Deborah Compagnoni Explained

Deborah Compagnoni
Birth Date:4 June 1970
Birth Place:Bormio, Italy
Height:165cm (65inches)
Wcdebut:1986
Retired:1999
Olympicmedals:4
Olympicgolds:3
Worldsmedals:3
Worldsgolds:3
Wcseasons:14
Wcwins:16
Wcpodiums:44
Wcoveralls:0 (4th 1998 & 1999)
Wctitles:1 (Gs 1997)
Show-Medals:yes

Deborah Compagnoni (pronounced as /it/; born 4 June 1970) is an Italian former Alpine skier who won three gold medals at the 1992, 1994, and 1998 Winter Olympics.[1]

Biography

Deborah Compagnoni was born in Bormio, northern Lombardy, and skied with the G.S. Forestale club.[1]

Compagnoni soon attracted attention for her great talent. Her career was always marked by major successes, but also by serious accidents. After her first major victory, the World Junior title in giant slalom, and her first podium in World Cup, she broke her right knee in the Val d'Isère downhill. After surgery, she decided to stop competing in downhill races, where her talent could have permitted even greater successes than those she obtained in her still outstanding career.[1]

Compagnoni won her first race in the World Cup in 1992. She also won the gold medal at the Winter Olympics of the same year, again in the super-G; however, while racing the giant slalom one day later, she destroyed her left knee.[1]

In the following years, she left the speed disciplines (downhill and Super-G), confirming herself as one of the best giant slalom specialists. Her fragile knees hindered Compagnoni's practice activity, and limited the number of victories in the World Cup; however, she always arrived in her best shape for the major championships. In 1994, at the Lillehammer Olympics, she won the gold medal in the giant slalom, a feat she repeated four years later in Nagano. In 1998, she won also a silver medal in the Slalom, finishing second by only 0.06 seconds.[1]

Compagnoni won the World Championship in giant slalom in 1996; in the following year's edition, she repeated the victory, alongside winning with the slalom title, a feat never accomplished by any other Italian female skier. She won a total of 16 races in the Alpine Skiing World Cup (13 giant slalom, 2 super-G, and 1 slalom), plus a giant slalom World Cup in 1997.[1]

Deborah Compagnoni is considered the best Italian female skier of all time, the equal of famous male champions like Gustav Thöni and Alberto Tomba. The World Cup skiing track in her native Santa Caterina Valfurva has been named after her.

She is married to Alessandro Benetton, and they have three children: Agnese, Tobias, and Luce; they live in Ponzano Veneto, Italy.[2] [3] Her brother Jacopo Compagnoni, a fellow Alpine skier, died during an avalanche on Monte Sobretta on December 16, 2021, at the age of 40.[4]

World Cup results

Season standings

SeasonOverallDownhill Super-GGiant slalomSlalomCombined
PlacePointsPlacePointsPlacePointsPlacePointsPlacePointsPlacePoints
40. 24 22. 12 17. 12
did not participate due to an injury
52. 19 22. 9 24. 10
57. 12 17. 12
11. 590 15. 126 4. 344 19. 120
11. 535 6. 230 8. 200 17. 105
6. 841 18. 91 3. 515 12. 195 12. 40
12. 524 25. 74 5. 325 14. 125
22. 346 6. 280 30. 66
4. 967 1. 560 3. 407
4. 912 2. 565 6. 304
22. 347 9. 256 23. 91

Races victories

These are her world cup victories.[5]

DateLocationRace
26 January 1992 Super-G
7 March 1993 Super-G
5 December 1993 Giant slalom
11 December 1993 Giant slalom
5 January 1994 Giant slalom
8 January 1995 Giant slalom
2 March 1996 Giant slalom
29 December 1996 Slalom
17 January 1997 Giant slalom
18 January 1997 Giant slalom
26 January 1997 Giant slalom
15 March 1997 Giant slalom
25 October 1997 Giant slalom
21 November 1997 Giant slalom
19 December 1997 Giant slalom
6 January 1998 Giant slalom

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Deborah Compagnoni - Athlete Information. fis-ski.com. 20 February 2021.
  2. http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/fashion/article3721700.ece "A life in the day: Alessandro Benetton, retail magnate", The Sunday Times, John Follain, 13 April 2008
  3. http://www.elle.com/Life-Love/Entertaining-Design/Alessandro-Benetton-Future-Perfect "Alessandro Benetton: Future Perfect", Elle, Alexandra Marshall, 6 January 2010
  4. Web site: Morto Jacopo Compagnoni, il fratello di Deborah travolto da una valanga in Valfurva. La Repubblica. 16 December 2021.
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=0EniB-D24w4C&dq=Deborah+Compagnoni&pg=PA919 Encyclopædia Britannica almanac 2008