Shawn Johnson competes on the balance beam in the 2007 Visa Gymnastics Championship.
Jed Jacobsohn/GETTY IMAGES
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Gymnast Shawn Johnson may be bound for this summer's Olympics, but she's also a regular, down-to-earth 16-year-old
Date published: 1/31/2008
GYMNAST Shawn Johnson was a little bit of a late bloomer; when she was born, she had to be resuscitated because she was essentially dead.
Back then, no one could have predicted that she would become the next great hope for American gymnastics. But she rallied, and now she is training for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China.
Johnson is the rock star of the upcoming Olympics, the way Michael Phelps was in 2004. She has been interviewed on such shows as "Access Hollywood" and in magazines including Sports Illustrated, and she was even named an "ABC News" Person of the Week in November. All this, and she isn't even a month removed from her 16th birthday.
Johnson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, and was promptly dismissed by her first gymnastics coach as all brawn and no skill. The first coaches to spot her burgeoning talent were Liang Qiao Chow and Liwen Zhuang Li of Chow's Gymnastics and Dance, which had just opened near Des Moines.
In 2005, Johnson qualified as a Junior International Elite on her first attempt. She struggled some at first on the international stage, finishing seventh in the U.S. National Championships. But that only made her train harder. The next year, she came armed with new maneuvers, including a tucked full-in beam dismount and a tucked double-twisting double back-flip in the floor exercises, both of which have been executed only by the very best gymnasts of all time.
In 2007, Johnson entered the senior division, where everything she touched began to turn to gold. After taking the U.S. National Championships, she teamed up with a star-studded cast that included Nastia Liukin and Alicia Sacramone at the 2007 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Stuttgart, Germany. The U.S. won the team competition, and Johnson, behind a victory in the floor exercises, took the individual title.
She eclipsed that success in the 2007 Pan American Games, taking four gold medals (all-around, team, uneven bars and balance beam) and one silver (floor exercises).
While she sustained her first major injury in 2007, a stress reaction in her right leg, she healed quickly and resumed her training for the 2008 Olympic Games.
Date published: 1/31/2008
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