Jacqui Cooper

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Jacqui Cooper
Medal record
Women’s freestyle skiing
Representing  Australia
FIS Freestyle World Ski Championships
Gold medal – first place 1999 Meiringen-Hasliberg Aerials
Bronze medal – third place 2007 Madonna di Campiglio Aerials
Bronze medal – third place 2009 Inawashiro Aerials

Jacqui Cooper (born 6 January 1973 in Melbourne, Australia) is a retired Australian freestyle skier and motivational speaker.[1]

Cooper started skiing aerials at age 16 and was on the Australian team for 20 years. During her career she had many injuries, including a shattered knee, elbow, hip, shoulder and a broken back.

She finished in sixteenth place at the 1994 Winter Olympics and crashed out of the qualification round at the 1998 Winter Olympics. At the Salt Lake Winter Games in 2002, the three-time world champion was a favourite to win gold, but a training accident the week before those games shattered her knee. Teammate Alisa Camplin would win the gold for Australia.

Cooper made her comeback at the 2004 Mount Buller World Aerials, two and a half years after her Salt Lake accident. She won the silver behind fellow Australian Lydia Lassila (née Ierodiaconou). After having a long time off competition, she performed double somersaults, rather than her trademark triples.

At the 2006 Winter Olympics, Cooper entered the final as the favourite, having recorded a world record 213.56 in the qualification round, but she crashed on both jumps.

Cooper won 24 World Cup gold medals, claiming her fifth World Cup title in Inawashiro, Japan.[2]

In 2009 Cooper was appointed Company Ambassador for La Trobe Financial.[citation needed]

Cooper was selected for the 2010 Winter Olympics, the first Australian woman to make five Olympic teams, summer or winter.[3] She finished fifth in that competition. Fellow Australian Lydia Lassila took the gold medal.[4]

Jacqui is the mother of three. Her eldest daughter was diagnosed with Coeliac Disease when at two years old. Cooper is a volunteer ambassador for Coeliac Victoria & Tasmania.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ "Jacqui Cooper". Olympedia. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  2. ^ Jumping Jac nails best win of all. FOX Sports, 26 February 2007
  3. ^ AUSOlympicTeam Twitter feed
  4. ^ ABC Online
  5. ^ Coeliac Victoria & Tasmania, "CVT Ambassadors: Jacqui Cooper" Retrieved on 16 February 2018.

External links[]


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