Skip to main content

Spain make history in Gwangju as Europe enjoy their brightest Archery World Championships

Gwangju (South Korea), 11 September 2025.
The 2025 Archery World Championships have written an unprecedented chapter in the sport’s history. For the first time since the mixed recurve team event was introduced in 2011, a European pair struck gold: Elia Canales and Andrés Temiño. The Spaniards stunned the home favourites, An San and Kim Woo-jin, ending South Korea’s seven-title streak in the discipline.

The victory was hailed as a landmark both in Spain and across the continent. “This triumph proves that Europe can compete on equal terms with the nations that have traditionally dominated this sport,” said Canales after the final. Temiño called it “a before-and-after moment for Spanish archery”.

📸RFETA

European highlights in Gwangju

Spain’s golden feat was the headline act, but other European nations also left their mark on the championships:

  • Germany claimed bronze in the women’s recurve team event, defeating India in a dramatic shoot-off.
  • Italy, a traditional powerhouse, reached the men’s recurve team semi-finals, falling narrowly to South Korea in a match decided by just two points.
  • In compound archery, the Netherlands’ Mike Schloesser confirmed his reputation as one of the world’s finest, battling through to the men’s individual semi-finals and securing bronze.
  • France also impressed, reaching the quarter-finals in the mixed recurve event before being knocked out by Spain.

A championship that shifts the balance

Until now, South Korea had exercised near-total dominance in recurve, while the United States and Mexico tended to share the spoils in compound. Yet Gwangju 2025 marked a change in narrative: Europe is no longer a hopeful challenger but an established contender.

Spain’s historic triumph stands as a beacon for the continent. “This result gives confidence to all European teams. It’s no longer about dreaming of beating Korea, but about knowing it can be done,” a World Archery official remarked after the competition.

The 2025 World Championships will be remembered not only for Spain’s breakthrough but also for a wider European resurgence that signals a new chapter in the global balance of power in archery.