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・ Carlo Peretti
・ Carlo Peroni
・ Carlo Peroni (conductor)
・ Carlo Perosi
・ Carlo Perrier
・ Carlo Perrone
・ Carlo Pesenti
・ Carlo Peter Caputo
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・ Carlo Petrini (footballer)
・ Carlo Petrini (scientist)
・ Carlo Pezzati
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・ Carlo Piaggia
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Carlo Piccio
・ Carlo Pietzner
・ Carlo Pinsoglio
・ Carlo Pio di Savoia
・ Carlo Pisacane
・ Carlo Pisacane (actor)
・ Carlo Pittara
・ Carlo Pizzi
・ Carlo Poerio
・ Carlo Poggioli
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・ Carlo Ponti
・ Carlo Ponti (conductor)


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Carlo Piccio : ウィキペディア英語版
Carlo Piccio

Juan Carlos Antonio Piccio (born July 6, 1981) is a Filipino former swimmer, who specialized in long-distance freestyle and in individual medley events. He won a total of three medals, two silvers and one bronze, at the Southeast Asian Games (1999 and 2001), and later represented the Philippines at the 2000 Summer Olympics. He also holds numerous age group titles, including seven golds from the Philippine National Games, and more than five Filipino records in long-distance freestyle (400 and 1500 m) and in individual medley (400 m) during his sporting career. While residing in the United States, Piccio played for the Davie Nadadores Club in Mission Viejo, California, and later for the Cincinnati Bearcats swimming and diving team at the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he became the team's rookie of the year (2002).
==Early years==
Piccio was born in Bacolod City, Negros Occidental, the son of Ernesto Piccio and Gina Tanpinco, and the eldest of three siblings in the family. His father Ernesto worked as a registered sugar planter, while his mother Gina owned a popular Bacolod Business Inn. His sister Patricia graduated with a bachelor's degree in organizational communication at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio, and later worked in Los Angeles. Piccio's youngest sister Mia, played for the Florida Gators golf team, and became a certified golfer.
Piccio started his sporting career at the age of nine under his father's urgency and desire. In 1995, he made his competitive debut at the Philippine National Games ((タガログ語:Palarong Pambansa)) in Manila, winning a total of seven golds. Three years later, he picked up four gold medals in the same tournament, and registered the same number of meet records, three of which remained unbroken until the present.
After competing in the National Games, Piccio attended the University of St. La Salle in Bacolod City, but he decided to stop schooling for a year because of his long preparation for international tournaments, particularly the Olympic Games. In late 1998, Piccio left the Philippines to further continue his education and training in the United States. During his two-year visit, he lived with his aunt in Tustin, California, and later transferred to his foster father Brian Goodell, a 1976 Olympic champion in long-distance freestyle double (both 400 and 1500 m), in Mission Viejo. Piccio studied in his junior and senior season at the Mission Viejo High School, where he played for the Davie Nadadores Club, along with two other world-elite swimmers Juan Veloz of Mexico and Torwai Sethsothorn of Thailand.

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