Paul Ruggeri

Paul Ruggeri
 Gymnast 
Full name Paul Ruggeri III
Country represented  United States
Born (1988-11-12) November 12, 1988
Syracuse, New York
Hometown Manlius, New York
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Discipline Men's artistic gymnastics
Level Senior elite
College team Hilton HHonors
Head coach(es) Genadi Chub

Paul Ruggeri III (born 12 November 1988)[1] is a senior elite American gymnast who competed for the University of Illinois and is currently training at the USOTC in Colorado Springs, CO.

Childhood

Ruggeri is the grandson of an Italian immigrant.[2] His father was a swimmer and his aunt a gymnast.[3] He attended Fayetteville Manlius High School, in His home town of Manlius, New York.[3] He began gymnastics in 1995 at CNY Gym Centre.[3]

College career

Ruggeri competed for the University of Illinois from 2008 to 2012. In 2008, Ruggeri was the NCAA national champion on high bar. In 2009, he repeated high bar gold and added gold on parallel bars. In 2012, Ruggeri was national champion on vault and won silver on parallel bars; the Illini were also national team champions. In 2012 he was named the Nissen Award winner, the gymnastics version of the Heisman.[2]

Ruggeri had five years of college gymnastics because he redshirted (cut short or skipped because of injury) his 2011 (senior) year. The cause was a torn peroneal (ankle) ligament[4] at U.S. elite Winter Cup competition. Over the years, he won nine All American honors.[2]

Elite career

In 2010, Ruggeri was an alternate on the U.S. squad at the World Championships.[5][6]

At the 2011 Pan American Games, Ruggeri won gold on high bar and silver on parallel bars.[1]

At 2012 US Nationals, Ruggeri finished 7th in the all around.[1] A member of the U.S. senior national team, Ruggeri hoped to compete in the 2012 Olympics. However, he was not selected. He finished 6th in the all around at Olympic Trials.[1]

As of March 2013, Ruggeri worked as a gymnastics coach and trained for elite competition.[1] In April, 2013, Ruggeri participated in a World Cup competition and won gold on vault and high bar. In recognition, the United States Olympic Committee named him as their male athlete of the month.[7] On 6 February 2014, he underwent surgery (meniscectomy) for a meniscus tear in the right knee.[8] He was an alternate on the U.S. men's team to the 2014 world championships.

In February 2015, Ruggeri won the Winter Cup Challenge. In addition to placing first in the All Around competition, he placed first in vault and high bar, as well as third on floor exercise. He has been named to the U.S. Gymnastics senior national team for 2015.[9]

On July 11, 2015, Ruggeri helped the U.S. Men's Gymnastics team to their first Gold medal in twenty years at the Pan-American Games.

At 2015 US Nationals Ruggeri's notable finishes include placing 8th in the all around, 5th on floor and winning a silver medal on high bar.

Gymnastics traits

Ruggeri considers rings and pommel horse his weak events.[1] He has vaulted a Yurchenko entry to two different tricks: a half turn and double full off[10] or (without turn) to 2-1/2 twists (Shewfelt).[1] His height is 5-8.[2]

Personal

Ruggeri studied molecular biology at the University of Illinois,[1] with organic chemistry as his favorite class.[3] School was challenging for him because of the difficulty in balancing sports and studies.[10] During college, he was targeting becoming a doctor,[10] but (as of 2013) he considered his options open. His post-gymnastics plans were to craft a career combining sports and chemistry, perhaps nutrition.[1]

Ruggeri studied art in high school and enjoys painting, drawing and photography. He also likes acrobatic water and snow sports.[10]

References

External links

Routines

Uploads by USA Gymnastics from 2012 National Championships:

Interviews

Uploads by USA Gymnastics and University of Illinois Athletics:

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.