Showing posts with label Laurie Hernandez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laurie Hernandez. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2016

Armour: Shawn Johnson goes from idol to friend for Laurie Hernandez


Laurie Hernandez dazzles during balance beam qualification

The USA women"s gymnastics team reacts to being selected to compete in the Rio Olympics.

Coach Maggie Haney got former U.S. Olympian Shawn Johnson in touch with current Olympian Laurie Hernandez.(Photo: Kyle Terada, USA TODAY Sports)

Shawn Johnson couldnt stop smiling when the U.S. Olympic team was introduced, her grin growing brighter and brighter as the gymnasts were showered with confetti and applause.

As proud as she was to hear her name called eight years ago, it was just as rewarding to see Laurie Hernandez make the Rio team. The up-and-comer and the four-time Olympic medalist have become text and phone buddies these last few months, with Johnson acting as a sounding board whenever the 16-year-old needs it.

Youre yourselfs harshest critic. Being able to see someone elses dream come true and know youve seen them grow, its cool, said Johnson, whose medals at the Beijing Games included a gold on balance beam.

The months leading up to the Olympics might be more nerve-racking for the U.S. women than the Games themselves, what with national team coordinator Martha Karolyi watching their every move and shuffling the lineups in her head accordingly. Even veterans whove been through the process before the world championships get stressed, let alone a first-year senior.

Add to that a knee injury that limited Hernandezs training for six weeks, and its no surprise last years U.S. junior champ was having a rough time in the spring.

Looking for ways to reassure Hernandez and bolster her confidence, longtime coach Maggie Haney made contact with Johnson, one of Hernandezs idols since her early days as a gymnast.

Asked if shed be willing to talk with Hernandez, Johnson didnt hesitate. She might not have known Hernandez then, but she knew how the teenager was feeling.

Absolutely. Ill do it. In two seconds, said Johnson, who also was 16 when she competed in the Olympics. Ive been there, been through it.

Shawn Johnson was in a very similar situation to Laurie Hernandez when she headed to the Beijing Games in 2008.(Photo: Robert Hanashiro, USA TODAY Sports)

Soon after, at the end of a practice, Haney casually told Hernandez to expect a call that night.

I was like, OK, who? Hernandez said. She was like, Youll really like who it is. I was like, OK, who? She was like, Do you want me to tell you?" I was like, Yeah! Tell me.

Once she said it was Shawn, I was high-key freaking out, like, Hernandez paused, sucking in her breath as if she were hyperventilating. Definitely fan-girled over that.

They talked about anything and everything, with Johnson assuring Hernandez that whatever she said would stay between them.

Hernandez isnt lacking for a support system. Shes the youngest of three in a close-knit family, and Haney is a de facto member of that family after coaching her for a decade.

Shes tight with Rio teammates Simone Biles and Aly Raisman. She trains alongside Jazmyn Foberg, the 2014 junior champ who was taken out of the mix for Rio this summer because of an injury.

But sometimes you need someone with no stake in the game. Someone who understands but isnt involved.

Thats where Johnson comes in.

I wanted to be someone she could just vent to, Johnson said. Its hard to tell your family that youre frustrated or you want to quit or you want to eat ice cream or you just want to sleep and miss practice or you dont like your coach. There are so many things. And you cant tell your coach that or Martha. Nobody.

The two communicate mostly by text, though Johnson was in St. Louis for the national championships and in San Jose for the Olympic trials.

After finishing third in nationals, Hernandez was second to three-time world champion Biles in the trials. That kind of steady performance might earn her a spot on all four events during Sundays prelims, which would give her a chance to qualify for the all-around final.

She has incredible potential, Johnson said. I think weve seen her (at nationals and trials) go from being unsure of her position to genuinely owning the floor. I just love the confidence you can see.

When Hernandez hears that kind of praise from someone who was her idol, its her turn to smile.

Being a little girl, looking up to her, and now were kind of like, friends, Hernandez said. Thats crazy.

First an idol, then a friend. And now a fellow Olympian.

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/columnist/nancy-armour/2016/07/31/olympics-gymnastics-shawn-johnson-laurie-hernandez-rio/87885922/

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2016 Olympics: Laurie Hernandez puts aside personal goals for ...


