sport.wikisort.org - AthleteJolanda Neff (born 5 January 1993) is a Swiss cyclist, who currently rides for Trek Factory Racing in cross-country and cyclo-cross events. She won the gold medal in the women's cross-country event at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
Swiss cyclist
Jolanda Neff Neff in 2017 |
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Full name | Jolanda Neff |
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Born | (1993-01-05) 5 January 1993 (age 29) St. Gallen, Switzerland |
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Height | 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) |
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Weight | 53 kg (117 lb) |
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Current team | Trek Factory Racing |
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Disciplines | - Mountain Bike (Cross-Country)
- Cyclo-cross
- Road
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Role | Rider |
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2012 | Wheeler–IXS Team (off-road) |
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2013–2014 | Giant Pro XC Team (off-road) |
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2013 | Rabobank–Liv Giant (road) |
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2014–2016 | Stöckli-Pro-Team (off-road) |
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2015–2016 | Servetto Footon (road) |
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2017–2018 | Kross Racing Team (off-road) |
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2018– | Trek Factory Racing (off-road) |
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2019 | Trek–Segafredo (road)[1] |
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- Cyclo-cross
- National Championships (2019)
- Mountain Bike
- Olympic Games XC (2021)
- World XC Championships (2017)
- World Marathon Championships (2016)
- European XC Championships
(2015, 2016, 2018, 2019)
- National XC Championships
(2014, 2016–2018, 2020, 2021)
- Road
One-day races and Classics
- National Road Race Championships (2015, 2018)
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Career
She was the overall winner of the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in 2014 and 2015.[2][3] She was triple Under-23 Mountain Bike World Champion (2012, 2013 and 2014). At the 2017 UCI World Championships in Cairns she became the elite world champion.
In June 2015, she won the first gold medal for Switzerland in the women's cross country event at the European Games in Baku.[4] Later the same month, she went on to win the Swiss National Road Race Championships.
Neff won the UCI Mountain Bike Marathon World Championships in 2016 and Mountain Bike XCO World Championship in 2017. She also won the European Mountain Bike Championships in August 2018 at Cathkin Braes, just outside of Glasgow.[5]
In October 2018, Neff announced that she would join the new Trek–Segafredo team for 2019 in road racing, and Trek Factory Racing in mountain biking and cyclo-cross.[6]
In July 2021, Neff won the gold medal at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.[7] Her victory, along with her teammates Linda Indergand and Sina Frei winning the bronze and silver medals, marked the first Swiss Olympic podium since 1936 and the first time a nation has won all three medals in a cycling event since 1904.[7]
Personal life
Since 2018, she has been in a relationship with US-downhill mountainbike racer Luca Shaw.[8]
Major results
Cyclo-cross
- 2017–2018
- EKZ CrossTour
- 1st Bern
- 1st Meilen
- 2nd Eschenbach
- 2018–2019
- 1st
National Championships
- DVV Trophy
- 1st Grand Prix Sven Nys
- EKZ CrossTour
- 1st Meilen
- 2019–2020
- 1st Trek Cup
- UCI World Cup
- 2nd Waterloo
- 2021–2022
- 1st Trek Cup
Road
- 2015
- 1st
Road race, National Championships
- 4th Giro dell'Emilia
- 6th Trofeo Alfredo Binda
- 9th Road race, UCI World Championships
- 2016
- 1st
Overall Tour de Pologne
- 1st
Points classification
- 1st Stages 1 & 3
- 3rd Trofeo Alfredo Binda
- 8th Road race, Olympic Games
- 10th La Flèche Wallonne
- 2018
- 1st
Road race, National Championships
- 2020
- 4th Time trial, National Championships
- 2021
- 4th Overall Tour de Suisse
- 2022
- 5th Overall Tour de Suisse
Mountain Bike
- 2012[9]
- UCI World Championships
- 1st
Under-23 Cross-country
- 2nd
Eliminator
- 1st
Cross-country, UEC European Under-23 Championships
- National Championships
- 1st
Eliminator
- 1st
Under–23 Cross-country
- BMC Racing Cup
- 2nd Basel–Muttenz
- 3rd Overall UCI Under-23 XCO World Cup
- 2013
- UCI World Championships
- 1st
Under-23 Cross-country
- 2nd
Eliminator
- 1st
Eliminator, National Championships
- 2nd
Team relay, UEC European Championships
- BMC Racing Cup
- 3rd Gränichen
- 2014
- UCI World Championships
- 1st
Under-23 Cross-country
- 2nd
Team relay
- National Championships
- 1st
Cross-country
- 2nd Eliminator
- 1st
Overall UCI XCO World Cup
- 1st Pietermaritzburg
