2004 Olympics: Top Stories |
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Golden girl: Expectations are high for Carly Patterson
12:17 AM CDT on Monday, August 9, 2004
She's easy on the eardrums.
That might not sound like a highly technical assessment of world
champion gymnast Carly Patterson's skills. But Don Peters, who coached
the 1984 U.S. Women's Olympic Team, has listened intently while
observing Patterson's progress.
"She gets her game face on," said Peters. "She very rarely misses. If
you watch the way she lands on the beam, she lands like a cat. It's
really good training and really good technique."
Expectations are high for Carly Patterson Blackistone: Athens ushers in a new Olympic era Medal projections (.pdf) Athens: An Olympic primer (.pdf) 17 days of Olympic TV (.pdf) Sport previews:
Good enough for Patterson to become an Olympic champion?
In the cradle of the Games, the Allen gymnast noted for her powerful
execution will try to win the ultimate prize. Coaches and athletes say
Patterson, 16, has the tools and the temperament to excel in Athens.
"I think Carly is a phenomenal gymnast," said Kerri Strug, whose valiant
vault on a smashed ankle made her a heroine of the Olympic champion U.S.
Women's Gymnastics Team at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
Patterson's knack for recovery after a rare mishap has contributed to
her reputation as a great competitor. Her mental toughness was among the
first traits that attracted the admiration of legendary Olympic coach
Bela Karolyi and his wife, Martha, the U.S. women's team coordinator.
Patterson's career began unintentionally. She was 6 when she attended
the eighth birthday party for her cousin, Farin Fabre, in their native
Baton Rouge, La. In what now seems like fate, the party was at a
facility called Elite Gymnastics.
It so happened that gym owner Johnny Moyal, a three-time Olympian for
Israel and an All-American gymnast at LSU, was coaching his young team
that afternoon. He happened to spot one of the birthday party's guests
as she jumped into a pit of foam cubes and flipped on the mats.
"She was very talented physically, a great athlete," said Moyal, who
sent the partygoer – Patterson – home with a note asking that her
parents bring her back to the gym for an evaluation. "This little girl
looked like she was something special."
Patterson trained with Moyal for five years before her family moved to
Houston. The next year, a second auto industry career move for her
father, Ricky, landed Patterson in North Texas, at the World Olympic
Gymnastics Academy in Plano.
Evgeny Marchenko, co-owner of WOGA, and Natasha Boyarskaya, one of the
gym's coaches who is an expert choreographer, have trained Patterson
since 2000. Patterson spends more than 35 hours a week in the gym, which
required her to switch from Allen public schools to private schooling
last year.
"A lot of gymnasts can do great at practice," Marchenko said. "Carly has
the ability to do things the same way in competition."
Among the highlights of her last two seasons, Patterson has won a world
team gold medal, a world all-around silver medal, two senior national
titles (floor exercise and a tie with Bedford native Courtney Kupets for
the 2004 U.S. all-around championship) and two Visa American Cup
championships.
Bela Karolyi named Mary Lou Retton, Vanessa Atler and Patterson the
three best American gymnasts he has seen.
Patterson was the first to perform the double Arabian balance beam
dismount in a major competition.
"It's a very risky trick with a blind landing," Marchenko said of the
move known as the "Patterson." "It's pretty spectacular."
After Patterson had elbow surgery in September, Marchenko carefully
paced her recovery to gear her for the Olympic year. Martha Karolyi said
Marchenko has done a good job of keeping Patterson from becoming
distracted.
But the pressure of outside expectations for Patterson worries Strug.
"She's going into every competition expected to win it all," Strug said.
"And I don't think that's fair. I don't think she should have to go into
the Olympics with everybody thinking she's going to be the next Mary
Lou."
Mary Lou Retton was quick to dismiss concerns about Patterson after her
slip-ups on the balance beam – her favorite apparatus – at the U.S.
Olympic Trials in Anaheim, Calif., in June.
"Carly's just awesome," Retton said with trademark enthusiasm. "Awesome!"
Patterson finished third behind trials winner Kupets and runner-up
Courtney McCool. Patterson fell off the balance beam in each round of
the two-session trials, missing on a switch leap and a standing Arabian.
Marchenko was unfazed.
"She was possibly over cautious," Marchenko said. "When she falls, she
falls. Her routines are very stable. She's very calm and cool. She never
gave up. Her spirit was not broken, not damaged."
Indeed, she posted the highest scores at the final Olympic team
selection camp's two competitions in New Waverly, Texas, in mid-July,
including a 9.9 on the floor exercise. She was named to the team, and
Marchenko was appointed the Olympic squad's assistant coach at the
camp's finale July 18.
Patterson said she is not focusing on the competition in Athens, which
will include Russia's Svetlana Khorkina, who topped Patterson for the
world all-around title last year.
Said Patterson: "Now is the time for me to get ready and just
concentrate on me."
E-mail
charasta@dallasnews.com
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