Italy is mourning the loss of 15-year-old figure-skating talent Matilda Ferrari, who died in a traffic accident while on her way to school. She was struck by a cement truck in Giustino, a town in Trentino in the Italian Alps, as she crossed the road to catch her morning bus. Emergency responders arrived quickly, but she succumbed to her injuries at the scene. Early findings indicate the truck driver had a green light when Matilda stepped into the roadway.
Local reports say Matilda had been walking with two friends and was headed to Tione for classes, as she did every school day. The stretch where the crash occurred is a major, busy artery for the region and has been the site of previous close calls, renewing concern about the safety of students’ daily routes.
“It is a terrible tragedy that leaves us speechless. You can’t go to school in the morning and die like this,” said Giustino’s mayor, Manuel Cosi. “We are devastated.” His words captured the shock felt throughout the small community.
Matilda was widely regarded as a rising star on the ice. A member of Sporting Ghiaccio Art Pinzolo, she trained almost every day and had recently pushed through a knee injury to make striking progress. At the end of 2024 she placed third in the Italian Cup final, a result that hinted at a bright future. After the news broke, her club shared a black-and-white photo and wrote that they couldn’t imagine the rink without her.
Tributes poured in on social media from across Italy and beyond. “What a terrible death, poor girl, may she rest in peace,” one message read. Another lamented the dangers on the roads: “Too many crazy people.”
Police have opened an investigation into the circumstances of the crash, examining whether mechanical issues or limited visibility played a role. What is already clear is that the location has long been considered risky, and the incident has reignited debate over how to better protect students commuting to school.
Friends, teachers, and neighbors remember Matilda as bright, disciplined, and full of dreams. Her death leaves a profound void—not only in Italian figure skating, but in the lives of everyone who knew her. For many, the tragedy is a painful reminder of how an ordinary morning ritual can turn catastrophic in seconds. As the mayor said, Giustino has “lost a star.”