Kyle Shewfelt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Olympic medal record
Gymnastics
Gold 2004 Athens Men's floor exercise

Kyle Shewfelt (born May 6, 1982 in Calgary, Alberta) is a Canadian gymnast. His gold medal in the men's floor exercise competition at the 2004 Athens Olympics was the first medal ever by a Canadian in an artistic gymnastics event and was the first Canadian gold of the 2004 Olympics.

Shewfelt was considered a medal threat in advance of the Athens games. In the end, Shewfelt finished first on Floor and fourth on Vault, amid much controversy, with Dragulescu taking the bronze medal despite a fall on his second vault. Canadian gynmastics officials protested the judging but, months later, no change was made in the vault medals despite the fact that four of the vault judges were eventually sanctioned. Many noted that Dragalescu is Romanian as is Adrian Stoica, who leads the Men's Technical Committee.

Born in Calgary, Shewfelt first began practicing gymnastics in 1988 influenced by a neighbour. His father was also an athlete playing for the Brandon Wheat Kings hockey team. While Shewfelt was a skilled hockey player he turned to gymnastics at an early age. He attended Calgary's National Sport School in order to complete his high school education, while pursuing his Olympic plans with fellow athletes at the school[1]. Kyle trained at Altadore Gymnastic Club under coach Kelly Manjak, from age 6 up until the 2004 Olympics. Manjak married in 2004 and moved following the Olympics to Ontario. Shewfelt stayed in Calgary, training with coach Tony Smith at the University of Calgary.

Shewfelt's long-held goal of Olympic gold was endangered by an ankle injury in March 2004, but he made a full recovery in time for Athens. Before the Olympics Shewfelt has speculated on moving to Cirque du Soleil after his athletic career is over. A gold medal could easily open many other opportunities for him, however, as he has instantaneously became a household name in much of Canada.

In 2005 he acted as himself in the hungarian made semi-biographical sports movie "Fehér tenyér" (White Palm).

In 2006 Shewfelt made a comeback to the international scene, leading the Canadian team to a gold medal at the Commonwealth Games in Australia, collecting bronze on Floor and gold on Vault for himself.

His focus increasingly directed towards the team competition, Canada later in 2006 finished second only to Olympic Champions Japan in the Pacific Alliance competition. At that event in Hawaii, Shewfelt won both Floor and Vault.

Next was World Championships in Denmark where Shewfelt led his team to a best ever team ranking (6th) and where he collected another World Championships medal (bronze on Floor Exercise).

Shewfelt will likely try to defend his title in the 2008 Summer Olympics.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Olympic champions in men's floor exercises
1932: István Pelle | 1936: Georges Miez | 1948: Fenenc Pataki | 1952: K. William Thoresson | 1956: Valentin Muratov | 1960: Nobuyuki Aihara | 1964: Franco Menichelli | 1968: Sawao Kato | 1972: Nikolai Andrianov | 1976: Nikolai Andrianov | 1980: Roland Brückner | 1984: Li Ning | 1988: Sergei Kharkov | 1992: Li Xiaoshuang | 1996: Joannis Melissanidis | 2000: Igors Vihrovs | 2004: Kyle Shewfelt