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Giovanni De Gennaro (born 21 July 1992)[1] is an Italian slalom canoeist who has competed since 2008.[2]
He won two medals in the K-1 team event at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships with a gold in 2013 and a bronze in 2011. He also won a bronze medal in the same event at the 2015 European Championships in Markkleeberg. He won gold medal in first ICF World Cup race 2016 in Ivrea.
De Gennaro finished 7th in the K1 event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
He lives in Roncadelle (Brescia) and he is a member of Corpo Forestale dello Stato.
World Cup individual podiums
Season
|
Date
|
Venue
|
Position
|
Event
|
2016 |
4 Jun 2016 |
Ivrea |
1st |
K1
|
References
|
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- 1949 (folding): Switzerland (Werner Zimmermann, Jean Engler & Eduard Kunz)
- 1951 (folding): Austria (Hans Frühwirth, Rudolf Pillwein & Othmar Eiterer)
- 1953 (folding): Austria (Franz Grafetsberger, Hans Herbist & Rudolf Sausgruber)
- 1955 (folding): West Germany (Manfred Vogt, Sigi Holzbauer & Alois Würfmannsdobler)
- 1957 (folding): East Germany (Heinz Bielig, Eberhard Gläser & Reinhard Sens)
- 1959 (folding): East Germany (Eberhard Gläser, Heinz Bielig & Günther Möbius)
- 1961 (folding): East Germany (Horst Wängler, Eberhard Gläser & Roland Hahnebach)
- 1963 (folding): East Germany (Eberhard Gläser, Rolf Luber & Fritz Lange)
- 1965: West Germany (Manfred Vogt, Eugen Weimann & Horst Dieter Engelke)
- 1967: East Germany (Jürgen Bremer, Christian Döring & Volkmar Fleischer)
- 1969: France (Patrick Maccari, Claude Peschier & Alain Colombe)
- 1971: Austria (Kurt Presslmayr, Norbert Sattler & Hans Schlecht)
- 1973: East Germany (Wolfgang Büchner, Siegbert Horn & Christian Döring)
- 1975: West Germany (Ulrich Peters, Dieter Förstl & Bernd Dichtl)
- 1977: France (Jean-Yves Prigent, Bernard Renault & Christian Frossard)
- 1979: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Albert Kerr & Allan Edge)
- 1981: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Albert Kerr & Nicolas Wain)
- 1983: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Paul McConkey & Jim Dolan)
- 1985: West Germany (Peter Micheler, Toni Prijon & Jürgen Kübler)
- 1987: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Melvyn Jones & Russell Smith)
- 1989: Yugoslavia (Jernej Abramič, Marjan Štrukelj & Albin Čižman)
- 1991: France (Manuel Brissaud, Gilles Clouzeau & Jean-Michel Regnier)
- 1993: Great Britain (Richard Fox, Melvyn Jones & Shaun Pearce)
- 1995: Germany (Jochen Lettmann, Thomas Becker & Oliver Fix)
- 1997: Great Britain (Paul Ratcliffe, Ian Raspin, & Shaun Pearce)
- 1999: Germany (Thomas Becker, Ralf Schaberg & Jakobus Stenglein)
- 2002: Germany (Claus Suchanek, Thomas Becker & Thomas Schmidt)
- 2003: Switzerland (Thomas Mosimann, Mathias Röthenmund & Michael Kurt)
- 2005: France (Julien Billaut, Fabien Lefèvre & Benoît Peschier)
- 2006: France (Fabien Lefèvre, Julien Billaut & Boris Neveu)
- 2007: Germany (Fabian Dörfler, Alexander Grimm & Erik Pfannmöller)
- 2009: Czech Republic (Ivan Pišvejc, Vavřinec Hradilek & Michal Buchtel)
- 2010: Germany (Alexander Grimm, Fabian Dörfler & Hannes Aigner)
- 2011: Germany (Sebastian Schubert, Hannes Aigner & Alexander Grimm)
- 2013: Italy (Daniele Molmenti, Andrea Romeo & Giovanni De Gennaro)
- 2014: France (Mathieu Biazizzo, Sébastien Combot & Boris Neveu)
- 2015: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Vavřinec Hradilek & Ondřej Tunka)
- 2017: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Ondřej Tunka & Vít Přindiš)
- 2018: Great Britain (Joseph Clarke, Bradley Forbes-Cryans & Christopher Bowers)
- 2019: Spain (David Llorente, Samuel Hernanz & Joan Crespo)
- 2021: France (Boris Neveu, Mathieu Biazizzo & Benjamin Renia)
- 2022: Germany (Hannes Aigner, Noah Hegge & Stefan Hengst)
- 2023: Czech Republic (Jiří Prskavec, Vít Přindiš & Jakub Krejčí)
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