Annia Hatch
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Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Competitor for United States | |||
Artistic Gymnastics | |||
Olympic Games | |||
Silver | 2004 Athens | Team competition | |
Silver | 2004 Athens | Vault | |
World Championships | |||
Bronze | 1996 Puerto Rico | Vault | |
Pan American Games | |||
Silver | Mar del Plata 1995 | Balance beam | |
Bronze | Mar del Plata 1995 | Vault | |
Bronze | Mar del Plata 1995 | Uneven bars |
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (July 2007) |
Annia Portuondo Hatch (born June 14, 1978 in Guantánamo, Cuba) is a Cuban-American gymnast, who competed at the 2004 Olympics.
Hatch began gymnastics in her native Cuba at the age of five. She won her first Cuban National Championships at the age of ten; over the course of her career she would win the title a total of seven times.
Competing for Cuba, Hatch made her debut at the World Gymnastics Championships in 1993. She placed tenth in the all-around. In 1995 she picked up three medals at the Pan Am Games, placing fourth in the all-around, second on the balance beam, and third on the vault and uneven bars. The following year, in 1996, she became the first Cuban gymnast ever to win a medal at the World Championships with a bronze on the vault. The result, however, was controversial, as many experts believed Annia's performance merited the gold medal over Romania's Gina Gogean and Simona Amanar.
Hatch qualified as an individual for the 1996 Olympics, but a lack of funding prevented the Cuban Olympic Committee from sending her to the competition. She retired and, in 1997, moved to the United States. With her new husband, Alan Hatch, she became a part owner and coach of the Stars Academy gym in West Haven, Connecticut. In 2001 she became an American citizen.
Hatch resumed training at the elite level in 2001 with her husband as her coach. By mid-2002, Hatch turned heads in the U.S. when she won the U.S. Classic, a qualifier to the U.S. National Championships. In doing so, she defeated the number one ranked U.S. gymnast, the reigning national champion and highest finisher at the 2001 World Championships, Tasha Schwikert. Hatch also placed first in the vault at the meet, looking better than she ever had in Cuba on the event. Hatch went on to place first after the first day of the U.S. National Championships, and fourth at the conclusion of the meet. Hatch's vaults were so spectacular (a well executed double twisting tsukahara and a powerful double twisting yurchenko) that many experts believed Hatch was likely to win vault at the upcoming World Championships in Decebren, Hungary.
Although Hatch was a U.S. citizen, a rule stated that during the first year after obtaining citizenship in a new nation, one's former country of citizenship had to give permission to release the gymnast in order for her to represent her new country in international competition. Fidel Castro refused to release Hatch, prompting U.S. government officials and former U.S. president Jimmy Carter to specifically petition Cuba on Hatch's behalf. Because Cuba would not release her voluntarily, Hatch had to wait until she was granted an international release in 2003 before she was permitted to represent the United States in international competition.
Hatch was named to the 2003 World Championships team after a solid placement at U.S. Nationals. In podium training at Worlds, Hatch looked to once again be the top contender for the gold medal on the vault, but a devastating knee injury, a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), the day before competition commenced left Hatch on the sidelines.
As is standard with any ACL reconstruction, the graft takes a full twelve months to heal, which meant that any training Hatch did prior to the 2004 Olympics put her in jeopardy of re-tearing her ACL. But come mid 2004, Hatch was ready to compete at the US Nationals and the Olympic Trials. She was named to the US squad for the 2004 Olympics. In Athens, Hatch competed only on vault in the team competition, and contributed to the US team's silver medal. Although she was not completely back up to her normal speed on vault, she qualified to the vault event final, where she won a silver medal behind Romanian Monica Rosu.
After the Olympics, Hatch retired from competition. She has since pursued fashion and music while coaching gymnastics.
[edit] External links and resources
- Annia Hatch at the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique profile page
- USA Gymnastics biography
- Annia Hatch's U.S. Olympic Team bio ... includes two photo galleries
- "West Haven celebrates Annia Hatch's Olympic silver medal" - Laura Walsh, Associated Press, August 23, 2004