| Blaine Wilson |
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| Full name | Blaine Carew Wilson |
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| Born | (1974-08-03) August 3, 1974
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| Height | 5 ft 4 in (163 cm) |
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| Spouse |
Makare Desilets
( m. , divorced) |
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| Discipline | Men's artistic gymnastics |
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Country represented | United States (1994–2005, 2008) |
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| College team | Ohio State Buckeyes |
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| Gym | USOTC Team Chevron Team Texaco |
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| Retired | May 22, 2008 |
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| Awards | Nissen-Emery Award (1997) |
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Blaine Carew Wilson (born August 3, 1974) is a retired American gymnast who was a member of the United States men's national artistic gymnastics team. He is a five-time U.S. national champion (1996-2000), a three-time Olympian (1996, 2000, 2004), and an Olympic silver medalist in the team competition at the 2004 Olympic Games.
Early life and education
Blaine Wilson was born in Columbus, Ohio.[1] He comes from a sports-minded family and is named after baseball great Rod Carew and former Dallas Cowboys guard Blaine Nye. Wilson's father started him in gymnastics at age four because he was so energetic. Wilson competed in college for Ohio State University, where he was coached by 1976 bronze-medal winner Peter Kormann. In 1997, Wilson won the 1997 Big Ten Athlete of the Year award as well as the Nissen Award (the "Heisman" of men's gymnastics).[2]
Career
Wilson won his first national all-around title at the 1996 Coca-Cola National Championships and won the next four consecutive national titles. Wilson was the first man to win five consecutive national all-around titles since USA Gymnastics was named the sport's national governing body, and the third man to win five consecutive U.S. all-around titles (or more) in gymnastics history.
Wilson won the silver medal with the U.S. team in the team competition at the 2004 Olympics. He also placed fifth with the U.S. team at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics. At the 1999 World Championships, he placed fourth in the all-around and sixth in the team competition. In 1995, in his first World Championship appearance, he was the highest U.S. all-around finisher (25th).
Wilson won his first World Championship medal at the 2003 World Championships where he helped the U.S. team win the silver medal. Months later, at the 2004 Visa American Cup, Wilson tore his left biceps tendon and vowed to return for the 2004 Olympic Games. His hard work and determination earned him a spot on his third Olympic team. Wilson and the U.S. team went on to win the silver medal in Athens.
On May 22, 2008, during the first night of competition at the Men's USA Championships, Wilson announced his retirement from gymnastics competition.[3]
In 2013, he was inducted into the International Sports Hall of Fame.[4]
Personal life
Wilson married professional volleyball player Makare Desilets on March 28, 2001, whom he met at the United States Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado. They celebrated the birth of their first living child, a daughter, on October 4, 2002, after suffering the loss of a son. Blaine and Makare divorced in 2006. Wilson married rhythmic gymnast Aliane Baquerot. The couple was both performing on The Tour of Gymnastics Superstars and after their stop in Sacramento traveled to Reno, Nevada, and married there.[5] Blaine and Aliane have two sons, Jackson and Bodhi.
Blaine currently resides in Columbus where he owns and manages his own gymnastics, cheerleading, and volleyball training facility, Integrity Athletics, in Plain City, Ohio.
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Blaine Wilson". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on September 8, 2015.
- ^ "Nissen Emery Award". usagym.org. USA Gymnastics. Archived from the original on August 23, 2012. Retrieved November 17, 2012.
- ^ "Blaine Wilson Retires". Gymnast.com. Archived from the original on May 29, 2008.
- ^ Dr. Robert Goldman (March 12, 2013). "2013 International Sports Hall of Fame Inductees". sportshof.org. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
- ^ "Gymnast Blaine Wilson weds". gymnasticscoaching.com.
