Marc Muskatewitz

German curler (born 1996) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marc Muskatewitz (born 28 January 1996) is a German curler from Kempten.[3]

Born (1996-01-28) 28 January 1996 (age 30)
Baden-Baden, Germany[1]
Curling clubCC Füssen, Füssen, GER[2]
SkipMarc Muskatewitz
Quick facts Born, Team ...
Marc Muskatewitz
Born (1996-01-28) 28 January 1996 (age 30)
Baden-Baden, Germany[1]
Team
Curling clubCC Füssen, Füssen, GER[2]
SkipMarc Muskatewitz
ThirdBenjamin Kapp
SecondFelix Messenzehl
LeadJohannes Scheuerl
AlternateMario Trevisiol
Curling career
Member Association Germany
World Championship
appearances
8 (2016, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026)
European Championship
appearances
7 (2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2024, 2025)
Olympic
appearances
1 (2026)
Medal record
Curling
Representing  Germany
European Championships
Gold medal – first place2024 Lohja
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Career

Juniors

Muskatewitz started playing curling in 2003,[4] where he had a successful junior career, where he skipped the German junior men's curling team at two European Junior Curling Challenge events, and later at two World Junior B Curling Championships. While he was still junior age, he won the German Men's Championship as a second on the Alexander Baumann team, and represented Germany on the national men's team at multiple European and World Championships.

Mens

Muskatewitz started skipping the national men's curling team at the 2018–19 curling season, with teammates Sixten Totzek, Daniel Neuner, and Ryan Sherrard. The team found success, finishing fourth at the 2018 European Curling Championships, the team also represented Germany at 2019 Worlds, where they finished in 8th place with a 4–8 record. Following the season, Muskatewitz would step back to third position on the team, and Totzek would be the new skip of the new German team, where they would continue to have strong showings at the European and World Men's championships.

Muskatewitz would return as skip of the German team at 2023–24 curling season, and would join forces with a new team of Benjamin Kapp, Felix Messenzehl, Johannes Scheuerl, Mario Trevisiol, and coached by former teammate Ryan Sherrard. The new team would have a strong showing at the 2024 World Men's Curling Championships, finishing in 5th place after losing to Italy's Joël Retornaz in the playoffs. However, the team would build upon this success at the 2024 European Curling Championships, they would beat Scotland's Bruce Mouat 9–7 in the final to win Germany's first European medal since 2008, and their first gold since 2004.[5] After winning the European Championships, the team qualified for their first Tier 1 Grand Slam of Curling event, the 2024 National, where they had a strong showing, losing in the quarterfinals to Mike McEwen 6–5. The team also continued to perform well on the world curling circuit, winning the 2024 Karuizawa International Curling Championships. Muskatewtiz would then win the 2025 German Men's Championship against former skip Sixten Totzek, qualifying his team to represent Germany at the 2025 World Men's Curling Championship.[6] At the 2025 World's, team Muskatewitz would finish the round robin with a 5–7 record, finishing outside of the playoffs in 8th place. However, Muskatewitz's performance over the last two world championships earned Germany enough points to qualify directly for the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Personal life

Muskatewitz is currently a student.[3]

Teams

More information Season, Skip ...
Season Skip Third Second Lead Alternate Coach Events
2013–14 Marc MuskatewitzDaniel RothballerMichael HolzingerPirmin SchlickeSebastian OswaldKatja WeisserEJCC 2014 (5th)
Marc MuskatewitzDaniel RothballerMichael WiestSebastian OswaldGJCC 2014 1st place, gold medalist(s)[7]
Marc MuskatewitzKevin BoldMike BurbaCristoph SchmidtHans-Joachim BurbaGMCC 2014 (4th)[8]
2014–15 Alexander BaumannManuel WalterMarc MuskatewitzSebastian SchweizerJörg EngesserMartin BeiserECC 2014 (8th)
Marc MuskatewitzDaniel RothballerMichael WiestSebastian OswaldMerlin LitkeThomas LipsEJCC 2015 (5th)
2015–16 Alexander BaumannManuel WalterMarc MuskatewitzSebastian SchweizerDaniel HerbergKatja Schweizer (ECC)
Thomas Lips (WCC)
ECC 2015 (6th)
WCC 2016 (12th)
Marc MuskatewitzSixten TotzekMichael WiestSebastian OswaldJoshua SutorKatja SchweizerWJBCC 2016 (4th)
2016–17 Marc MuskatewitzSixten TotzekJan-Lucia HaagMarc WeilerMagnus SutorWolfgang BurbaWJBCC 2017 (4th)
2018–19 Marc MuskatewitzSixten TotzekDaniel NeunerRyan SherrardSebastian SchweizerMartin BeiserECC 2018 (4th)
Marc MuskatewitzDaniel NeunerRyan SherrardDominik GreindlBenjamin KappAndy KappWCC 2019 (8th)
2019–20 Marc MuskatewitzSixten TotzekJoshua SutorDominik GreindlBenjamin KappUli Kapp, Lukas FritschECC 2019 (7th)
2020–21 Sixten TotzekMarc MuskatewitzJoshua SutorDominik GreindlKlaudius HarschUli KappWCC 2021 (10th)
2021–22 Sixten TotzekMarc MuskatewitzJoshua SutorDominik GreindlMagnus SutorUli Kapp, Holger HöhneECC 2021 (8th)
WCC 2022 (7th)
2022–23 Sixten TotzekKlaudius HarschMagnus SutorDominik GreindlMarc MuskatewitzUli KappWCC 2023 (9th)
2023–24 Marc MuskatewitzBenjamin KappFelix MessenzehlJohannes ScheuerlMario TrevisiolRyan SherrardWCC 2024 (5th)
2024–25 Marc MuskatewitzBenjamin KappFelix MessenzehlJohannes ScheuerlMario TrevisiolRyan SherrardECC 2024 1st place, gold medalist(s)
WCC 2025 (8th)
2025–26 Marc MuskatewitzBenjamin KappFelix MessenzehlJohannes ScheuerlMario TrevisiolRyan Sherrard
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Grand Slam record

More information Key ...
Key
CChampion
FLost in Final
SFLost in Semifinal
QFLost in Quarterfinals
R16Lost in the round of 16
QDid not advance to playoffs
T2Played in Tier 2 event
DNPDid not participate in event
N/ANot a Grand Slam event that season
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More information Event, 2024–25 ...
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References

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