Hall of Fame

Connie Carpenter-Phinney

Speedskating, Cycling

Olympian in Sapporo 1972 Olympic Winter Games, Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games

Born:
February 26, 1957
Birthplace:
Madison, Wisconsin
College:
University of California, Berkeley
University of Colorado

hall of fame

Connie Carpenter-Phinney

Speedskating, Cycling

Olympian in Sapporo 1972 Olympic Winter Games, Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games

Born:
February 26, 1957
Birthplace:
Madison, Wisconsin
College:
University of California, Berkeley
University of Colorado
After an ankle injury ended her speedskating career, Connie Carpenter-Phinney took up cycling and won a gold medal in the Olympic women’s cycling debut event at the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games.
SHARE

As a youngster growing up in Wisconsin, Connie Carpenter would often cross the street to a flooded playground and go ice skating.

“Girls didn’t have a lot of sporting opportunities and I was always extremely active,” she said. “I skated every night on that rink.” 

It seemed natural, at the Sapporo 1972 Olympic Winter Games, when Carpenter made her Olympic debut as a 14-year-old speedskater, placing seventh in the 1,500-meter race.

Following the Olympics, Carpenter returned to school and continued training, thinking that her skating career was just getting started. But an ankle injury prevented her from going out for the U.S. team that would head to the Innsbruck 1976 Olympic Winter Games.

“I didn’t make the team and I was devastated,” she said.

Instead, as part of her recovery, Carpenter took up competitive cycling. She was a natural, eventually winning 12 national championships.

After high school, Carpenter matriculated to the University of California, Berkeley, where her incredible athletic ability was on display – though in a much different venue. Carpenter joined the Golden Bears’ crew team and won a national collegiate championship. Back on the bike, Carpenter prepared for the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games and the first-ever women’s cycling Olympic event, a 79.2-kilometer road race. Carpenter-Phinney (she married fellow Olympian cyclist Davis Phinney in 1983) edged teammate Rebecca Twigg at the finish line by less than half a wheel length to cap her incredible career with a gold medal.

MEDAL RESULTS
1984Los AngelesRoad raceGold

TICKETS NOW

ON SALE

DISCOUNTS FOR MILITARY, FIRST RESPONDERS, SENIORS, GROUPS AND MORE!​
RELATED GALLERY
connect with us
NEXT UP
One of the best swimmers who has ever competed for Team USA, Natalie Coughlin won 12 medals over the course of three Olympic Games (2004, 2008, 2012).
David Kiley competed at five Paralympic Games in wheelchair basketball, track and field, and alpine skiing. He won a total of 13 Paralympic medals.
Michelle Kwan sits as the most decorated figure skater – male or female – in the United States, having won 43 championships.
Swimmer Trischa Zorn-Hudson is the most successful athlete in the history of the Paralympic Games, having won 55 medals, including 41 gold medals, over seven Paralympics.
Skip to content