Denise Biellmann | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Biellmann (center) in November 1980
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Personal information | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Country represented | Switzerland | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Born |
Zurich, Switzerland |
11 December 1962 ||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.60 m (5 ft 3 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Coach | Heidi Biellmann (mother) |
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Retired | 1981 (age 18) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Denise Biellmann (born 11 December 1962) is a Swiss professional figure skater. She was the European and World Champion in 1981 and won the Swiss Championships three times.
Born in Zurich, Biellmann won her first international championship in Belgium at age 8; and, at age 11, she won the Swiss Junior Figure Skating Championships. At age 14, she competed at the 1977 European Championships and placed second in the Free Skate portion of the competition.
At the age of 15, she was the first female skater to land the triple lutz in competition, which she performed for the first time at the 1978 European Championships. At the same event, she became the first woman to receive a 6.0 in Technical Merit, receiving the score from British judge Pauline Borrajo. She was 12th in Figures, first in the Free Skate, and finished fourth over all.
At the 1980 Winter Olympics, she performed poorly in Compulsory Figures; but she won the Free Skate and placed fourth over all.
The Biellmann spin was named after her; she popularized the spin but did not invent it. It was present in skating at least since the 1965 European Championships when Tamara Moskvina performed it. It remains the only figure skating spin to be officially named after a person in ISU regulations. Nevertheless, by the end of her ISU career, the spin was causing her back pain.
Biellmann retired from amateur competition at age 18, shortly after her win at the 1981 World Championships.