Netherlands aims for more after compound mixed team gold in Madrid

Mike Schloesser and Sanne de Laat celebrating.

Sanne de Laat and Mike Schloesser shot a perfect final end to clinch compound mixed team gold at the fourth stage of the Hyundai Archery World Cup season in Madrid.

The Dutch pair edged Korea’s So Chaewon and Choi Yonghee, 155-153, in hot and humid conditions at the Explanada Puente del Rey. The match was tied at 115 apiece going into the fourth end – but while Korea faltered, the Netherlands delivered.

Chaewon dropped a costly eight, while De Laat and Schloesser posted a flawless 40 to secure the win in style.

“The thing with me is once the match is finished, I forget all about it,” said De Laat, who landed four of her eight arrows in the 10-ring. “When I’m up there, I just try to keep my head as empty as possible which works pretty well.”

“I think once the last arrow went in the 10, I had goosebumps all over. Finally, we did it because apart from European Championships, we’ve done bronze and silver medals, but never gold.” 

“This felt really great, especially since we’re trying to get into the Olympics as well, so it feels like a good omen.”

The victory rekindles the spark of the Netherlands’ Berlin 2023 World Championships title – but with the addition of compound mixed team to the Olympic programme at LA28, the stakes are now even higher.

But the compound game was changed in April as it was announced the mixed team event would be incorporated into the LA28 programme, an Olympic first.

Financial constraints had kept De Laat off the circuit in 2024, meaning she could not compete alongside Schloesser earlier in the season. But with Olympic qualification on the horizon – and now a World Cup win under their belts – both are aiming for more.

Netherlands versus Korea in action.

“We’re trying to put together a programme to get things funded,” said De Laat. “And this is a really good way of saying to them: fund us, because we’re worth it.”

“I definitely hope it goes through – and then you’ll see more of me in the next couple of years, up until LA.”

Korea is no stranger to the top step in this event, having taken the world title in 2019 – but this time, the nation settles for silver.

A World Cup silver remains a seismic achievement – but Chaewon and Yonghee will leave Madrid disappointed, particularly the former, who was part of Korea’s gold medal-winning team in Den Bosch six years ago alongside Kim Jongho.

Yonghee, a men’s team world record holder, did his part, shooting just one nine throughout the match. But it was Chaewon’s two eights – the first helping the Netherlands take the lead in the second end, and the second sealing Korea’s fate in the fourth – that proved decisive.

“I was quite nervous because this is the first time being on stage here in Madrid,” said Asian Games runner-up Chaewon. “When the score was tied at the end, I knew I had to shoot a 10, but that made me even more nervous and I tensed up a lot. I think that’s why I shot an eight and screwed up.”

Earlier, Chinese Taipei upset world number one India to win the compound women’s team gold medal.

Competition in Madrid continues with compound individual finals in the afternoon.

Podiums: Madrid 2025

Full results on the event page.

Compound men’s team

  1. Korea (Kim Jongho, Choi Yonghee, Choi Eun Gyu)
  2. France (Jean Philippe Boulch, Nicolas Girard, François Dubois)
  3. USA (James Lutz, Jesse Clayton, Curtis Broadnax)

Compound women’s team

  1. Chinese Taipei (Huang I-Jou,, Chen Yi-Hsuan, Chiu Yu-erh)
  2. India (Parneet Kaur, Prithika Pradeep, Jyothi Surekha Vennam)
  3. Korea (So Chaewon, Sim Sooin, Han Seungyeon)

Compound  mixed team

  1. Netherlands (Mike Schloesser, Sanne de Laat)
  2. Korea  (So Chaewon, Choi Yonghee)
  3. India (Jyothi Surekha Vennam, Rishabh Yadav)

Watch coverage from Madrid with a subscription to archery+.

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