Natalia Gemperle Explained

Natalia Gemperle
Birth Date:9 December 1990
Sport:Foot orienteering
Headercolor:lightsteelblue

Natalia Mikhailovna Gemperle (Russian: Наталья Михайловна Гемперле, née Vinogradova, born 9 December 1990) is a Russian-born Swiss orienteering competitor. She competes for the clubs Alfta-Ösa and OLK Aargus [1] [2]

Early Life

Natalia Mikhailovna Vinogradova was born[3] and raised[4] in Moscow. At the time of her birth, Moscow was still the capital of the Soviet Union. According to Gemperle, she started orienteering with her twin sister Olga at the age of ten.[4] At the age of 17, Gemperle was told by a professional orienteering coach after an hour observing her, that she would become a top 5 world athlete within 3 years. This prediction was eerily accurate, as Gemperle came fifth at the 2011 World Orienteering Championships 3 years later in her first year as a senior orienteer.[3]

Gemperle won a bronze medal in her last year of eligibility at the 2010 Junior World Orienteering Championships in Denmark.[3] This was in the relay, running with Anastasia Tikhonova and Anastasia Trubkina.

Career

In her first year as a senior in 2011, Gemperle came fifth at the World Orienteering Championships in the middle distance. Following this, Gemperle struggled to reach this level of performance for the next four years, matching her fifth place in the long distance at the 2015 World Orienteering Championships.[3] Gemperle turned professional in 2015.[4]

2016 was Gemperle's breakthrough season. At the 2016 World Orienteering Championships in Strömstad she won a silver medal in the long distance,[5] a bronze medal in the middle distance, and a gold medal with the Russian relay team. Gemperle became a consistent performer following this season, winning medals in the World Championships every season from 2016 to 2019. In 2017, Gemperle participated in The World Games in Wroclaw, Poland winning a silver at the middle-distance race and a bronze medal in the mixed relay.

Gemperle's best performance came in the 2018 World Orienteering Championships, where she won her first individual gold medal in the middle distance after favourite Tove Alexandersson was disqualified.[6]

Conversion from Russia to Switzerland

In 2016, Gemperle married Swiss orienteering coach Rolf Gemperle, previously the head coach of the Austrian national team. Gemperle credits Rolf with improving her orienteering to the level required to compete for medals.[3] Following her marriage, Gemperle moved to Hallwil in Switzerland.[4] Following the commencement of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, on 28 February 2022, the IOC banned Russia and Belarus and recommended that other international sporting organizers do the same, leading to the International Orienteering Federation banning athletes from those countries.[7]

Gemperle became eligible for Swiss citizenship in 2022, which according to World Athletics was granted before the 11th January 2022,[8] and received her passport in March 2022. However, Gemperle was unable to compete for Switzerland in Orienteering until 2023 due to IOF rules stating runners can only compete for one country in a calendar year (Gemperle competed for Russia in a World Ranking Event in Turkey in early 2022.) Gemperle was planning to make the change to Switzerland already before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[9]

Despite being banned from Orienteering, Gemperle was still able to compete for Switzerland in athletics during 2022, where she came 7th at the European championships in the Mountain Running Up & Down Senior Race.[10]

Competing for Switzerland

Gemperle made her debut for Switzerland in 2023. In her first year of eligibility, Gemperle won a silver medal in the middle distance at the World Orienteering Championships held in Switzerland, and was also part of the Swiss relay team winning the silver medals.[11] [12] She won her first gold medal for Switzerland with the Swiss sprint relay team in the 2024 World Orienteering Championships.[13]

She won a silver medal in the middle distance at the 2024 European Orienteering Championships in Hungary, behind Simona Aebersold.[14]

Personal Life

Gemperle has a twin named Olga. In 2020, Gemperle gave birth to a daughter. Gemperle's husband has a previous child from an earlier marriage, Eline Gemperle (born 2000), who also competes for Switzerland at an international level.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Natalia Gemperle . eventor.orienteering.org . 10 September 2016.
  2. Web site: Natalia Gemperle darf 2022 nicht für die Schweiz starten . www.swiss-orienteering.ch/ . 14 April 2023.
  3. Web site: Worldofo: Natalia Gemperle . worldofo.com . 22 May 2024.
  4. Web site: Natalia Gemperle: about. . nataliagemperle.ch . 22 May 2024.
  5. Web site: Official results for Long . eventor.orienteering.org . 25 August 2016 . 10 September 2016.
  6. Web site: 2018 World Orienteering Championships Middle Results . ranking.orienteering.org . 22 May 2024.
  7. Web site: IOC EB recommends no participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials . Olympics.com . 28 February 2022 . 1 January 2024.
  8. Web site: World Athletics: Natalia Gemperle . World Athletics.
  9. News: Sommerhalder . Rainer . The Russian orienteering athlete Natalia Gemperle is not allowed to start for Switzerland . 22 May 2024 . Luzerner Zeitung.
  10. Web site: Event Women's Mountain Running Up & Down Senior Race Women's Mountain Running Up & Down Senior Race . www.european-athletics.com . European Athletics . 22 May 2024.
  11. Web site: Official results for World Orienteering Championships 2023 - Middle - final . eventor.orienteering.org . 15 July 2023 . 15 July 2024.
  12. Web site: Official results for World Orienteering Championships 2023 - Relay . 15 July 2024.
  13. Web site: WOC 2024 Mixed Sprint Relay Results . WOC 2024 . 14 July 2024.
  14. Web site: Official results for Orienteering World Cup Round 3 with European Orienteering Championships 2024 - Middle . eventor.orienteering.org . 17 August 2024 . 17 August 2024 .