Varsity Cheer Partners With Invisalign Teen

9.15.11

Varsity Cheer Partners With Invisalign Teen

Invisalign Teen Joins Varsity to Sponsor “Grin It to Win It” Competition Activities

What is Grin It to Win It?

Invisalign Teen is a proud sponsor of Varsity Cheer and Dance competitions across the country.  Everyone knows that one of the keys to a successful performance is exuding personality and confidence.  Your smile and expression are as important as hitting each move.  And behind every good performance are the hard work, encouragement and support that keeps you going along the way.

“Grin It to Win It” is a chance to be recognized for always wearing your best smile and demonstrating the positive attitude, confidence and character to go with it. (read more)

Stretching Out: The True Legend of Paul Hamm

9.14.11

Stretching Out: The True Legend of Paul Hamm

Dwight Normile, International Gymnast Magazine

Like many in the sport, I was saddened by the Paul Hamm incident that led to his termination as an assistant coach at Ohio State. It only takes one slip-up in the Internet age, especially when video is involved. So Hamm, whose gymnastics brilliance had always shone brighter because of his humility, was humbled even further.

While I don’t condone his actions, I certainly will not judge him on one night of his life. As a writer, I have covered him since he and his twin, Morgan, dominated the age-group scene. When he showed up at the 2002 U.S. championships in Cleveland, he ran off with the first of three consecutive senior national titles.

At the 2003 Worlds in Anaheim, Hamm performed one of the best routines I’ve ever seen under the circumstances. After China’s Yang Wei had already finished his all-around performance with a solid floor routine, Hamm needed to nail the high bar set that had betrayed him more often than not in the past. That’s what I remember most. He went up and hit the best routine of his life, stuck his dismount, and became the first American male to win a world all-around gold.

“It was just an awesome feeling,” Hamm said at the time. “I was finished, and I finally beat high bar.”

A year later, at the Athens Olympics, he again completed his all-around with a clutch high bar routine. And even though his Olympic all-around title was clouded in controversy because of a scoring error, he carried on as best he could. He did nothing wrong, yet was robbed of the elation that usually comes with being Olympic champion. At his athletic peak, he disappeared from the sport after that.

Hamm, who turns 29 Sept. 24, was the most successful U.S. male gymnast ever, but I’ll always appreciate his demeanor off the apparatus. No matter the situation, he answered questions honestly, respectfully and thoughtfully. He was never too busy, or too full of himself. That’s what impressed me more than anything.

So when I think of Hamm, I will consider the total picture, not just one unfortunate evening. Because all we really learned from his incident with the police is that nobody is perfect. And nobody ever will be.

Paul Hamm was great for gymnastics. He was pivotal to the resurrection of a U.S. men’s program that had nose-dived after its 1984 Olympic team victory. And if his comeback stalls and he never returns to the sport, that’s how I will remember him. (read more)

Shawn Johnson Joins Iowa’s Healthiest State Initiative

9.14.11

Shawn Johnson Joins Iowa’s Healthiest State Initiative

Golden girl Shawn Johnson joins Iowa’s Healthiest State Initiative with two new Public Service Announcements:

Iowa celebrities of all ages — both in the state and across the country — are lending their faces and voices to a series of television and radio public service announcements that will encourage Iowans to participate in a Start Somewhere Walk on Friday, October 7, at noon.

(read more)

Support for Paul Hamm

9.10.11

Support for Paul Hamm

“The trials and adversities of life will squeeze you under pressure. What ever is rooted inside of your soul, will be released in these times.”
-Arthur J Robinson Jr.

(read more)

Olympic Champ Johnson Getting Her Groove Back

8.19.11

Olympic Champ Johnson Getting Her Groove Back

Sports Illustrated (AP)

Shawn Johnson is starting to look a little retro.
Retro as in 2007 and 2008.

Three weeks after looking rusty at a qualifier, her first competition since winning four medals at the Beijing Olympics, Johnson showed glimpses of her old self Thursday night at the U.S. gymnastics championships. She posted the third-highest score of the night on balance beam, and was solid on vault and uneven bars.

Best of all, she oozed the kind of confidence that she had when she and Nastia Liukin were running roughshod on the rest of the world.

“I feel like I’m starting to feel how to calm myself,” said Johnson, who also won the world title in 2007. “It was more just me and the competition instead of worrying about what everyone was thinking. I enjoyed it more this time.”

So much so that she even joked with coach Liang Chow, offering to throw in a floor routine. Johnson is only doing three events here, not doing floor to protect her surgically repaired knee.

“I did not care too much on her scores,” Chow said. “But her confidence and performance was way better than the first meet. I’m very pleased with that.” (read more)