eternal daughter of winter, Tessa Worley bows out

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Tessa Worley, one of the greatest winners in French skiing, decided to end her career, at the age of 33, after the giant finals of the Alpine Skiing World Cup in Soldeu (Andorra), announced on Sunday the French Ski Federation (FFS).

Raised in a permanent winter, the French skier Tessa Worley, 33, put an end, on Sunday March 19, in Soldeu (Andorra), to an exceptional career marked by two world champion titles (2013 and 2017), leaving a void in the France team.


About thirty years ago, a Frenchwoman and an Australian created the ski lifts and the ski school of the resort where they live six months a year, during the winter, with their two children, including a very young blonde. good at sliding. It was on the other side of the world, in Mount Lyford, a tiny village lost in New Zealand, a two-hour drive from Christchurch and the first hospital.

“Mount Lyford was really an adventure,” said Tessa Worley, smiling. “The station was in the middle of nowhere, very wild. And we didn’t even live in the village but in a completely isolated house, after half an hour of 4X4 ​​on stony roads. I appreciated this life lost in nature, going up to the station, going skiing, going to the small school and its three classes.”

With her family, Tessa, born on October 4, 1989 in Annemasse, crosses the globe every six months between New Zealand and Haute-Savoie, to live in an endless winter. “This education forged my character, believes Tessa Worley. Traveling, adapting, we moved a whole mess every six months. Having different landmarks, feeling good in several places, I’m comfortable with that.”

More than 17 years on the circuit

Without knowing it, the young girl is preparing for her future on the Alpine Skiing World Cup circuit, her suitcase always ready, between two hotels, in the car or in the halls of an airport.

Coming out of early childhood, Tessa Worley follows her mother and settles permanently in France. She joined the Federation and the high level at 15, in Albertville. With her friends Taïna Barioz, Anémone Marmottan, later Nastasia Noens, she formed a happy band.

The champion quickly hatched in the World Cup, won for the first time in Aspen (United States) in November 2008, at only 19 years old, and settled among the best, a circle she never left, with 16 victories on the circuit in addition to his two world titles.

At 33, her career is an exception: no other skier has had her longevity, more than 17 years on the world circuit, while the careers of most champions end early.

At the crossroads of generations, Tessa Worley skied against legends Tina Maze, Lindsey Vonn and Anna Fenninger before being opposed for years to Viktoria Rebensburg and Lara Gut-Behrami, until the best skier in history Mikaela Shiffrin.

End of an era

After her debut with a bang, her trajectory was meteoric until December 2013, a few months after her first world title, when a serious right knee injury in Courchevel deprived her of the Sochi Olympics the following year.

Other injuries, less serious, have punctuated her career, but the blue-eyed blonde has come back from each difficulty with a rage to win that is difficult to detect in the sweetness of her public appearances.

For several seasons, Tessa Worley was almost the only French skier to play for victories regularly, a pressure that she has always perfectly assumed, while her teammates Coralie Frasse-Sombet and Nastasia Noens also stop, in addition to saying goodbye to the men of another figure, Johan Clarey.

At the time of leaving, the question of his succession arises, while a new generation gently points the tip of its spatulas, notably led by Marie Lamure.

During all those frantic years on the icy slopes, Tessa Worley never saw Mount Lyford again. “After my career, I’ll go back, that’s for sure,” she promised AFP in 2021. It’s time to rediscover her roots, deeply rooted in the snow.

With AFP

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