- 1st Mont-Sainte-Anne
- 1st Méribel
- 3rd Albstadt
- BMC Racing Cup
- 1st Buchs
- 1st Lugano–Tesserete
- 1st Gränichen
- 1st Lenzerheide
- 1st Basel–Muttenz
- 2nd
Cross-country, UEC European Under-23 Championships
- 2015
- UEC European Championships
- 1st
Cross-country
- 2nd
Marathon
- 1st
Cross-country, European Games
- 1st
Overall UCI XCO World Cup
- 1st Nové Město
- 1st Albstadt
- 1st Mont-Sainte-Anne
- 2nd Windham
- 2nd Trentino
- BMC Racing Cup
- 1st Schaan
- 1st Lugano–Tesserete
- 1st Solothurn
- 1st Gränichen
- 2016
- 1st
Marathon, UCI World Championships
- UEC European Championships
- 1st
Cross-country
- 1st
Team relay
- 1st
Cross-country, National Championships
- 1st
Overall Swiss Epic (with Alessandra Keller)
- 2017
- UCI World Championships
- 1st
Cross-country
- 1st
Team relay
- 1st
Cross-country, National Championships
- 2018
- 1st
Team relay, UCI World Championships
- 1st
Cross-country, UEC European Championships
- 1st
Cross-country, National Championships
- 1st
Overall UCI XCO World Cup
- 1st Albstadt
- 3rd Val di Sole
- Swiss Bike Cup
- 1st Gränichen
- 1st Andermatt
- 2nd Schaan
- 1st Internacionales Chelva
- UCI XCC World Cup
- 2nd Albstadt
- 2nd Mont-Sainte-Anne
- 3rd Nové Město
- 3rd La Bresse
- 2019
- 1st
Cross-country, UEC European Championships
- UCI XCC World Cup
- 1st Vallnord
- 1st Val di Sole
- 2nd Albstadt
- 2nd Lenzerheide
- 3rd Nové Město
- 2nd
Cross-country, UCI World Championships
- 2nd Overall UCI XCO World Cup
- 2nd Albstadt
- 2nd Vallnord
- 2nd Les Gets
- 2nd Val di Sole
- 2020
- 1st
Cross-country, National Championships
- Swiss Bike Cup
- 2nd Leukerbad
- French Cup
- 2nd Alpe d'Huez
- 2021
- 1st
Cross-country, Olympic Games
- 1st
Cross-country, National Championships
- Internazionali d’Italia Series
- 1st Andora
- 2nd Copa Catalana Internacional BTT
- UCI XCC World Cup
- 3rd Leogang
- 3rd Lenzerheide
- 2022
- 1st
Short track, National Championships
- UCI XCO World Cup
- 1st Mont-Sainte-Anne
- 3rd Val di Sole
- UCI World Championships
- 2nd
Cross-country
- 3rd
Marathon
- 3rd Overall UCI XCC World Cup
- 1st Nové Město
- 1st Mont-Sainte-Anne
- 3rd Lenzerheide
References
External links
 Olympic Cycling Champions in Women's Mountain Bike |
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Swiss National Road Race Champions (women) |
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1980–1999 |
- Stefania Carmine (1982)
- Evelyne Müller (1983)
- Edith Schönenberger (1984–1987)
- Isabelle Michel (1988)
- Edith Schönenberger (1989)
- Barbara Heeb (1990)
- Luzia Zberg (1991–1992)
- Barbara Ganz (1993)
- Luzia Zberg (1994–1995)
- Maria Heim (1996)
- Barbara Heeb (1997–1998)
- Priska Doppmann (1999)
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2000–2019 |
- Diana Rast (2000)
- Nicole Brändli (2001–2003)
- Sereina Trachsel (2004–2005)
- Annette Beutler (2006)
- Sereina Trachsel (2007)
- Jennifer Hohl (2008–2009)
- Emilie Aubry (2010)
- Pascale Schnider (2011)
- Jennifer Hohl (2012)
- Doris Schweizer (2013)
- Mirjam Gysling (2014)
- Jolanda Neff (2015)
- Doris Schweizer (2016)
- Nicole Hanselmann (2017)
- Jolanda Neff (2018)
- Marlen Reusser (2019)
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2020–2039 | |
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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На других языках
[de] Jolanda Neff
Jolanda Neff (* 5. Januar 1993 in St. Gallen) ist eine Schweizer Radrennfahrerin. Sie ist dreifache U23-Weltmeisterin im Mountainbike-Cross-Country (2012, 2013, 2014), dreifache Mountainbike-Gesamtweltcup-Siegerin (2014, 2015, 2018), Weltmeisterin im Mountainbike-Marathon (2016) und Cross-Country (2017) sowie Olympiasiegerin im Mountainbike-Cross-Country (2021).
- [en] Jolanda Neff
[es] Jolanda Neff
Jolanda Neff (San Galo, 5 de enero de 1993) es una deportista suiza que compite en ciclismo de montaña en la disciplina de campo a través, aunque también ha competido en carretera.[1]
[fr] Jolanda Neff
Jolanda Neff, née le 5 janvier 1993 à Saint-Gall, est une coureuse cycliste suisse, spécialiste de VTT cross-country. Elle a notamment remporté une médaille d'or olympique, le championnat du monde de cross-country et du relais en 2017, le championnat du monde de cross-country marathon en 2016 et quatre titres de championne d'Europe.
Elle obtient aussi de bons résultats sur route, elle est notamment championne de Suisse sur route en 2015 et 2018. Le 27 juillet 2021, elle est sacrée championne olympique en menant un triplé suisse dans la course féminine du VTT aux Jeux de Tokyo 2020.
[it] Jolanda Neff
Jolanda Neff (Thal, 5 gennaio 1993[2]) è una mountain biker, ciclista su strada e ciclocrossista svizzera che corre per il team Trek Factory Racing. Specialista del cross country, in tale specialità ha vinto il titolo olimpico nel 2021 a Tokyo, un titolo mondiale Elite, tre Coppe del mondo e quattro titoli europei Elite. Attiva anche su strada, è stata due volte campionessa nazionale in linea.
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