Paul Wylie
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Olympic medal record | |||
Figure skating | |||
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Silver | 1992 Albertville | Men's singles |
Paul Stanton Wylie (born October 24, 1964) is an American figure skater and 1992 Olympic silver medalist.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Born in Dallas, Texas, Wylie began skating at the age of three. At age eleven, his family moved to Denver, Colorado, where he began to train with Carlo Fassi. Wylie remained with Fassi for nine years, first in Denver and later in Colorado Springs when Fassi relocated to the Broadmoor Skating Club. As a young skater, Wylie additionally worked with John Curry and Robin Cousins, who were also students of Fassi. Cousins lived with the Wylie family while he was training for the 1980 Winter Olympics.
In 1979, Wylie won the novice men's title at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, and in 1981, he won both the U.S. junior title and the World Junior Championship.
At the same time, Wylie was competing in pair skating with partner Dana Graham. They won the junior pairs title at the 1980 U.S. nationals. They were coached by John Nicks, commuting to work with him in California. They placed eighth in the senior division at the 1981 U.S. nationals, but then dissolved their partnership when they lost financial sponsorship.
In 1985, wanting to reconstruct some of his technique, Wylie left Fassi and began to train instead with Evy and Mary Scotvold, who were at that time located in Janesville, Wisconsin. Shortly afterwards, they all moved to the Boston area. Wylie attended Harvard University beginning in 1986. He was a member of the Fox Club, one of eight elite final clubs at the college.[citation needed] He graduated in 1991.
Wylie placed second at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in 1988, 1990, and 1992. He won the silver medal at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. The medal was considered a major upset. Wylie had never finished higher than ninth at the World Figure Skating Championships — four years prior — and had skated such a poor performance at the U.S. Championships immediately prior to the games that reporters questioned his placement on the Olympic team. The USFSA had even left Wylie off the team for the 1992 World Championships, naming Mark Mitchell in his place.
After the Olympics, Wylie joined the professional skating ranks. He won the 1992 U.S. Open Professional Championship and the 1993 World Professional Figure Skating Championships. Wylie toured with Stars on Ice from 1992 to 1998 before retiring to attend Harvard Business School and work in the corporate world. For some time he held a position with The Walt Disney Company.
In 2004, after leaving Disney, Wylie returned to the ice for twenty two dates with Stars on Ice. He has also continued his long association with An Evening with Champions, the annual benefit show at Harvard. Wylie has worked as a sports commentator/analyst, most recently for ESPN.
On August 14, 1999, Wylie married Cape Cod blueblood Kate Presbrey. They have two children, Hannah and Emma, and currently reside in Charlotte, North Carolina where Wylie works for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, as director of the Dare to be a Daniel program.[1]
[edit] Awards
- U.S. Olympic Spirit Award (1992)
[edit] Professional competitive highlights
- Ice Wars 1996 (team) 1st
- Battle of the Sexes 1996 (men's team) 1st
- Mike Masters 1996 1st
- Challenge of Champions 1995 1st
- Fall Team Pro-Am (team) 1st, 1st overall
- Ice Wars 1995 (team) 1st
- Miko Masters Paris Championships 1995 1st
- Ice Wars 1994 (team) 1st
- Spring Pro-Am 1994 1st
- World Challenge of Champions 1993 1st
- World Professional Figure Skating Championships 1993 1st
- Fall Pro-Am 3rd 1993 Miko Masters Paris Championships 1993 1st
- World Challenge of Champions 1992 1st
- U.S. Open Professional Championships 1992 1st
- Fall Pro-Am 1992 1st
[edit] Amateur competitive highlights
1992
- Olympic Winter Games — 2nd
- U.S. Championships 2nd
1991
- World Championshps 11th
- U.S. Championships 3rd
1990
- NHK Trophy 4th
- Goodwill Games 4th (Seattle, WA)
- World Championships 10th
- U.S. Championships 2nd
1989
- Nations Cup 3rd
- Skate Canada 2nd
- US Olympic Festival 2nd
- US Championships 3rd
1988
- Trophee Lalique 1st
- World Championships 9th
- Olympic Winter Games 10th
- U.S. Championships 2nd
1987
- NHK Trophy 2nd
- World University Games 3rd
- U.S. Championships 5th
1986
- U.S. Collegiate Championships 1st
- U.S. Championships 5th
1985
- U.S. Championships 5th
1984
- U.S. Championships 4th
1983
- U.S. Championships 5th
1982
- U.S. Championships 11th
1981
- U.S. Championships Junior Men 1st
- World Junior Championships 1st
1980
- U.S. Championships Junior Men 2nd
1979
- U.S. Championships Novice Men 1st
[edit] Education
- BA, 1991, Harvard College[1]
- MBA, 2000, Harvard Business School
[edit] Notes
- ^ Jerri Menges. Dare to Be a Daniel. Decision Magazine. BGEA. Retrieved on 2006-10-16.
[edit] References
- U.S. Olympic Committee: "Olympic Spirit Award"
- Kid's Questions with Paul Wylie
- For the Glory of God
- "Paul Wylie", Blades On Ice, August, 1998.
- "Paul Wylie", Skating, November, 1990.
- Martha Lowder Kimball, Robin Cousins. ISBN 0-9662502-0-6.
[edit] Navigation
1976: Mark Cockerell | 1977: Daniel Beland | 1978: Dennis Coi | 1979: Vitali Egorov | 1980: Alexander Fadeev | 1981: Paul Wylie | 1982: Scott Williams | 1983: Christopher Bowman | 1984: Viktor Petrenko | 1985: Erik Larson | 1986: Vladimir Petrenko | 1987: Rudy Galindo | 1988: Todd Eldredge | 1989: Viacheslav Zagorodniuk | 1990: Igor Pashkevich | 1991: Vasili Eremenko | 1992: Dmitri Dmitrenko | 1993: Evgeni Pliuta | 1994: Michael Weiss | 1995: Ilia Kulik | 1996: Alexei Yagudin | 1997: Evgeni Plushenko | 1998: Derrick Delmore | 1999: Ilia Klimkin | 2000: Stefan Lindemann | 2001: Johnny Weir | 2002: Daisuke Takahashi | 2003: Alexander Shubin | 2004: Andrei Griazev | 2005: Nobunari Oda | 2006: Takahiko Kozuka | 2007: Stephen Carriere |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | American figure skaters | Figure skaters at the 1988 Winter Olympics | Figure skaters at the 1992 Winter Olympics | Figure skating commentators | 1964 births | Living people | Olympic silver medalists for the United States | Harvard University alumni