Anja Pärson


Anja Sofia Tess Pärson is a Swedish former alpine skier. She is an Olympic gold medalist, seven-time gold medalist at the World Championships, and two-time overall Alpine Skiing World Cup champion. She has won a total of 42 World Cup races.

Biography

Pärson was born in Umeå, Sweden and has Sami roots. Pärson was introduced to ski racing by her sister, Frida, and is now trained by her father, Anders. Her first World Cup race was a giant slalom at the World Cup Finals at Crans-Montana, Switzerland. She qualified for that race as the new junior World Champion but only finished 25th in last place. She won her first World Cup race, a slalom at Mammoth Mountain, California, in December 1998 at age 17, and her first gold medal at St. Anton, Austria, in 2001. She clinched the silver medal in the giant slalom and the bronze medal in the slalom at the 2002 Winter Olympics, and added the gold in slalom plus two more bronze medals in downhill and combined in 2006 Winter Olympics.
Pärson won the Alpine Skiing World Cup overall title in 2004 and 2005. The latter title was won by the smallest margin ever, only 3 points over her fierce rival, Janica Kostelić. Initially a slalom and giant slalom specialist, she won her first super-G and downhill races in March 2005 at San Sicario, Italy, during the pre-Olympic competitions. In total, she has won 42 World Cup races in all five disciplines.
Pärson has won seven gold medals in the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships, in 2001, 2003, 2005 and 2007. These go along with two silver and three bronze medals in other events in 2001, 2005, 2007 and 2011. With her three gold medals in 2007 at Åre, Sweden, she became the first skier in history to win World Championship golds in all five disciplines.
Pärson has earned a total of 17 individual medals in World Championships and Olympics, exceeding the record by Christl Cranz in women's alpine skiing. In men's alpine skiing this achievement has been beaten only by Kjetil André Aamodt, with 20. After two disappointing seasons, she was back to her best over the 2008/09 season, finishing third in the overall cup.
At the 2010 Winter Olympics, while trying to chase down eventual downhill champion Lindsey Vonn of the United States, Pärson lost her balance on the last jump before the finish, resulting in a 60-metre flight and subsequent fall, without however suffering serious injury. She recovered from the fall and one day later won the bronze medal in the combined event.
With a downhill victory in March 2011, she has won at least one race for ten consecutive World Cup seasons, trailing only Alberto Tomba and Vreni Schneider who won races in eleven consecutive World Cup seasons, and equalling the mark of Renate Götschl and Ingemar Stenmark.
On 12 March 2012, Pärson officially announced her retirement, and that her last competition would be the World Cup final in Schladming the coming weekend.
In 2014 she became an expert commentator for Viasat during the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
As of 2015, Pärson works as a sports expert for the broadcaster Sveriges Television,
in addition to running a company with her wife.
Pärson competes in the celebrity dance show Let's Dance 2017 broadcast on TV4.

Personal life

Pärson's athletics club is Fjällvinden, Tärnaby, the same to which skiing legend Ingemar Stenmark and Stig Strand belonged.
Her height is 170 cm. She was awarded the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal in 2006 and in 2007.
After living several years in Monaco during her sports career, she returned to Sweden and has lived in Umeå since 2012.
In June 2012, Pärson announced on the Swedish radio program Sommar that she has been in a relationship with a woman, Filippa Rådin, for the past five years, and that they are expecting a child together. Their son, Elvis, was born on 4 July 2012. On 2 August 2014, Anja Pärson and Filippa married in Umeå, Sweden. Former Swedish Social Democratic Party leader Mona Sahlin officiated at the wedding. In January 2015, the couple announced that Pärson was pregnant with their second child, a boy named Maximilian who was born in May 2015.

World Cup results

Season standings

Season titles

7 titles
SeasonDiscipline
2003Giant slalom
2004Overall
2004Giant slalom
2004Slalom
2005Overall
2006Giant slalom
2009Combined

Individual races

42 wins
SeasonDateLocationDiscipline
19993 Dec 1998 Mammoth Mountain, USASlalom
20029 Dec 2001 Sestriere, ItalySlalom
200229 Dec 2001 Lienz, AustriaSlalom
20025 Jan 2002 Maribor, SloveniaSlalom
20026 Jan 2002 Maribor, SloveniaSlalom
200330 Nov 2002 Aspen, USASlalom
200315 Dec 2002 Sestriere, ItalyKO-slalom
200319 Jan 2003 Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyGiant slalom
200325 Jan 2003 Maribor, SloveniaGiant slalom
200326 Jan 2003 Maribor, SloveniaSlalom
20036 Mar 2003 Åre, SwedenGiant slalom
200428 Nov 2003 Park City, USAGiant slalom
200429 Nov 2003 Park City, USASlalom
200416 Dec 2003 Madonna di Campiglio, ItalySlalom
200428 Dec 2003 Lienz, AustriaSlalom
20045 Jan 2004 Megève, FranceSlalom
200424 Jan 2004 Maribor, SloveniaGiant slalom
200425 Jan 2004 Maribor, SloveniaSlalom
20047 Feb 2004 Zwiesel, GermanyGiant slalom
20048 Feb 2004 Zwiesel, GermanySlalom
200421 Feb 2004 Åre, SwedenGiant slalom
200414 Mar 2004 Sestriere, ItalyGiant slalom
200523 Nov 2004 Sölden, AustriaGiant slalom
200523 Jan 2005 Maribor, SloveniaSlalom
200525 Feb 2005 San Sicario, ItalySuper-G
200526 Feb 2005 San Sicario, ItalyDownhill
200611 Dec 2005 Aspen, USASlalom
200622 Dec 2005 Špindlerův Mlýn, Czech RepublicSlalom
200628 Dec 2005 Lienz, AustriaGiant slalom
200613 Jan 2006 Bad Kleinkirchheim, AustriaDownhill
200627 Jan 2006 Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalySuper-G
20064 Feb 2006 Ofterschwang, GermanyGiant slalom
200611 Mar 2006 Levi, FinlandSlalom
200615 Mar 2006 Åre, SwedenDownhill
200715 Mar 2007 Lenzerheide, SwitzerlandSuper-G
200815 Dec 2007 St. Moritz, SwitzerlandDownhill
200816 Dec 2007 St. Moritz, SwitzerlandSuper-G
20089 Mar 2008 Crans-Montana, SwitzerlandCombined
200919 Dec 2008 St. Moritz, SwitzerlandCombined
200918 Jan 2009 Altenmarkt, AustriaDownhill
201029 Jan 2010 St. Moritz, SwitzerlandCombined
20115 Mar 2011 Tarvisio, ItalyDownhill

World Championship results

Olympic results