Sandra Cariboni

Sandra Cariboni
Personal information
Country represented Switzerland
Born (1963-11-17) 17 November 1963
Zofingen, Switzerland
Height 1.71 m (5 ft 7 12 in)
Skating club ISC Davos
Training locations Davos
Retired c. 1986

Sandra Cariboni (born November 17, 1963)[1] is a Swiss former competitive figure skater in ladies' singles. She is the 1983 Swiss national champion and finished 11th at the 1984 Winter Olympics.

Personal life

Sandra Cariboni was born on November 17, 1963 in Zofingen, Switzerland.[1] She is the daughter of a pair of architects, Dino and Rita Carboni, who also worked as a skating coach, and has a sister, Claudia.[2] After she was diagnosed with Krupp syndrome as an infant, her family moved to Davos.[2]

Cariboni studied to become a veterinarian before becoming a homeopath in Zürich.[2] She and her partner, Hans Gerber, have a son, Zeno, born in 2009.[2]

Career

Cariboni became the Swiss national junior champion at the age of 13.[2] In 1982, she competed at her first major international event, the World Championships in Copenhagen, and finished 16th.

She began the following season by placing seventh at the 1982 Skate America and 13th at the 1982 NHK Trophy before winning the Swiss senior national title. She finished 13th at the 1983 European Championships in Dortmund and tenth at the 1983 World Championships in Helsinki.

Cariboni's most successful season was 1983–84. She placed sixth at the 1984 European Championships in Budapest, eleventh at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, and tenth at the 1984 World Championships in Ottawa.

In 1985, Cariboni dropped to eleventh at the European Championships in Gothenburg and 17th at the 1984 World Championships in Tokyo. After a long break due to a knee injury, she lacked the motivation to return to competitive skating and decided to retire.[2] She was a member of the Internationale Schlittschuh-Club in Davos.[3]

Cariboni worked for two years as a skating coach at the Suvretta House in St. Moritz.[2]

Competitive highlights

International
Event 81–82 82–83 83–84 84–85
Winter Olympics 11th
World Champ. 16th 10th 10th 17th
European Champ. 13th 6th 11th
NHK Trophy 13th
Skate America 7th
National[4]
Swiss Champ. 1st
J. = Junior level

References

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