USA Gymnastics names 2009 Hall of Fame inductees
02/03/2009
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 3, 2009 — 2004 Olympic all-around champion
Carly Patterson of Allen, Texas (women), 2004 Olympian Mary Sanders
of Toronto, Ont. (rhythmic gymnastics), 2000 Olympian Steve McCain
of Los Angeles (men) and 1996 Olympian John Macready of Knoxville,
Tenn. (men), are among the 2009 class of inductees for the USA
Gymnastics Hall of Fame that USA Gymnastics announced today. The
class also includes: two-time world acrobatic gymnastics champions
Shenea Booth and Arthur Davis of San Diego, Calif.; trampoline and
tumbling coach and judge Pat Wilson Henderson of Bloomington, Minn.,
lifetime achievement; Temple University head coach Fred Turoff of
Philadelphia, coach; trampolinist James Yongue of Breaux Bridge,
La.; and the 1999 Gold- Medal Men’s Double Mini-trampoline World
Championships Team.
“We are proud to recognize the 2009 inductees for their
accomplishments and contributions to gymnastics,” said Steve Penny,
president of USA Gymnastics. “The rich history of USA Gymnastics is
reflected by those inducted into this prestigious group.
Congratulations to each and every one of our honorees.”
The members of the 1999 U.S. Men’s Double Mini-trampoline World
Championships Team were: Karl Heger of Rockford, Ill.; Mark Griffith
of Orlando, Fla.; Byron Smith of Lubbock, Texas; and Ryan Weston of
Orlando. Brief biographies of all of the inductees are included
below.
The 2009 USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame luncheon and induction
ceremony is scheduled for Friday, Aug. 14, as part of the USA
Gymnastics National Congress and Trade Show in Dallas, which is held
in conjunction with the 2009 Visa Championships. Ticket and other
information on the luncheon and induction ceremony will be available
at www.usa-gymnastics.org.
The USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame inducted its first class in 1959.
Based in Indianapolis, USA Gymnastics is the national governing body
for gymnastics in the United States. Its mission is to encourage
participation and the pursuit of excellence in the sport. Its
disciplines include men's and women's artistic gymnastics, rhythmic
gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, and acrobatic gymnastics.
2009 USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame inductees
1999 U.S. World Championships Team for men’s double
mini-trampoline. The U.S. World Championships Team for men’s
double mini-trampoline claimed the double-mini team world title at
the 1999 World Championships in Sun City, South Africa. The members
of the team were: Karl Heger of Rockford, Ill.; Mark Griffith of
Orlando; Byron Smith of Lubbock, Texas; and Ryan Weston of Orlando.
Heger, who now works for the FBI, was inducted into the USA
Gymnastics Hall of Fame in 2007 as an individual member. He was a
member of the U.S. Trampoline Team for 22 years and won 18 national
titles. He competed in 11 World Championships, winning team gold
medals in double mini-trampoline in 1988 and 1999, and he also won
synchronized trampoline at the 1991 World Games. Griffith is the
2000 U.S. trampoline champion and earned U.S. titles in double
mini-trampoline in 1996 and 1999. In addition to his team gold medal
at the 1999 World Championships, Griffith finished seventh in double
mini. Smith, now a coach at Air Extreme in Lubbock, is a two-time
U.S. synchronized trampoline champion (1998 and 2000). Weston, the
2000 U.S. Olympic Team alternate, is an eight-time U.S. trampoline
champion (1996-99, 2001-04) and a four-time U.S. synchronized
trampoline champion (1999, 2003-05). Griffith and Weston are both
currently performing in a Cirque du Soleil show in Orlando.