Laurie Hernandez practices her floor routine

RIO DE JANEIROShe was waitingto begin her floor routine at the Olympicswhen the chants started to ring out through the arena here a few American voices at first, then a few more, and then a loud cacophony from the Team USAsupporters.

"Laurie! Laurie! Laurie!"

Was it a vote of confidence for the odd-girl out in the competition for the two U.S. spots in the all-around? Was it just the anticipation of the emotive Old Bridge native"s self-described "sassy" floor program? She had no way to know, but she heard the chants, loud and clear.

"Yeah, that was sooo cool," the 16-year-old said with her wide eyes opening even wider than usual. "Ohmygod."

This was the last moment, however, that the first night of the gymnastics competition was about Hernandez and yes, that was okay with her, too. No, she didn"t get to compete on the uneven bars, which meant she had no chance to qualify for the high-profile individual competition on Thursdaythat crowns the best gymnast in the world.

Meet all of N.J."s Olympians in Rio

Still: Hernandez understandsshe is part of the best gymnastics team in the world, and maybe the best d**n gymnastics in the history of the Olympics when the scores are all counted on Tuesday night.

That"s plenty cool, too.

"Absolutely," she said after the Americans finished team qualifying with a ridiculous 10-point lead over the world. This is a sport that is supposed to be decided by tenths of a point, not 10 points, but with Simone Biles leading the charge, the U.S. is only competing against history.

"Team USA, we"re so strong, you know?" Hernandez said. "Our team is made up of very amazing talented girls and we all work hard in the gym. I feel like we really deserve this."

Her first taste of the Olympics proved to be a good one. Not only will she be part of the five-woman team that is likely to steamroll its way to that gold medal on Tuesday night, but she qualified for the individual competition on the balance beam, too.

Her score of 15.366 on the beam trailed only the remarkable Biles who should be tested to see if she"s actually of this planet which means she"ll have a good shot to add a silver medal to that likely team gold.

Look: The many fans and observers who thought she had earned a shot to compete for the all-around (and I"m one of them) weren"t wrong. Had you plugged in her best score on the uneven bars from the U.S. trials, she would have narrowly outscored 2012 medal winner Gabby Douglas on Sunday.

But that wouldn"t have come close to beating Ally Raisman, who called her performance in finishing second overal to Biles"the best meet I"ve ever had." Given the talent, Team USA czar Martha Karolyi honestly couldn"t make a wrong decision here, and Hernandez handled it with class.

"I"ve learned to just deal with whatever situation comes for me," Hernandez said. "I respect 100 percent Team USA"s decision. We"ve been so successful over the years, and if they have to put someone a little stronger and more consistent in bars, then I respect that."

The bigger problem is the controversial "two-per-country" rule, which limits each nation to two competitors in the all-around and individual apparatus competitions. The spirit of the rule is to give others a shot in a sport that is dominated by a handful of countries.

13 cool things about Laurie Hernandez

"I don"t like it because I feel if it"s the best athletes, then the best athletes should be competing," said Aimee Boorman, Biles" personal coach. She"s right, of course, butif the rule didn"t exist, Team USA would need a shopping cart to take home all its medals from Rio.

The five gymnasts can"t count on the rest of the world to challenge them, so they push themselves. And clearly, the woman who built this program into the juggernaut it has become knows what she"s doing, too.

"Repeatedly I tell them during training you"re not doing it for mom or dad or the public or me," Karolyi said. "You really doing gymnastics because you want to be the best you can be."

The world is going to watch a heavy dose of that excellence. Up next: The team finals on Tuesday, when it feels as if they world is competing for silver, and then the Biles Show on Thursday in the all-around. Hernandez won"t compete that day, but she"s cool with that.

She is on the best gymnastics team in the world, maybe the best d**n gymnastics team in history. That"s plentycool, too.

Steve Politi may be reached atspoliti@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter@StevePoliti. FindNJ.com on Facebook.

Source: http://www.nj.com/olympics/index.ssf/2016/08/2016_olympics_nj_gymnast_laurie_hernandez_puts_aside_personal_goals_for_usa_dream_team_politi.html

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