May
10, 2007
USA Gymnastics
names 2007 Hall of Fame inductees
By KAREN SALADYGA
USA Gymnastics
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 9, 2007—USA
Gymnastics today announced the 2007 class of inductees
for the USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame: Olympians Kevin
Davis of Tyrone, Ga., Dr. Gene Whelan of West Richland,
Wash., and Valerie Zimring-Schneiderman of Ridgefield,
Conn.; men’s artistic coach Sadao Hamada of
Stanford, Calif.; rhythmic coach Irina Vdovets of
Chicago; two-time double mini-trampoline team world
champion Karl Heger of Rockford, Ill.; and two-time
double mini-trampoline world champion Leigh Hennessy
of Van Nuys, Calif. Dr. Joseph C. Schabacker is
the 2007 Lifetime Achievement recipient in recognition
of his contributions to acrobatic gymnastics.
“Congratulations to the members of the
2007 class who have helped gymnastics become the
sport it is today,” said Steve Penny, president
of USA Gymnastics. “We are proud to recognize
their efforts through induction in the Hall of
Fame.”
The 2007 USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame luncheon
and induction ceremony are scheduled for Friday,
Aug. 17, at 11 a.m. at the San Jose (Calif.) Marriott
Hotel. Tickets are $40 per person. For more information,
log on to www.usa-gymnastics.org.
2007 USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame inductees
Kevin Davis, a member of the U.S. Men’s
National Team from 1986-90, competed in the 1988
Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea. At the University
of Nebraska, where he was coached by Francis Allen
and Jim Howard, he earned seven NCAA All-America
honors and was a member of the team that won the
1988 NCAA Championships. Davis also was a member
of the 1987 Pan American Games and the 1989 Word
Championships teams. He won the pommel horse at
the 1988 American Cup and was an all-around finalist
at the 1989 World Championships. Davis graduated
from Nebraska with a bachelor’s degree in
speech communication and is employed by Phizer
Pharmaceuticals. He currently resides in Tyrone,
Ga., with his wife, Elizabeth, and three daughters,
Hailey, Madison and Kinsey.
Sadao Hamada coached the Stanford men’s
gymnastics team to three NCAA championships (1992-93,
1995) in his 30 years at the university. In 1989,
he was named USA Gymnastics Coach of the Year.
He also earned other Coach of the Year awards
multiple times, including three from the NCAA,
six conference and two regional. Hamada coached
Olympians Steve Hug (1972) and Jair Lynch (1992,
parallel bars silver medalist in 1996), as well
as nine individual NCAA champions. Hamada graduated
from Japan’s Nippon College of Health and
Physical Education in 1969 and earned a master’s
degree from Kent State University. He currently
resides in Stanford, Calif.
Karl Heger was a member of the U.S. Trampoline
Team for 22 years and won 18 national titles.
He competed in 11 World Championships, winning
gold medals in double mini-trampoline in 1988
and 1999, and he also won synchronized trampoline
at the 1991 World Games. He served in Operation
Desert Storm, where he was awarded the Bronze
Star, and he currently works for the FBI. Heger
lives in Rockford, Ill., with his two sons, Kevin
(17) and KJ (13). Both Kevin and KJ have competed
at the World Age Group Games in trampoline and
are coached by their mother, Ute Heger, who was
a member of the German national trampoline team.
Leigh Hennessy is a two-time double mini-trampoline
world champion (1976, 1978) and won a silver medal
in synchronized trampoline at the 1976 World Championships.
She was the first athlete, male or female, to
win all three trampoline events (individual, synchronized
and double mini) at the national championships.
Hennessy was honored by the International Trampoline
Federation in 1982 for her contribution to the
sport of trampoline. From 1978-92, she was listed
in the Guinness Book of World Records with the
highest double mini-trampoline score in international
competition. Hennessy graduated summa cum laude
from the University of Southwestern Louisiana
with a bachelor’s degree in speech and audiology
in 1980, and earned her master’s degree
with honors in communication two years later.
She lives in Van Nuys, Calif., and is a movie
stuntwoman and a former writer for Glenn Sundby
Publications.
Irina Vdovets, the only two-time U.S. Olympic
rhythmic gymnastics coach (1988, 1992), was the
coach for Olympians Michele Berube, Jenifer Lovell
and Diane Simpson-Bundy. She coached the U.S.
World Championships Team four times (1985, 1987,
1989 and 1991) and was a U.S. national team coach
from 1985-95. In 1986-87, Vdovets was honored
as the U.S. Rhythmic Coach of the Year. Vdovets
currently lives in Chicago and is the program
director at Illinois Rhythmics.
Dr. Gene Whelan, a member of the 1976 U.S. Olympic
Team, was a member of the men’s team that
won the gold medal at the 1975 Pan American Games.
He first competed for the University of Massachusetts
and then for Penn State University, where he earned
a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering
in 1977. While at Penn State, Whelan earned All-America
honors in 1974 and 1976 and won the 1976 Nissen
Award. He was an international master of sport
from 1974-77. He earned a master’s degree
in mechanics and hydraulics from the University
of Iowa in 1980 and holds a doctorate in civil
and environmental engineering from Utah State
University. Whelan currently resides in West Richland,
Wash.
Valerie Zimring-Schneiderman was a rhythmic gymnast
on the 1984 U.S. Olympic Team and competed on
two World Championships teams (1981, 1983). A
member of the U.S. Rhythmic National Team from
1979-85, she was the 1984 U.S. all-around and
hoop champion and the 1978 junior all-around,
rope, ball and clubs national champion. She earned
a bachelor’s degree in arts from the University
of California – Los Angeles in 1989 and
earned her master’s degree in program-dance
in 1991. Zimring-Schneiderman has worked for NBC
Sports as a technical advisor during two Olympic
Games (1988, 1996) and has done television commentary
work. She lives in Ridgefield, Conn., with her
husband, Ross, and their two teenage sons, Zach
and Will.
Lifetime Achievement Award recipient
Dr. Joseph C. Schabacker served as president of
the U.S. Sports Acrobatics Federation from 1975-93.
He was a professional hand balancer for 10 years
and a gymnastics judge for 24 years. He competed
for Temple University from 1938-43.
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. |