tortuous paths
“The stadium is absolutely amazing today. I’m so incredibly grateful to you. I don’t notice anything right now, I have so much adrenaline,” said Lückenkemper into the microphone in the stadium four years after winning the European Championship silver in Berlin, through which La Ola sloshed .
Lückenkemper had been plagued by problems before the finale. She started the semi-finals with a blue tape on her back left thigh. Only her trainer convinced her to take part in the final. Sporting successes like that of Lückenkämper sometimes come about on winding paths.
It is fitting that Lückenkemper, who comes from Soest in North Rhine-Westphalia, has repeatedly been thrown back by injuries in the past. Four years ago she had won silver at the European Championships, but the big breakthrough was a long time coming. At the Olympic Games in Tokyo last year, she only took part as a substitute for the sprint relay. Although she was used in the final, she only managed fifth place. At the World Cup in the USA a few weeks ago, she failed in the semi-finals, but won bronze in the relay.
She lives in Florida
So now the biggest triumph of her career. Lückenkemper has finally proven that she can keep up with the best in the world, even if the Jamaican and American sprinters are in a league of their own. But exactly to close this gap, Lückenkemper switched to the training group (Pure Athletics Group) of US coach Lance Baumann in 2019. He picked her up because she’d proven she could do it with multiple runs under 11 seconds.
Since then, she has been training in Clermont, Florida, has taken an apartment there and has steadily improved. The group is top-class. American sprint world champion and Olympic gold medalist Tori Bowie and two-time Olympic gold medalist Shaunae Miller-Uibo from the Bahamas are among them. Baumann trains less, but harder. Known are the knock-out days (Ko days), on which the runners complete sprints at a faster rate. It goes so far that Lückenkempfer would throw up every time if she had the time, she once told the “Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung”.
Lückenkemper now has a little time to take a breath and enjoy her new role. During this time, she should collect a few more followers on Instagram, where she is already followed by over 180,000 people. The next big goal follows on Sunday. The athlete from SCC Berlin wants to win the next medal with the relay.
Sources: DPA,, , ,
Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.