Julieta Cantaluppi
Julieta Cantaluppi | |
---|---|
Born | Como, Italy | 24 January 1985
Height | 163 cm (5 ft 4 in) |
Gymnastics career | |
Discipline | Rhythmic gymnastics |
Country represented | ![]() |
Club | Aeronautica Militare |
Head coach(es) | Kristina Guiourova |
Retired | 2012 |
Julieta Cantaluppi (born 24 January 1985, in Como) is a retired Italian rhythmic gymnast[1] and currently a coach in rhythmic gymnastics.
Personal life
[edit]She was brought to rhythmic gymnastics by her mother, Kristina Guiourova, who was also her coach. She competed in rhythmic gymnastics for Bulgaria and was world champion with rope in London in 1979. Her grandmother, Julieta Shishmanova, was a famous Bulgarian rhythmic gymnastics coach and member of the FIG Technical Committee, she coached some of the greatest Bulgarian individual gymnasts of all time, including Maria Gigova, Neshka Robeva, Rumyana Stefanova and Krassimira Filipova, helping them win numerous world medals.[2]
Career
[edit]During her early years, she moved with her mother between various cities and gymnastics clubs in Italy, where she started training and competing. In 1997, her mother decided to return to Bulgaria, where Julieta trained under Neshka Robeva. During this period, she often returned to Italy, competing in both the Italian and Bulgarian championships. In 2002, Julieta and her mother settled permanently at Ginnastica Fabriano, a club they helped grow to the highest competitive level.
In 2003, Cantaluppi joined the Italian national team as an individual gymnast. In 2005, she placed 4th at the Mediterranean Games in Almería and 14th in All-around at the European Championships in Moscow. In 2008, she finished 15th at the European Championships in Turin. She won gold at the 2009 Mediterranean Games in Pescara, overcoming the disappointment of missing qualification for the 2008 Beijing Olympics and beginning her long journey toward the London Olympics. In 2010, she placed 13th at the European Championships in Bremen.
She finished 11th in All-around Final at the 2011 World Championships in Montpellier and secured her qualification for the 2012 Olympic Games. In London, the same city where her mother had won the world title, Cantaluppi competed in the individual all-around event at the 2012 Summer Olympics, where she placed 16th.[3]
After retirement in 2013, Cantaluppi took up coaching at club Ginnastica Fabriano, becoming head Italian coach overseeing successful Italian rhythmic gymnasts Milena Baldassarri (2018 World Ribbon silver medalist, 6th at the Tokyo Olympics), Talisa Torretti (2018 Youth Olympic Games AA bronze medalist) and Sofia Raffaeli (2022 five-times World champion, two times European champion and 2024 Olympic bronze medalist). She also lead the Ginnastica Fabriano team to multiple wins at Italian club championships.
In September 2023 Cantaluppi announced she was stepping down as Italian head coach to pursue other coaching opportunities overseas. Since November 2023, she has worked as a coach for the Israeli national team.[4] In March 2025, wiretaps were reported by Italian newspapers in which she was accused of abusing two of her athletes (Sofia Raffaelli and Serena Ottaviani) during her time at Ginnastica Fabriano.[5][6]
Notable pupils
[edit]Rhythmic gymnasts:
- Letizia Cicconcelli (born in 1999) (1 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze in World Group, 1 gold and 2 silver in European Group Championships)
- Milena Baldassarri (born in 2001) (2 Olympic All-around finals 2020 Olympics and 2024 Olympics, 1 gold, 2 silver, 3 bronze in World, 2 silver in European Championships, multiple World Cup medals)
- Talisa Torretti (born in 2003) (1 bronze at the 2018 Youth Olympics, 1 bronze in Junior European Championships)
- Sofia Raffaeli (born in 2004) (1 bronze at the 2024 Olympics, 5 gold, 4 silver and 3 bronze in World, 5 gold and 6 silver in European, 3 silver at Junior World Championships, 1 gold and 2 silver in World games, multiple World Cup medals)
Counselor/Coordinator for Italian Junior Group:
- 2017 European Championships Group silver medalists
(Anna Paola Cantatore, Nina Corradini, Melissa Girelli, Francesca Pellegrini, Talisa Torretti, Rebecca Vinti)
- 2019 European Championships Group bronze medalists
(Siria Cella, Alessia Leone, Alexandra Naclerio, Serena Ottaviani, Vittoria Quoiani, Giulia Segatori)
- 2023 European Championships Group bronze medalists
(Virginia Cuttini, Gaia D'Antona, Elisa Dobrovolska, Caterina Maltoni, Cristina Ventura, Bianka Vignozzi)
References
[edit]- ^ "Julieta Cantaluppi". London 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
- ^ "Protagoniste: Julieta Cantaluppi" (in Italian). 11 September 2023. Retrieved 28 March 2025.
- ^ "Individual All-Around Event Standings". London 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-12-05. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
- ^ "Cantaluppi lascia l'Italia. Tecchi: "Il progetto olimpico di Fabriano va avanti"". www.federginnastica.it. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
- ^ "Il caso degli abusi nella ginnastica ritmica non fa che peggiorare". Il Post (in Italian). 2025-03-31. Retrieved 2025-03-31.
- ^ Villa, Stefano (2025-03-31). "Si parla anche di Sofia Raffaeli nelle intercettazioni di ginnastica ritmica: "Rimanevano in mutande, chiuse in uno stanzino freddo"". OA Sport (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-03-31.
- 1985 births
- Living people
- Italian rhythmic gymnasts
- Olympic gymnasts for Italy
- Gymnasts at the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Sportspeople from Como
- Gymnasts of Centro Sportivo Aeronautica Militare
- Mediterranean Games gold medalists for Italy
- Competitors at the 2009 Mediterranean Games
- Mediterranean Games medalists in gymnastics
- Italian people of Bulgarian descent
- Gymnastics coaches
- 21st-century Italian sportswomen
- Italian sportspeople stubs
- European rhythmic gymnast stubs