Interviews
Georgia GouldFearless Femme: Pro Mountain Biker Georgia Gould.
Stack, 19 May 2013
Georgia Gould didn't take her first mountain bike ride until she was 19 years old. Nine years later, she was careening through the cross-country mountain bike course at the Beijing Olympic Games for Team USA. Finally, last year, Gould proudly brought home a bronze medal from the London Games.
At age 33, Gould is determined to change mountain biking—specifically the way the sport treats women. With a playful expression, she tells STACK why the sport of cycling needs to catch up with the times.
Follow along as Gould opens up about her greatest fears, her awkward love of gangsta rap, and her strategy for winning the World Cup this year.
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 Rossella CalloviRitorna a sorridere - La Callovi si racconta: lo stop, la paura, il rientro, le ambizioni.
CicloWeb, 5 April 2013
Spesso per descrivere una persona si utilizza un aggettivo vago e dall'aspetto positivo: "solare". In pochi casi però si ha davvero in testa ciò che si intende con quella parolina diventata ormai una sorta di moda, da buttare sul tavolo come fosse un jolly. Ecco, se si vuol comprendere meglio chi incarni la tipica figura della ragazza "simpatica e solare" bisogna prendere la via del Trentino e conoscere Rossella Callovi. Questa giovane della Val di Non vive a Termon di Campodenno, è nata a Cles il 5 aprile 1991 e corre nella Pasta Zara-Cogeas-Manhattan di Maurizio Fabretto. Di Rossella colpisce molto la bellezza interiore, anche se i capelli biondi, gli occhi azzurri ed un sorriso splendido e quasi perenne, meraviglioso come un'opera d'arte del Louvre, potrebbero permettere alla trentina di vestire tranquillamente i panni della miss.
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Georgia GouldFearless Femme: Pro Mountain Biker Georgia Gould.
Stack, 19 May 2013
Georgia Gould didn't take her first mountain bike ride until she was 19 years old. Nine years later, she was careening through the cross-country mountain bike course at the Beijing Olympic Games for Team USA. Finally, last year, Gould proudly brought home a bronze medal from the London Games.
At age 33, Gould is determined to change mountain biking—specifically the way the sport treats women. With a playful expression, she tells STACK why the sport of cycling needs to catch up with the times.
Follow along as Gould opens up about her greatest fears, her awkward love of gangsta rap, and her strategy for winning the World Cup this year.
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