| Shenea Booth and Arthur Davis,
acrobatic gymnastics. Davis and Booth became the first
U.S. acrobatic gymnastics world champions in the mixed
pairs' event at the 2002 World Championships, and then
became the first U.S. acro athletes to repeat as world
champions when they defended their title in 2004. They also
were three-time U.S. champions (2002-04) and acrobatic
gymnastics’ Athletes of the Year in 2003-04. The duo was
awarded the Glen Sundby Award for Outstanding Pair/Group
Performance in 2003-04 and earned awards for the Most
Difficult Skill in 2002 and 2004. Booth was on the national
team for seven years, and Davis was on the national squad
for nine years. Since retiring from competitive gymnastics,
the twosome is performing as “Realis,” an acrobatic troupe
part of Aerial Experience Productions. They made it to the
final round of the hit show, “America’s Got Talent,” in
2006. Booth and Davis have also demonstrated their acrobatic
talents at shows in the United States and around the world.
Davis is co-creator and choreographer of "Realis." Both live
in San Diego, Calif. |
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| John Macready, men’s gymnastics.
Macready, who began in gymnastics when he was just five
years old, was a 1996 Olympian and a member of the 1995 and
1997 World Championship Teams. He was the youngest member of
the 1996 U.S. Men's Olympic Gymnastics' Team, which placed
fifth for the USA’s best finish since 1984. Macready was
third in the all-around at the 1996 U.S. Olympic Trials and
1996 Coca-Cola National Championships, where he was also
second on rings and third on both vault and high bar. Since
retiring from competitive gymnastics in 2000, Macready is a
co-owner of Flipfest, a gymnastics camp in Knoxville, Tenn.,
as well as a motivational speaker and works as the in-house
emcee at USA Gymnastics premier events. He is married and
has two children. |
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| Steve McCain, men’s gymnastics.
McCain was a member of the men’s 2000 U.S. Olympic Team and
was an alternate on the 2004 Olympic squad. He was a member
of the U.S. men’s team that won the team silver medal at the
2001 World Championships, as well as the squads for the
1994, 1996 and 1999 World Championships. In addition to the
team silver medal, he finished fourth in the floor exercise
and was an all-around finalist at the 2001 World
Championships. The men’s team finished fifth at the 2000
Olympic Games and the 1999 World Championships. McCain was
third on pommel horse at the 2004 U.S. Visa Championships;
third on high bar at the 2003 U.S. Championships; third in
the all-around and parallel bars (tie) at the 2001 U.S.
Championships; and fourth in the all-around at the 2000 John
Hancock U.S. Gymnastics Championships and the 2000 U.S.
Olympic Trials. A native of Houston, McCain currently lives
in Los Angeles. A graduate of UCLA, McCain maintains a
gymnastics website, "American Gymnast," with former national
team member Jay Thornton. |
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| Carly Patterson, women’s gymnastics.
In 2004, Patterson became the first U.S. woman to win the
Olympic all-around gold medal since Mary Lou Retton in 1984.
She also claimed team and balance beam silver medals at the
2004 Olympic Games. At the 2003 World Championships,
Patterson earned gold and silver medals, respectively, in
the team and all-around events. She won U.S. titles in the
all-around (tie) and floor exercise in 2004, and she was the
2002 U.S. junior all-around champion. Among the awards
Patterson received in 2004 are: USA Gymnastics Co-Athlete of
the Year, U.S. Olympic Committee SportsWoman of the Year and
U.S. Sports Academy Female Athlete of the Year. In 2003,
Patterson and her World Championships teammates were named
the USOC’s Team of the Year. Patterson trained at WOGA in
Plano, Texas, and was a member of the junior national team
from 2000-03 and the senior national team from 2004-05.
Patterson currently lives in Allen, Texas, and is pursuing a
singing career. In 2006, she appeared on FOX’s television
show Celebrity Duets. Her second single will be released in
February 2009 and her CD will debut in April 2009. |
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| Mary Sanders, rhythmic gymnastics.
