Right from the start, the German trio of Lea Zimmermann, Julia Tannheimer and Julia Kink were always within touching distance of the podium positions - Zimmermann handed over in second position to teammate Tannheim who recovered from a penalty loop in prone to deliver a strong standing shooting. Individual gold medalist Kink carried the victory home and sealed the deal with a 5/5 standing shooting in challenging conditions.
"It was so so special, the Lea and Julia did such a good job and gave me over a minute advantage. I tried to look at it as a sprint, not a relay. I have no idea where my mistakes went in the prone but I tried to avoid the penalty loop and then pull myself together and go shot by shot." (Julia Kink, Anchor Leg Germany)
Italy got off to a strong start with Astrid Plosch and Fabiana Carpella yet both Carpella and anchor leg Carlotta Gautero found themselves circling the penalty loop after the standing stages, leaving them with no chance to close in on the German team. Team Norway completed the podium in third position.
For almost the entirety of the Youth Men Relay, a three-way battle between Germany, Norway and the Czech Republic unfolded, with the lead changing multiple times. In the end, the superb shooting performance by the Czech trio made the difference in challenging conditions in Shchuchinsk. With three spare rounds only, Jonas Kabrda, Daniel Malusek and Ferdinand Jansa secured gold.
Elias Seidl and Erik Hafenmair managed to navigate the German team through the opening two legs without any penalty loops: While Albert Engelmann built a comfortable lead after the prone on the anchor leg, he had to circle the penalty loop twice after the standing stage. Engelmann closed in on Jansa again on the last loop but hit the wall physically on the last kilometre, losing over 20 seconds.
"I was first after the last shooting, and Engelmann closed in very very fast but I knew that we can win it still. I beat him on the top of the hill and went fast to the finish line." (Ferdinand Jansa, Czech Anchor Leg)
Team Norway moved from potential gold to the bronze position after three penalty loops in the final prone position by Sivert Gerhardsen.
Pictures: Yevenko/IBU