Natascha Badmann | |
Residence: | Switzerland |
Nickname: | Swiss Miss Natasches ("Too fast") "The Smile" |
Birth Date: | 6 December 1966 |
Birth Place: | Basel, Switzerland |
Height: | 1.65m (05.41feet) |
Weight: | 52kg (115lb) |
Turnedpro: | 1995 |
Pb: | 9:07:54 (2002) |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Natascha Badmann (born 6 December 1966) is a professional triathlete from Switzerland. She is a 6-time winner of the Ironman World Championships in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii in 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, and 2005; in 1998 she became the first European woman to win the Ironman Triathlon World Championship.
Natascha works in Switzerland as a social worker, and speaks German, English, French, and Italian. She currently lives in Winznau, Switzerland with her husband Toni and daughter Anastasia.[1]
Her daughter Anastasia was born days before she turned 18. Nicknamed the "Swiss Miss", Badmann won her first Ironman World Championship at the age of 29, when her daughter was already 13 years old. Her husband, coach and nutritionist is Toni Hasler.[2]
At the 2007 Hawaii Ironman, Badmann hit a cone on the bike leg and injured her shoulder and collarbone. While she wanted to continue the race, Hasler convinced her to drop out to prevent further injury. At the same race in 2006, stomach problems nearly caused her to drop out again. Early into the run, Badmann stopped and threw up. Struggling to continue, she began to walk. In a dramatic moment with tremendous support from cheering fans, Badmann, crying, began jogging. She finished 10th with a personal-worst marathon time of 3:27:54.[3]
Though she finished second on the course of the 2004 Ironman Triathlon World Championship, Badmann is considered the winner of the race due to the disqualification of the initial winner, Germany's Nina Kraft, after Kraft admitted to using the banned performance enhancer EPO.[4]
Table below gives major significant ranking podium) obtained from International Championship triathlon since 1994.[5]
scope=col | Year | scope=col | Competition | scope=col | Country | Scope=col | Position | scope=col | Timing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row; align=center; | 2014 | Swiss Ironman (fr) | |||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="3" | 2012 | South Africa Ironman (fr) | |||||||
Ironman 70.3 Asia-Pacific | |||||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 2011 | ||||||||
Ironman Lanzarote | |||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 2007 | South Africa Ironman (fr) | |||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 2006 | South Africa Ironman (fr) | |||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 2005 | ||||||||
South Africa Ironman (fr) | |||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 2004 | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 2003 | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 2002 | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 2001 | Ironman California | |||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 2000 | ||||||||
Long Distance World Championships | |||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 1998 | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 1997 | ||||||||
Long Distance Duathlon World Championships | |||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 1996 | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; rowspan="2" | 1995 | ||||||||
Duathlon Worldwide Championships | Timing | ||||||||
scope=row; align=center; | 1994 | Duathlon Worldwide Championships | Timing |