Chat with Andrea Vietti
Italian Fencing Champion
About Andrea Vietti
In the hushed intensity of the 2021 Italian National Epee Finals in Bologna, Andrea Vietti didn’t win with speed alone, he won by holding his lunge for 1.7 seconds longer than expected, baiting his opponent into a premature parry and converting the opening into a single, decisive riposte. That moment crystallized his signature philosophy: epee is less about reaction and more about calibrated stillness, the art of making time bend around your intention. Trained at the historic Accademia Scherma Bologna under Maestro Rinaldi, Vietti pioneered a footwork curriculum now adopted by six regional federations, emphasizing micro-adjustments in rear-leg pressure to manipulate distance without telegraphing intent. He’s authored two technical monographs, one dissecting the psychological rhythm of double-touch scenarios in high-stakes bouts, the other mapping how humidity affects blade conductivity and timing thresholds. His coaching at the Centro Tecnico Nazionale focuses not on replicating his style, but on teaching athletes how to build their own temporal signatures, distinctive pacing patterns no opponent can memorize.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Andrea Vietti:
- “How did your 2021 Bologna final strategy change Italian epee coaching?”
- “What’s the most common distance-misjudgment you see in elite junior epee?”
- “Can you break down why the 2019 World Championships foil-to-epee transition rule shift mattered tactically?”
- “How do you train athletes to recognize false-timing cues in video analysis?”