Sebastian Schubert
|  Sebastian Schubert in 2017 | 
|
| Nationality | German | 
|---|
| Born | 17 July 1988 (1988-07-17) (age 37) Hamm, West Germany
 | 
|---|
|
| Country | Germany | 
|---|
| Sport | Canoe slalom | 
|---|
| Event | K1 | 
|---|
|
| Highest world ranking | No. 1 (2014) | 
|---|
|
 Sebastian Schubert (born 17 July 1988 in Hamm) is a retired German slalom canoeist who competed at the international level from 2004 to 2019. 
He won a gold medal in the K1 team event at the 2011 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Bratislava. He also won eight medals at the European Championships (2 golds, 4 silvers and 2 bronzes). Schubert won the overall world cup title in the K1 category in 2013 and 2014.[1] He finished the 2014 season as the World No. 1.[2] 
 World Cup individual podiums
   References
  External links
  |  | 
|---|
|  1949 (folding): Switzerland (Werner Zimmermann, Jean Engler & Eduard Kunz)1951 (folding): Austria (Hans Frühwirth, Rudolf Pillwein & Othmar Eiterer)1953 (folding): Austria (Franz Grafetsberger, Hans Herbist & Rudolf Sausgruber)1955 (folding): West Germany (Manfred Vogt, Sigi Holzbauer & Alois Würfmannsdobler)1957 (folding): East Germany (Heinz Bielig, Eberhard Gläser & Reinhard Sens)1959 (folding): East Germany (Eberhard Gläser, Heinz Bielig & Günther Möbius)1961 (folding): East Germany (Horst Wängler, Eberhard Gläser & Roland Hahnebach)1963 (folding): East Germany (Eberhard Gläser, Rolf Luber & Fritz Lange)1965: West Germany (Manfred Vogt, Eugen Weimann & Horst Dieter Engelke)1967: East Germany (Jürgen Bremer, Christian Döring & Volkmar Fleischer)1969: France (Patrick Maccari, Claude Peschier & Alain Colombe)1971: Austria (Kurt Presslmayr, Norbert Sattler & Hans Schlecht)1973: East Germany (Wolfgang Büchner, Siegbert Horn & Christian Döring)1975: West Germany (Ulrich Peters, Dieter Förstl & Bernd Dichtl)1977: France (Jean-Yves Prigent, Bernard Renault & Christian Frossard)1979: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Albert Kerr & Allan Edge)1981: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Albert Kerr & Nicolas Wain)1983: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Paul McConkey & Jim Dolan)1985: West Germany (Peter Micheler, Toni Prijon & Jürgen Kübler)1987: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Melvyn Jones & Russell Smith)1989: Yugoslavia (Jernej Abramič, Marjan Štrukelj & Albin Čižman)1991: France (Manuel Brissaud, Gilles Clouzeau & Jean-Michel Regnier)1993: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Melvyn Jones & Shaun Pearce)1995: Germany (Jochen Lettmann, Thomas Becker & Oliver Fix)1997: Great Britain (Paul Ratcliffe, Ian Raspin, & Shaun Pearce)1999: Germany (Thomas Becker, Ralf Schaberg & Jakobus Stenglein)2002: Germany (Claus Suchanek, Thomas Becker & Thomas Schmidt)2003: Switzerland (Thomas Mosimann, Mathias Röthenmund & Michael Kurt)2005: France (Julien Billaut, Fabien Lefèvre & Benoît Peschier)2006: France (Fabien Lefèvre, Julien Billaut & Boris Neveu)2007: Germany (Fabian Dörfler, Alexander Grimm & Erik Pfannmöller)2009: Czech Republic (Ivan Pišvejc, Vavřinec Hradilek & Michal Buchtel)2010: Germany (Alexander Grimm, Fabian Dörfler & Hannes Aigner)2011: Germany (, Hannes Aigner & Alexander Grimm)2013: Italy (Daniele Molmenti, Andrea Romeo & Giovanni De Gennaro)2014: France (Mathieu Biazizzo, Sébastien Combot & Boris Neveu)2015: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Vavřinec Hradilek & Ondřej Tunka)2017: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Ondřej Tunka & Vít Přindiš)2018: Great Britain (Joseph Clarke, Bradley Forbes-Cryans & Christopher Bowers)2019: Spain (David Llorente, Samuel Hernanz & Joan Crespo)2021: France (Boris Neveu, Mathieu Biazizzo & Benjamin Renia)2022: Germany (Hannes Aigner, Noah Hegge & Stefan Hengst)2023: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Vít Přindiš & Jakub Krejčí)
 |