Viinberg was born in Nanaimo, British Columbia, located on Vancouver Island. She has an older brother named Simon. Her mother, June de Jong (née Mayhew), is an actress, while her father, Hielke de Jong, who passed away on December 7, 2009, was a retired government employee. Viinberg is of Dutch, English, and Ukrainian ancestry.
At the age of eight, Viinberg and her family moved to Regina, Saskatchewan. She attended Argyle Elementary school and graduated from Sheldon Williams Collegiate in 1997. In school, Viinberg pursued swimming after seeing Calgary Olympian Mark Tewksbury win the 100-metre backstroke at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. After undergoing a growth spurt in her adolescence, her parents introduced her to rowing.
"They helped me discover rowing after seeing all the rowers train every morning on Wascana Lake when they drove to work. I thought I had nothing to lose, and my 6’0 frame seemed to be the ideal body type," said Viinberg.[4]
Olympics
In 2004, Viinberg made her first Olympic team, where she competed at the Athens Olympic Games. In 2008, Viinberg was selected to compete in the women's quad at the Beijing Olympic Games. With one of the crew members suffering a rib fracture,[citation needed] the team achieved an eighth-place finish.
Post-rowing career
Viinberg graduated from the University of Victoria with a BSc in Biology.[5] She enrolled in a post-graduate program in Naturopathic Medicine at the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine.[6] She then started her career in neuropathic medicine.[7]
Personal life
After becoming engaged (on the Great Wall of China) after the 2008 Olympic Games, Viinberg married her husband Alex Viinberg in 2009.[8]
In 2009, Viinberg's father died from leukemia. Eighteen months later, her mother was diagnosed with stage 3C colon cancer. When asked about her mother at the 2012 Olympic Games, Viinberg said, "She battled stage three colon cancer so she could be in the stands to watch me perform my dream. We both achieved our goals."[9]
Key results
2012 – 2nd in the W8+, Olympic Games, London, GBR
2012 – 1st in the W8+, World Cup, Munich, Germany
2012 – 2nd in the W8+, World Cup, Lucerne, Switzerland
2011 – 2nd in the W8+, World Championship, Bled, Slovenia
2011 – 2nd in the W8+, World Cup, Lucerne, Switzerland
2010 – 2nd in the W8+, World Rowing Championships, New Zealand
2008 – 8th in the Olympic quad, Beijing, China
2007 – 5th in the W4x, World Championships, Munich, Germany
2006 – 7th in the W4x, World Championships, Eton, England
2004 – Alternate on Olympic team in Athens, Greece
2003 – 4th in the W4-, World Championships, Milan, Italy
2002 – 2nd in the W4-, World Championships, Seville, Spain
2002 – 6th in the W8+, World Championships, Seville, Spain
2002 – 4th in the W8+, World Cup, Munich, Germany
2001 – 2nd in the W2-, US Nationals, Camden, New Jersey
2000 – 1st in the W8+, Women's Henley, Henley-on-Thames, England
2000 – 2nd in the W8+, Henley Royal Regatta, Henley-on-Thames, England
1997 – 1st in the W4- and 2nd in the W8+, Jeux Canada Games, Brandon, Manitoba