Nationality Italian Name Ugo Frigerio Events Racewalking Club US Milanese Weight 55 kg | Sport Athletics Height 1.71 m Role Olympic athlete | |
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Personal best(s) 10 km walk – 44:38.0 (1925)50 km walk – 4:59:06 (1932) Died July 7, 1968, Garda, Veneto, Italy Gold medals Athletics at the 1920 Summer Olympics – Men's 10 kilometres walk Bronze medals Athletics at the 1932 Summer Olympics - Men's 50km Walk |
Trofeo ugo frigerio 2013
Ugo Frigerio (16 September 1901 – 7 July 1968) was an Italian race walker. He competed in four events at the 1920, 1924 and 1932 Olympics ranging from 3 to 50 km and won three gold and one bronze medals. He was the Olympic flag bearer for Italy in 1924 and 1932.
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Biography
Nationally Frigerio won nine race walking titles: in the 3 km (1921, 1922), 10 km (1919–1922, 1924, 1931), and one-hour walk (1920).
Before the 3 km Olympic race in 1920 in Antwerp Frigerio gave pages of sheet music that he wanted to hear to the band playing at the competition venue. During the race he would scold the conductor when the band was deviating from its tempo, and chat to the public, which eventually began to cheer him.
Frigerio semi-retired after learning that race walking was excluded from the 1928 Summer Olympics. He resumed training in 1931 to prepare for the 1932 Games, where the only walking event was 50 km, five times longer than his favorite 10 km distance. He won a bronze medal and retired for good, becoming a sports administrator. In 1934, he wrote an autobiography titled Marciando nel nome dell’Italia (Walking in the Name of Italy).