Morgan White (gymnast)
Morgan White | |
---|---|
Country represented | United States |
Born | West Bend, Wisconsin, U.S. | June 27, 1983
Level | Senior international |
Morgan White (born June 27, 1983) is an American former gymnast. She was 1998 US Junior National Champion, 1999 Pan American Games All-Around Champion, 1999 World Championships Team, and a 2000 Olympic Games Team USA Member.[1]
Biography
[edit]White was born in West Bend, Wisconsin, to Ron and Debbie White.[1] She began competitive gymnastics training in 1988.[2] She attended Central Christian Academy in Fairfield, Ohio.[3][1]
At the 1997 International Artistic Gymnastics Challenge, in Brussels, Belgium, White was 1st in bars. At the 1997 Pan American Gymnastics Championships, in Medellin, Colombia, she was 2nd team, and 2nd bars.[1]
White was the 1998 US junior national all-around champion.[3] At the 1998 Junior Pan American Artistic Gymnastics Championships, in Houston, Texas, she was 1st team, 2nd all-around; and 1st bars. At the 1998 International Team Championships, in Knoxville, Tennessee, she was 2nd team, and 2nd bars, in the Junior Division. At the 1998 US Classic, in San Antonio, Texas, she was 1st all-around, 2nd bars, 1st beam, and 2nd floor in the Junior Division. At the 1998 American Classic, in Orlando, Florida, she was 1st bars in the Junior Division. At the 1998 John Hancock US Gymnastics Championships (the US nationals), in Indianapolis, Indiana, she was 1st all-around; 1st bars; 2nd beam; 1st floor, in the Junior Division.[1]
In 1999, White was a member of the United States women's national gymnastics team, which came in 5th at the 1999 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships.[3] In Gymnastics at the 1999 Pan American Games in Winnipeg, Canada, she was 1st all-around; 3rd bars.[3][4] At the 1999 China Dual, she was 1st team.[5] At the 1999 American Classic, in Pomona, California, she was 2nd floor.[1]
At the 2000 US Classic, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, White was 2nd all-around. She won a silver medal in floor at the 2000 Pacific Rim Championships, and a bronze medal in the All-Around. She won a silver medal in the 2000 American Cup in Orlando, Florida.[4] At age 16, she was 4 feet tall and weighed 83 pounds.[4]
White was named to the 2000 Team USA Olympic team, the youngest member of the team,[6][3] but had to withdraw before the competition began due to injury.[7] The stress fracture left foot injury, which she had been training through, flared up while she was abroad, and White was forced to withdraw from the competition before it began.[8][9][10][11]
White was a complainant in the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal.[11] She said USA Gymnastics national team doctor Larry Nassar started sexually abusing her when she was 16.[11]
Eponymous skill
[edit]White has one eponymous skill listed in the Code of Points.[12]
Apparatus | Name | Description | Difficulty[a] |
---|---|---|---|
Uneven bars | White | Stalder forward in L grip to handstand also with ½ turn (180°) in handstand phase | D |
- ^ Valid for the 2022-2024 Code of Points
See also
[edit]- List of Pan American Games medalists in gymnastics
- List of U.S. National Championships medalists in gymnastics
- List of former United States women's national gymnastics team rosters
- List of sports terms named after people
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Morgan White," USA Gymnastics.
- ^ Chad Konecky. "High Hopes". ESPN.
- ^ a b c d e Kyle Melinn (July 16, 2000). "Morgan makes it". ESPN.
- ^ a b c Juliet Macur. "GYMNASTS' IDEALS ARE REFRESHING". Orlando Sentinel.
- ^ "1999 USA/China Dual Meet: Americans Split with Chinese in Shanghai". USA Gymnastics.
- ^ John Romano. "Gymnast White's roots in Pinellas". Tampa Bay Times.
- ^ DIANE PUCIN (September 12, 2000). "U.S. Gymnast Sidelined by Foot Injury". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "US gymnast pulls out". BBC.
- ^ Tim Struby (August 2, 2016). "The Alternates". Victory Journal.
- ^ Eddie Pells. "U.S. Gymnasts Begin Defense of Gold". AP NEWS.
- ^ a b c Macur, Juliet (November 10, 2018). "'Seriously, You Chose Her?': U.S.A. Gymnastics' Trouble at the Top". The New York Times.
- ^ "2022-2024 Code of Points Women's Artistic Gymnastics" (PDF). International Gymnastics Federation. pp. 90, 207. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
External links
[edit]- 1983 births
- Living people
- American female artistic gymnasts
- People from West Bend, Wisconsin
- Sportspeople from Washington County, Wisconsin
- U.S. women's national team gymnasts
- Gymnasts at the 1999 Pan American Games
- Medalists at the 1999 Pan American Games
- Pan American Games gold medalists for the United States in gymnastics
- 20th-century American sportswomen