David Zobel broke the World Championship norm right in the first race. Third place in the individual should not have been the last podium. He has his goal clearly in focus: the home World Championships in Oberhof.
As motivation, biathlete David Zobel looks at old races by Erik Lesser. For example Lesser’s World Championship pursuit victory in Kontiolahti in 2015. “These are stories that push you and show that it’s possible,” said Zobel, who made a strong statement with third place in the Kontiolahti individual and clinched his first World Cup podium in the first race of the season.
After the resignations of Lesser, Arnd Peiffer and Simon Schempp, Benedikt Doll (32) is the last of the golden generation of biathlon men. All were individual world champions and won Olympic medals. But Doll stops soon.
Zobel’s goal: He and the others around Roman Rees (29), Philipp Nawrath (29), Philipp Horn (28) and Justus Strelow (25) want to build on this success. “If you don’t set big goals, you can’t achieve much,” says the native of Starnberg: “But there’s still room for improvement.”
The 26-year-old has clear ideas. Catching up with the Norwegians and French, who were ahead of the curve in terms of breadth and quality. And show “that we will then be the new generation, who can then perhaps say that we are all world champions and have individual medals at the Olympics. We are all up for it.” According to Lesser, who trained with Zobel in Oberhof, he is an asset to any team.
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.