External links
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| Men's artistic gymnastics athletes | | |
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| Women's artistic gymnastics athletes | |
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| Rhythmic gymnastics athletes | | Individual | |
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| Group |
- Aliane Baquerot
- Mandy James
- Kate Nelson
- Brandi Siegel
- Challen Sievers
- Becky Turner
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| Coaches | | Men's | |
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| Women's | |
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| Rhythmic |
- Jan Exner (Individual)
- Rossitza Todorova (Group)
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| Men's artistic gymnastics athletes | | |
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| Women's artistic gymnastics athletes | Team  | |
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| Alternate | |
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| Rhythmic gymnastics athletes | |
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| Trampoline athletes | | Individual | |
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| Alternate | Ryan Weston |
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| Coaches | | Men's |
- Peter Kormann (Head coach)
- Yoichi Tomita (Asst. coach)
- Barry Weiner (Asst. coach)
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| Women's |
- Kelli Hill (Head coach)
- Steve Rybacki (Asst. coach)
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| Trampoline | |
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| Men's artistic gymnastics athletes | Team  | |
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| Alternates | |
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| Women's artistic gymnastics athletes | Team  | |
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| Alternates | |
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| Rhythmic gymnastics athletes | |
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| Trampoline athletes | | Individual | |
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| Alternates | Jamie Strandmark |
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| Coaches | | Men's |
- Kevin Mazeika (Head coach)
- Miles Avery (Asst. coach)
- Vitaly Marinich
- Mark Williams
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| Women's |
- Kelli Hill (Head coach)
- Yevgeny Marchenko (Asst. coach)
- Armine Barutyan-Fong
- Al Fong
- Alan Hatch
- Chris Waller
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| Rhythmic | |
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| Trampoline | |
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United States National Championships for Blaine Wilson |
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's All-Around |
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's Floor Exercise |
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's Still Rings |
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's Vault |
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- 1963: Art Shurlock
- 1964: George Hery
- 1965: Brent Williams
- 1966: Dan Millman
- 1967: Jack Kenan
- 1968: Rich Scorza
- 1969: Paul Tickenoff
- 1970: Makoto Sakamoto
- 1971: Gary Morava
- 1972: Mike Kelley
- 1973: Gary Morava
- 1974: John Crosby Jr.
- 1975: Tom Beach
- 1976:
- 1977: Ron Galimore
- 1978: Jim Hartung
- 1979: Ron Galimore
- 1980: Ron Galimore
- 1981: Ron Galimore
- 1982: Jim Hartung
1982 Jim Mikus
- 1983: Chris Reigel
- 1984: Chris Reigel
- 1985: Scott Johnson
1985 Mark Oates
- 1986: Scott Wilbanks
- 1987: John Sweeney
- 1988: Bill Paul
1988 John Sweeney
- 1989: Bill Roth
- 1990: Lance Ringnald
- 1991: Scott Keswick
- 1992: Trent Dimas
- 1993: Bill Roth
- 1994: Keith Wiley
- 1995: David St. Pierre
- 1996: Blaine Wilson
- 1997: Blaine Wilson
- 1998: Brent Klaus
- 1999: Guard Young
- 2000: Blaine Wilson
- 2001: Jason Furr
- 2002: Paul Hamm
- 2003: Raj Bhavsar
- 2004: David Sender
- 2005: Sean Golden
- 2006: David Sender
- 2007: Sean Golden
- 2008: David Sender
- 2009: Jake Dalton
- 2010: Steven Legendre
- 2011: Jake Dalton
- 2012: Jake Dalton
2012 Sean Senters
- 2013: Eddie Penev
2013 Sean Senters
- 2014: Donnell Whittenburg
- 2015: Sam Mikulak
- 2016: Jake Dalton
- 2017: Eddie Penev
2017 Donnell Whittenburg
- 2018: Anton Stephenson
- 2019: Shane Wiskus
- 2020: No competition
- 2021: Brody Malone
- 2022: Asher Hong
- 2023: Kameron Nelson
- 2024: Donnell Whittenburg
- 2025: Asher Hong
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's Parallel Bars |
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United States Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Men's Horizontal Bar |
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Nissen-Emery Award |
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- 1966: James Curzi
- 1967: Steve Cohen
- 1968: Dave Thor
- 1969: Robert Emery
- 1970: Pete Difurio
- 1971: Brent Simmons
- 1972: Tom Lindner
- 1973: John Crosby Jr.