Sanders, who grew up in Toronto, Ont., represented the USA
in the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, where she
finished 15th in the all-around. In 2004, she won the
all-around and all four individual event titles at the
Pacific Alliance Championships and finished ninth in the
all-around at the Athens Olympic Test Event. Sanders also
won the all-around at the 2004 U.S. Olympic Team Trials. In
2003, she advanced to the finals in the all-around (10th),
hoop (7th) and clubs (7th) at the World Championships.
Earlier that year, Sanders was the all-around gold medalist
at the Pan American Games. Sanders was the U.S. all-around
champion from 2002-04. Her U.S. individual event titles
were: ball and hoop, 2002-04; clubs, 2002-03; ribbon, 2003;
and rope, 2002. She graduated from York Mills Collegiate
Institute in May 2002. She trained at Ritmika and was
coached by Mimi Masleva. A dual citizen of the United States
and Canada, she competed for Canada from 2001-02. After
retiring from competitive gymnastics, Sanders worked for
Cirque du Soleil. |
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| Fred Turoff, men’s gymnastics coach.
Turoff graduated from Temple University in 1969 and went on
to a coaching career that has spanned more than three
decades. Turoff has coached 16 EIGL/ECAC title teams. He
served as a member of the coaching staff at many
international events, including the 1979 World
Championships, 1991 World University Games and Pan American
Games, 1992 Olympic Games, 1994 World Championships, and the
1996 Pacific Alliance Championships. His numerous awards,
honors and distinctions for his service include the Frank
Cumiskey Award, Special Service Award (NACGC), the Honor
Coach Award, and NCAA Eastern Region Coach of the Year (nine
times). He is a former chair of the Hall of Fame Selection
Committee and is a past president of the USECA for men’s
gymnastics. In addition to coaching, Turoff is an author and
a nationally and internationally certified judge. He
completed his Master of Education in biomechanics in August
1991. He is married with one child. |
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James “Jimmy” Yongue, trampoline. Yongue, who lives in
Breaux Bridge, La., won the bronze medal in synchronized trampoline
at the 1968 World Championships and was the North American champion
in 1964-65. He was the AAU national champion in 1965 and was the
silver medalist in 1964 and 1967-69. Despite two interruptions in
his career due to injuries, he competed in at least 13 international
competitions, including a sixth-place finish at the 1965 World
Championships. Yongue also competed in the 1967 and 1968 World
Championships, where he placed eighth and 10th, respectively. At the
AAU Nationals, he also finished third in trampoline in 1966 and in
synchronized trampoline in 1969. Yongue attended the University of
Southwest Louisiana from 1966- 70. After retiring from competition,
he went on to coach for many years, including the U.S. team at the
1972 World Championships and for three other international events.
He also coached several national AAU champions, including Stuart
Ransom, Chris Eilerson, Charlie Watkins, Jim Cartledge, Ann Thompson
and Mason Koffman. He currently coaches at Acadiana Gymnastics.
Lifetime Achievement
Pat Wilson Henderson, Lifetime Achievement (trampoline and
tumbling coach and Brevet judge). A trampoline and tumbling
judge from 1971 through the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece,
Henderson has represented the USA in approximately 30 countries as a
coach, judge and teacher. She is a three-time recipient of the
Outstanding Coach of the Year award and Women in Sport award.
Henderson opened her first gymnastics facility in 1976 in Tulsa,
Okla., and opened Minnesota Twisters in 1984. From 1974 to present,
she has had a national qualifier every year, and many of her
trampolinists were members of the national team and earned
individual titles. Henderson has also produced international
competitors – a world age-group medalist, world team members, one
world team bronze medalist, two world team gold medalists, and the
2004 Olympic Team alternate. She has been a member of the USA
coaching staff, as well as a U.S. World Championships team coach.
From 2001-04 Henderson was a member of the FIG Trampoline Technical
Committee and received the FIG Silver Recognition in 2005 for her
dedication and service. Henderson received her degree from
Metropolitan State University in 1978. The mother of two resides in
Bloomington, Minn.