O’Donohue triples up with three golds on compound finals day at youth worlds

O donohue Winnipeg

The USA’s Savannah O’Donohue won her third gold medal of the Winnipeg 2025 World Archery Youth Championships on Saturday, taking the individual compound under-18 title with a 143–140 victory over Prithika Pradeep of India.

She had previously won the mixed team title with Caleb Quiocho and, yesterday, the team title alongside Khloe Markle and Julia Cook, becoming the only archer in the 570-strong field to remain undefeated across all competitions.

“I’m feeling really good, you know,” said the 16-year-old from Louisiana. “I just really wanted to come here and leave it all out on the stage.”

“Usually it kind of sinks in when we go home, but I’m just really trying to live in the moment and treasure this.”

With six gold finals on the schedule, the rain that had marked team finals day mostly held off, but a vicious wind again caused havoc in many matches. O’Donohue was by far the most consistent archer of the day, maintaining her level even as her bow visibly moved in the breeze.

India had better news in the under-21 compound women’s final, as eighth seed Chikitha Taniparthi was sharper than Korea’s Park Yerin to win 142–136.

Fluss Winnipeg

Germany’s compound youth also enjoyed a strong day, with Simon Moritz and Ruven Flüß winning the under-18 and under-21 compound men’s titles, respectively.

Ruven scored a solid 146, the highest of the day, against Mexico’s Lot Máximo Méndez Ortiz, after edging through his semifinal against Wei Z Wu of Chinese Taipei in a shoot-off.

The German had fought his way up from 30th place in qualification.

“It’s unbelievable,” said an emotional Flüß afterwards. “It’s everything I dreamed of, my whole life. Thank you to everyone.”

Unable to attend the Gwangju 2025 World Archery Championships due to university commitments, he added: “I hope it’s not my last world championship.”

Moritz beat Hector McNeilly of New Zealand in the under-18 final, giving that country its best-ever result in this competition and its first youth worlds medal since Stephen Clifton took bronze in 2004.

McNeilly, a veteran of the  Limerick 2023 World Archery Youth Championships, shot a miss in another windy final, but was accepting about the result.

“It’s adapt or die really, but yeah, the conditions are there, so you’ve got to really use them to your advantage,” he said. “It’s what happened – I’ll be able to live with it.”

“For New Zealand, I think it’s something special for sure. Archery is even smaller than everything else, so being able to compete and get on the podium is always something that is a great achievement.”

The competition continues with mixed team and individual recurve finals on Sunday.

You can watch finals coverage from Winnipeg with a subscription to archery+.

Compound champions: Winnipeg 2025

Full results are available on the event page

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