Rossella Fiamingo

Rossella Fiamingo
Personal information
Born (1991-07-14) 14 July 1991
Catania, Italy
Weapon(s) épée
Hand left-handed
Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight 56 kg (123 lb)
National coach(es) Sandro Cuomo
Club GS Forestale
Personal coach(es) Gianni Sperlinga
FIE Ranking current ranking

Rossella Fiamingo (born 14 July 1991) is an Italian épée fencer,[1] world champion in 2014 and 2015.

Career

Fiamingo did ballet and rhythmic gymnastics as a child. She took up fencing when she was seven at the instigation of her father, who already drove her brother to a nearby fencing school, AS Methodos Catania.[2] She was taught by Gianni Sperlinga, who remains her personal coach as of today. In 2004 she was selected into the cadet Italian national team. She won the 2007 Cadet European Championships in Novi Sad, then the 2008 Cadet World Championships at home, in Acireale. She earned both the individual and team gold medals in 2009 and 2010 at the Junior European Championships, then she won the 2010 European U23 Championships in Gdańsk.

Fiamingo joined the national senior team in the 2010–11 season. At the 2011 European Championships in Sheffield she reached the quarter-finals, where she was defeated by teammate Nathalie Moellhausen.[3] The next season she climbed her first World Cup podium with a bronze medal in Doha, followed by a gold medal in Rio de Janeiro. Qualified to the 2012 Summer Olympics with the team, she was defeated 14–15 in the quarter-finals of the individual event by China's Sun Yujie.[4] In the team event, Italy were defeated in the first round by the United States, then lost to Romania in the ranking matches and finished seventh.

In the 2013–14 season Fiamingo won the World Championships, defeating along the way Olympic champions Yana Shemyakina and Britta Heidemann.[5] Rossella Fiamingo (ITA) won again women's individual épée at the 2015 world championships in Moscow to become the first woman to win back-to-back world titles in this event since Laura Flessel-Colovic (FRA) in 1998-1999. Fiamingo joined Flessel-Colovic (1998 and 1999) and Mariann Horvath (HUN, 1991 and 1992) as the only women with multiple world titles in this event. This was the third gold medal for Italy in this event, equalling France and Hungary on most wins. She in the 2014-2015 season also won the world cup. Fiamingo has a degree in pianoforte and studies nutrition at the University of Catania.[6]

References

  1. London2012.com
  2. Francesco Drago (11 June 2012). "Intervista esclusiva a Rossella Fiamingo" (in Italian). OlimpiAzzura.
  3. "Moellhausen che peccato. La spada è di bronzo" (in Italian). Gasport. 16 July 2011.
  4. "Rossella Fiamingo". BBC Sport. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  5. Teobaldo Semoli (29 July 2014). "Rossella Fiamingo: brava, bella e semplice". Panorama (in Italian).
  6. "Medaglie per la campionessa del mondo di spada Fiamingo e l'hockeista Mirabella". Bolletino d'Ateneo (in Italian). Università degli Studi di Catania. 27 August 2014.
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