- 1974: Steve Hug
- 1975: Jay Whelan
- 1976: Gene Whelan
- 1977: Peter Kormann
- 1978: Tim LaFleur
- 1979: Kurt Thomas
- 1980: Mario McCutcheon
- 1981: Bart Conner
- 1982: Jim Hartung
- 1983: Peter Vidmar
- 1984: Roy Palassou
- 1985: Matt Arnot
- 1986: Wes Suter
- 1987: Spider Maxwell
- 1988: Tom Schlesinger
- 1989: David Zeddies
- 1990: Mike Racanelli
- 1991: Jarrod Hanks
- 1992: Scott Keswick
- 1993: John Roethlisberger
- 1994: Kip Simons
- 1995: Josh Stein
- 1996: Darren Elg
- 1997: Blaine Wilson
- 1998: Dan Fink
- 1999: Todd Bishop
- 2000: Jeff LaVallee
- 2001: Jamie Natalie
- 2002: Justin Toman
- 2003: Daniel Furney
- 2004: Dan Gill
- 2005: Guillermo Alvarez
- 2006: Justin Spring
- 2007: Matt Cohen
- 2008: Jonathan Horton
- 2009: Casey Sandy
- 2010: Luke Stannard
- 2011: Steven Legendre
- 2012: Paul Ruggeri
- 2013: Eddie Penev
- 2014: Sam Mikulak
- 2015: Ellis Mannon
- 2016: Jesse Glenn
- 2017: Akash Modi
- 2018: Sean Melton
- 2019: Yul Moldauer
- 2020: Stephen Nedoroscik
- 2021: Shane Wiskus
- 2022: Brody Malone
- 2023: Paul Juda
- 2024: Colt Walker
- 2025: Taylor Christopulos
- 2026: Fred Richard
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NCAA Championships for Blaine Wilson |
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- 1938: Erwin Beyer (Chicago)
- 1939: Marv Forman (Illinois)
- 1940: Earl Shanken (Chicago)
- 1941: Earl Shanken (Chicago)
- 1942: Earl Shanken (Chicago)
- 1948: Jim Peterson (Minnesota)
- 1952: Dick Gutting (Florida State)
- 1961: Fred Orlofsky (S. Illinois)
- 1962: Bruno Klaus (S. Illinois)
- 1963: Gil Larose (Michigan)
- 1964: Sidney Oglesby (Syracuse)
- 1965: Dan Millman (California)
- 1966: Frank Schmitz (S. Illinois)
- 1967: Paul Mayer (S. Illinois)
- 1968: Bruce Colter (Cal St LA)
- 1969: Dan Bowles (California)
1969 Jack McCarthy (Illinois)
- 1970: Doug Boger (Arizona)
- 1971: Pat Mahoney (CSUN)
- 1972: Gary Morava (S. Illinois)
- 1973: John Crosby (S. Conn. State)
- 1974: Greg Goodhue (Oklahoma)
- 1975: Tom Beach (California)
- 1976: Sam Shaw (Cal St Fullerton)
- 1977: Steve Wejmar (Washington)
- 1978: Ron Galimore (LSU)
- 1979: Leslie Moore (Oklahoma)
- 1980: Ron Galimore (Iowa State)
- 1981: Randall Wickstrom (California)
- 1982: Steve Elliott (Nebraska)
1982 Randall Wickstrom (California)
- 1983: Mark Oates (Oklahoma)
1983 Chris Riegel (Nebraska)
- 1984: Chris Riegel (Nebraska)
- 1985: Derrick Cornelius (SUNY Cortland)
- 1986: Chad Fox (New Mexico)
- 1987: Chad Fox (New Mexico)
- 1988: Chad Fox (New Mexico)
- 1989: Chad Fox (New Mexico)
- 1990: Brad Hayashi (UCLA)
- 1991: Adam Carton (Penn State)
- 1992: Jason Hebert (Syracuse)
- 1993: Steve Wiegel (New Mexico)
- 1994: Steve McCain (UCLA)
- 1995: Ian Bachrach (Stanford)
- 1996: Jay Thornton (Iowa)
- 1997: Blaine Wilson (Ohio State)
- 1998: Travis Romagnoli (Illinois)
- 1999: Guard Young (BYU)
- 2000: Guard Young (BYU)
- 2001: Daren Lynch (Ohio State)
- 2002: Dan Gill (Stanford)
- 2003: Andrew DiGiore (Michigan)
- 2004: Graham Ackerman (California)
- 2005: Michael Reavis (Iowa)
- 2006: David Sender (Stanford)
- 2007: Pejman Ebrahimi (Ohio State)
2007 David Sender (Stanford)
- 2008: Steven Legendre (Oklahoma)
- 2009: Steven Legendre (Oklahoma)
- 2010: Eddie Penev (Stanford)
- 2011: Jake Dalton (Oklahoma)
- 2012: Eddie Penev (Stanford)
2012 Paul Ruggeri (Illinois)
- 2013: Fred Hartville (Illinois)
- 2014: Alec Robin (Oklahoma)
- 2015: Sean Senters (Stanford)
- 2016: Anthony McCallum (Michigan)
- 2017: Anthony McCallum (Michigan)
- 2018: Yul Moldauer (Oklahoma)
- 2019: Anthony McCallum (Michigan)
- 2021: Gage Dyer (Oklahoma)
- 2022: Paul Juda (Michigan)
- 2023: Asher Hong (Stanford)
- 2024: Asher Hong (Stanford)
- 2025: Kameron Nelson (Ohio State)
- 2026: Tyler Flores (Oklahoma)
2026 Jun Iwai (Stanford)
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Big Ten Athlete of the Year |
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