Giorgio Rocca
Giorgio Rocca (born 6 August 1975) is an Italian former alpine skier, a specialist in slalom skiing. Together with Marc Girardelli, Ingemar Stenmark and Marcel Hirscher, he is one of four skiers to have won 5 Alpine Skiing World Cup slaloms in a row, which he achieved in the 2005/2006 season: only Alberto Tomba (7) has won more World Cup slaloms consecutively. He is currently ninth in the list of all-time slalom winners, with a total of 11 victories.
Giorgio Rocca | |||||||||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||||||||
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Nationality | Italian, Swiss | ||||||||||||||||
Born | Chur, Grisons, Switzerland | 6 August 1975||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Biography
Rocca was born in Chur, Switzerland. He made his debut in the Alpine Skiing World Cup on 6 January 1996 in Flachau. However, Rocca broke his right knee and was forced off the tour for a year. In March 1997 he scored his first point-scoring result in the World Cup, at the Shigakogen slalom. He scored his first top ten finish in November 1998, at the Aspen slalom.
One year later Rocca finally secured his first podium finish, scoring a third place in the renowned Kitzbühel slalom. In 1999 he won the bronze medal at the Alpine World Skiing Championships in Vail. Rocca began to be considered the legitimate heir of Italy's Alberto Tomba, who had just retired. This responsibility however, seemed to crush Rocca and stunted his progress, together with another knee accident.
After two difficult seasons, in 2001 Rocca was again on the podium, with second places in Aspen and Madonna di Campiglio. In January 2003, after another 2nd in the Sestriere slalom, Rocca finally won his first World Cup race on the Lauberhorn piste at Wengen in Switzerland. In the 2005 season he took two victories at Chamonix and Flachau, and two bronze medals at his home World Championship in Bormio, in the slalom and the combined. Rocca won again in February 2005, this time at Kranjska Gora, and for a while was in contention for the Slalom World Cup title for the season.[1][2]
Rocca started the 2005/2006 season with an impressive series of five wins a row in the first five slalom races. He explained his notable improvements from a psychological point of view, as he had taken advantage of the help of a team of psychologists to solve the alleged fragility that had thwarted him in past seasons.
Rocca currently lives in Livigno. In his career he competed for C.S. Carabinieri.
He recited the Olympic oath at the 2006 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony. It was at these Olympics that he was hoping to win gold in his strongest event: slalom, after his great success in the world championships, so he decided to focus on this event. He did not enter the Giant Slalom or Super-G as originally planned, however he did compete in the Combined race where he placed 5th with a total time of 3:10.74. In the Slalom he was the first starter but he straddled at the second gate, throwing away his chances of being champion.
In January 2010, Rocca confirmed his retirement from competition, bringing forward plans to end his racing career at the end of the season due to his sustaining a groin injury in training which prevented him from competing at the 2010 Winter Olympics.[3]
World Cup victories
Overall
Season | Discipline |
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2006 | Slalom |
Individual victories
Date | Location | Race |
---|---|---|
19 January 2003 | Wengen | Slalom |
16 March 2003 | Lillehammer | Slalom |
11 January 2004 | Chamonix | Slalom |
22 December 2004 | Flachau | Slalom |
9 January 2005 | Chamonix | Slalom |
27 February 2005 | Kranjska Gora | Slalom |
4 December 2005 | Beaver Creek | Slalom |
12 December 2005 | Madonna di Campiglio | Slalom |
22 December 2005 | Kranjska Gora | Slalom |
8 January 2006 | Adelboden | Slalom |
15 January 2006 | Wengen | Slalom |
References
- "COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE PODIUM". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
- "COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE TOP 10 POSITION". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
- Meadows, Mark (9 January 2010). O'Brien, John (ed.). "Retiring Rocca ruled out of Vancouver". reuters.com. Retrieved 28 January 2018.