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Nathalie Schneitter

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Full name
  
Nathalie Schneitter

2011–
  
Colnago-Fabre-Sudtirol

Weight
  
59 kg

2008–2009
  
Colnago-Cap-Arreghini

Height
  
1.68 m


Rider type
  
Cross-country

Role
  
Olympic athlete

Name
  
Nathalie Schneitter

Disciplines
  
Mountain biking

Nathalie Schneitter Nathalie Schneitter at 2008 Olympic Games Day 17

Born
  
19 June 1986 (age 37) Lommiswil, Switzerland (
1986-06-19
)

2010
  
Colnago-Arreghini-Sudtirol

Current team
  
Colnago-Fabre-Sudtirol

Nathalie Schneitter (born 19 June 1986 in Lommiswil) is a Swiss professional mountain biker. Throughout her sporting career, she has won numerous Swiss national championship titles (both under the junior and elite category), and more importantly, a gold medal in the under-23 category at the 2008 European Mountain Bike Championships. Schneitter also handed an opportunity to represent her nation Switzerland at the 2008 Summer Olympics, and later rode professionally for more than five seasons on an exclusive sponsorship contract with the Colnago Team.

Nathalie Schneitter Nach dem Kulturschock ist Nathalie Schneitter endlich

Racing career

Nathalie Schneitter Nathalie SCHNEITTER Blaza KLEMENCIC Emily BATTY Flickr

Schneitter sought sporting headlines on the international scene at the 2008 European Mountain Bike Championships in Sankt Wendel, Germany, where she held off a tight battle against Slovenia's Tanja Zakelj and Czech Republic's Tereza Huříková for the gold medal in the women's under-23 cross-country race, adding a silver to her early career resume from the World Junior Championships in Val di Sole, Italy.

Nathalie Schneitter ColnagoPROTeamNathalieEvaViviennecAlberOttojpg

Few months later, Schneitter qualified for the Swiss squad, along with her teammate and 2007 world champion Petra Henzi, in the women's cross-country race at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing by receiving one of the nation's two available berths for her team from the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), based on her best performance at the World Cup series and Mountain Biking World Rankings. At the start of the race, Schneitter landed on her head into the ground on the initial lap, but managed to successfully complete a 4.8-km sturdy, treacherous cross-country course with a career-high, fifteenth-place effort in 1:53:42.

Nathalie Schneitter mtbcrosscountrycomimagesworldcup2013race4w

Shortly after the Olympics, Schneitter signed an exclusive sponsorship contract with Colnago-Cap-Arreghini Team for two additional seasons, followed by her short stint on Colnago-Arreghini-Sudtirol in 2010. In that same year, she defeated Italian rider Eva Lechner for the gold medal in the women's cross-country race at the fourth stage of the Nissan UCI MTB World Cup in Champéry, and later continued to flourish her mountain biking success by taking home the silver for her Swiss squad in the mixed team relay at the 2011 UCI World Championships.

Nathalie Schneitter Nathalie Schneitter Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Schneitter sought to compete for her second Swiss squad at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, but suffered heavily with a shoulder injury from the bike crash that sidelined her Olympic bid at the final stage of the UCI World Cup in La Bresse, France. She also affiliated with her former rival Lechner to lead Italy's Colnago-Fabre-Südtirol for three more seasons, as her exclusive contract with the team was officially renewed until 2014.


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Nathalie Schneitter nathalie schneitter natuzzchen Twitter

Nathalie Schneitter Nathalie Schneitter auf Platz zwei ROSE Vaujany fueled

References

Nathalie Schneitter Wikipedia