Matteo Rizzo (born 5 September 1998) is an Italian figure skater. He is a three-time European Championship medalist (silver in 2023, bronze in 2019, 2024), a four-time Grand Prix bronze medalist, the 2019 Winter Universiade champion, a two-time Italian national champion (2018 and 2023), and a seven-time silver national medalist (2015-2017, 2019-2022). He has won several ISU Challenger Series medals, including gold at the 2017 CS Warsaw Cup and 2022 CS Budapest Trophy. Rizzo represented Italy at the 2018 and 2022 Winter Olympics.
He is also the 2018 World Junior bronze medalist, the 2017 JGP Italy champion, and the 2014 Italian junior national champion.
In October, Rizzo competed at two JGP events. He placed second in the short program at the JGP Poland in Gdańsk, but his placement in the free skate (tenth) dropped him to sixth overall. Ranked second in the short and first in the free, he won the gold medal at JGP Italy in Egna, setting new personal bests for the short program as well as his overall score.
Returning to the senior level, Rizzo won gold at the 2017 CS Warsaw Cup, having placed first in both segments ahead of Switzerland's Stéphane Walker and Canada's Liam Firus. In December, he won the national title and was selected to represent Italy at the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea. Rizzo competed in both parts of the team event as part of the Italian team, placing fifth in the short program and fourth in the free skate, while Team Italy finished fourth overall. He finished twenty-first in the men's event.
Returning to the junior level one final time, Rizzo competed at the 2018 World Junior Championships and won the bronze medal after placing sixth in both programs. This was the first World Junior medal for an Italian man. At the 2018 World Championships in Milan, Rizzo placed seventeenth.
Competing at the 2019 European Championships, Rizzo debuted a new free skate to a medley of Queen songs. He placed tenth in the short program and third in the free skate, winning the bronze medal overall with a personal best score of 247.08 points and achieving his first podium finish at a senior-level ISU Championship. In his free skate, he successfully landed a quad toe loop for the first time. Rizzo was the first Italian man to win a European medal since Samuel Contesti in 2009.
Rizzo next participated in the 2019 Winter Universiade in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. Introducing the quad toe loop into the short program, he finished second there and then placed first in the free skate to win the gold medal. At the World Championships in Japan, Rizzo placed fifth in the short program with a new personal best score, tenth in the free, and seventh overall. He concluded the season as part of Team Italy at the 2019 World Team Trophy, where he placed fourth among the men competing and Team Italy finished sixth overall.
For his first Grand Prix assignment, Rizzo competed at the 2019 Skate Canada International. In the short program, he placed eighth after underrotating his quadruple toe loop and falling on his combination jump. Despite a number of errors in the free skate, he moved up to finish in sixth place overall. At the 2019 Cup of China, Rizzo placed third in the short program despite falling on his triple Lutz and consequently missing his combination. Fourth in the free skate, he remained in third place overall and won the bronze medal.
After winning the silver medal at the Italian Championships, Rizzo competed at the 2020 European Championships, where he placed seventh in the short program after some minor jump errors. Fifth in the free skate, he rose to fifth place overall but remarked that it had been "a tough season for me because it’s between the Olympics." Rizzo was also assigned to compete at the 2020 World Championships, but these were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
After taking the silver medal at the Italian championships, Rizzo was assigned to compete at the 2021 World Championships in Stockholm, where he placed eleventh. Rizzo and Grassl's placements qualified two berths for Italian men at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. They were both subsequently named to the Italian team for the 2021 World Team Trophy. He announced on April 11 that he had been unable to leave Italy for the event location in Osaka, and therefore withdrew from participation. He subsequently stated that he had withdrawn after a positive COVID-19 test.
On the Grand Prix, Rizzo's first assignment was the 2021 NHK Trophy, where he placed sixth in the short program. He was third in the free skate, rising to fifth place overall despite popping one of his two planned quad jumps. Rizzo expressed satisfaction at receiving a score over 170 points in the free segment with only one quad jump. At the 2021 Rostelecom Cup, he was ninth in the short program and rose to fifth place again after a second-place free skate.
After winning a fourth consecutive silver medal at the Italian championships, Rizzo was named to the Italian Olympic team. He was first forced to withdraw from the 2022 European Championships due to equipment issues. Competing in Beijing, Rizzo placed thirteenth in the short program of the Olympic men's event. Seventeenth in the free skate, he finished sixteenth overall.
Rizzo concluded his season at the 2022 World Championships. He finished tenth overall.
After winning his second national title, Rizzo competed at the 2023 European Championships, finishing second in the short program, despite underrotating his attempted quad loop. Rizzo said the experience was difficult, as for him the short program was "always like a big wall that I need to crush." In the free skate, he made an error on his opening quad toe loop attempt, but went on to land the quad loop and six triple jumps cleanly, winning a small gold medal for the free skate. He remained in second place overall, winning the silver medal. He reflected that "there were mistakes, but overall I was happy." He was the second Italian man to win multiple European medals, after Carlo Fassi.
Rizzo finished ninth at the 2023 World Championships. He then joined Team Italy for the 2023 World Team Trophy, finishing eighth in the short program despite only performing a quad-double combination and underrotating his attempted quad loop. In the free skate, he scored a new personal best of 187.35, with his only error being a turning out of a triple Axel. He finished second in the free skate, only fractions of a point behind Korea's Cha Jun-hwan. Team Italy finished in fourth place.
After withdrawing from both the 2023 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb and the Italian Championships, Rizzo announced that he required hip surgery that would cause him to miss the 2024 World Championships in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, but that he would compete at the 2024 European Championships in Kaunas, Lithuania. Prior to those championships, Rizzo opted to change his short program from "Dernière danse" to "Two Men in Love," a shortened version of the free program he used for the 2022 Winter Olympics. In Kaunas, he placed sixth in the short program after doubling a planned quad. A second-place free skate with only one mistake, a fall on a triple Axel, lifted him to third overall, and he claimed his third European medal.
Rizzo's surgery was performed in late January.
On February 1, 2025, Rizzo placed fourth in the short program with a new season's best of 85.68 points at 2025 Europeans. After the short program, he said: "I also want to express my deep condolences to everyone involved in the plane crash and to U.S. Figure Skating. It’s incredibly horrible news. I’ve been following the updates all day, and my heart breaks for my friends in the U.S. I want to send them all my best wishes.” He placed sixth in the free skate and fifth overall. “Honestly, I feel pretty proud of what I’ve done,” said Rizzo after the free skate. “This season has definitely been a roller coaster with a lot of ups and downs. Not everything went to plan today. There were some mistakes, but overall, a top-five finish after last year is something I’m really proud of, and I feel good about it.”
2018–2019 season
2019–2020 season
2020–2021 season
2021–2022 season
2022–2023 season
2023–2024 season
2024–2025 season
2025–2026 season
Programs
Competitive highlights
Detailed results
Senior level
Junior level
External links
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