Swiss cyclist (born 1993)
Jolanda Neff Neff in 2018
Full name Jolanda Neff Born (1993-01-05 ) 5 January 1993 (age 32) Altstätten , SwitzerlandHeight 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) Weight 53 kg (117 lb) Current team Trek Factory Racing Disciplines Role Rider Rider type All-rounder 2012 Wheeler–IXS Team (off-road) 2013–2014 Giant Pro XC Team (off-road) 2013 Rabobank–Liv Giant (road) 2014–2016 Stöckli-Pro-Team (off-road) 2015–2016 Servetto Footon (road) 2017–2018 Kross Racing Team (off-road) 2018– Trek Factory Racing (off-road) 2019 Trek–Segafredo (road) [ 1]
Cyclo-cross
National Championships (2019)
Mountain bike
Olympic Games XC (2020 )
World XC Championships (2017)
World Marathon Championships (2016)
European XC Championships (2015, 2016, 2018, 2019)
National XC Championships (2014, 2016–2018, 2020, 2021)
XC World Cup (2014 , 2015 , 2018 )
8 individual wins (2014 , 2015 , 2018 , 2022 )
Road
One-day races and Classics
National Road Race Championships (2015, 2018)
Jolanda Neff (born 5 January 1993) is a Swiss cyclist, who primarily rides in the cross-country cycling and cyclo-cross disciplines, for the Trek Factory Racing team.[ 2] She won the gold medal in the women's cross-country event at the 2020 Summer Olympics .
Career
She was the overall winner of the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in 2014 and 2015 .[ 3] [ 4] 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 .[ 5] 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 .[ 6]
In October 2018, Neff announced that she would join the new Lidl–Trek team for 2019 in road racing, and Trek Factory Racing in mountain biking and cyclo-cross.[ 7]
In July 2021, Neff won the gold medal in the women's cross-country event at the COVID-19 pandemic -delayed 2020 Summer Olympics .[ 8] Her victory, along with her teammates Linda Indergand and Sina Frei winning the bronze and silver medals, marked the first all-Swiss Olympic podium since 1936 and the first time a nation has won all three medals in a cycling event since 1904.[ 8]
Personal life
Since 2018, she has been in a relationship with American downhill mountain biking racer Luca Shaw .[ 9]
Career achievements
Major results
Cyclo-cross
Road
Source: [ 10]
Mountain bike
Source: [ 11]
2012
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
1st Tokyo 2020 Test Event
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
2023
2nd Cross-country, National Championships
2nd Haiming
Swiss Bike Cup
2nd Basel
3rd Gränichen
4th Cross-country, UEC European Championships
UCI XCO World Cup
4th Mont-Sainte-Anne
5th Snowshoe
2024
Swiss Bike Cup
2nd Gränichen
2nd Rivera
Shimano Super Cup
2nd Banyoles
UCI XCO World Cup
5th Mairiporã
Awards and honours
Between 2014 and 2019, Neff was named as the Swiss female cyclist of the year at the Swiss Cycling Awards [de ] .[ 12] [ 13] She won the award for a seventh time in 2021, as all five Swiss female cyclists to ride, and win medals, at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Neff, Sina Frei , Linda Indergand , Marlen Reusser and Nikita Ducarroz – were recognised as joint winners.[ 14]
Following her Olympic gold medal, a street in Thal was renamed as "Jolanda Neff Weg" in her honour in August 2021.[ 15]
References
External links
1990–1999 2000–2009 2010–2019 2020–2029
2000-2009 2010-2019 2020-2029
1980–1999 2000–2019 2020–2039