Rulon Gardner
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men's Greco-Roman wrestling | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gold | 2000 Sydney | 130 kg | |
Bronze | 2004 Athens | 120 kg |
Rulon Gardner (born August 16, 1971 in Afton, Wyoming) is an amateur wrestler in the Greco-Roman discipline from the United States. His strength is often attributed to the physical labor on the dairy farm he grew up on. He graduated from Ricks College (BYU-Idaho) with an Associates Degree. He has his teaching credentials in Physical Education, yet he has never taught in the classroom. His love is working with disadvantaged children and is currently making his profession as a motivational speaker.
On 25 February 2007, Gardner and two other men survived a crash when a light aircraft he was travelling in crashed into Lake Powell, Utah. Gardner swam more than one hour in 44 degree water to reach shore, and then spent the night without shelter.[1] None of the three received life-threatening injuries.
He now owns a business called "Gardner's Country Village" in his hometown of Afton. It sells snacks and other items to travelers.
Contents |
[edit] High School Years
Rulon Gardner attended Star Valley High School in Afton, Wyoming, and was a three-sport letterwinner and standout in football, wrestling and track and field. He was an All-State selection in both football and wrestling, and was also the 1989 wrestling state heavyweight champion. In track & field, as a senior, he took second at the state finals in the shotput.
As a wrestler Rulon would have most likely been a two time Wyoming State Wrestling Champion, yet his older brother Reynold was slightly better than he was. Rulon claims it was because Reynold played mental games on him and kept him from the varsity position until Reynold graduated. Reynold was the 1988 Wyoming State Heavyweight Champion and was on the Championship Team from Star Valley. Reynold went on to wrestle at Ricks College (BYU-Idaho) following his missionary service for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the church of which Rulon is also a member. Reynold was an NCJAA All American in 1992 and NCJAA Heavyweight National Champion in 1993. He then fulfilled a wrestling scholarship at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon. Reynold was the 1994 & 1995 PAC 10 Conference Heavyweight Champion. Rulon attributes much of his wrestling success to the early battles that he had with Reynold.
Rulon is a great great-grandson of Archibald Gardner, one of the early settlers of Star Valley, Wyoming.
[edit] Junior College Years
Gardner attended Ricks College for two years and as a sophomore, he was the NJCAA national heavyweight wrestling champion.
[edit] Wrestling career
Gardner is most well known for his defeat of Alexander Karelin in the 2000 Summer Olympics. Karelin had been undefeated for thirteen years, and had not given up a point in six years, prior to his loss in the gold medal match to Gardner.
After the 2000 Olympics he suffered a series of injuries from both a snowmobiling and motorcycle accident. These injuries included an amputated toe and a dislocated wrist, but he still went on to win the U.S. Olympic trials for his weight class and then to compete in the 2004 Summer Olympics. At the 2004 Olympics, he was unable to repeat his 2000 performance, although he did win a bronze medal. After the bronze medal match, he left his shoes on the mat as the traditional symbol of retirement from competitive wrestling.
Gardner has since begun competing in mixed martial arts and in 2005 he became the host for a professional wrestling league called Real Pro Wrestling.
Aside from his Olympic medals, his achievements include:
- U.S. Champion in 1995, 1997, and 2001
- James E. Sullivan Award for amateur athlete of the year, 2001
- Gold medal, World Wrestling Championships, 2001
- Jesse Owens Award, 2001
- United States Olympic Committee Sportsman of the Year, 2001
- ESPY award for U.S. Male Olympic athlete of the year, 2001
- Pan American Games champion, 1998
- World Cup Champion, 1996
[edit] MMA record
On the 31st December, 2004 Rulon Gardner fought Hidehiko Yoshida in a mixed martial arts bout for the Pride Fighting Championships at an event named PRIDE Shockwave 2004. Yoshida, in addition to being an MMA fighter, was a former Olympic gold medallist in judo.
Gardner won the bout via unanimous decision.
[edit] Autobiography
In 2005 Gardner published his autobiography (co-written by Bob Schaller), Never Stop Pushing: My Life from a Wyoming Farm to the Olympic Medals Stand, in which he describes his Greco-Wrestling career, his academic struggles (as someone who suffers from a learning disability) and an account of his near-death experience when getting stranded after a snowmobile accident.
[edit] Survival Stories
Rulon Gardner has had an amazing streak of luck with survival. While in grammar school, Rulon was impaled by an arrow in a show-and-tell incident. In 2002, Gardner was stranded on a wilderness snowmobile trip and had to have a toe amputated after suffering frostbite. In 2004, he was hit by a car while riding his motorcycle. In February 2007, Gardner and two others crashed a Cirrus SR-22 airplane into Lake Powell. After surviving the impact, he was forced to swim in 44 degree Fahrenheit (7 °C) water for over an hour. He survived overnight with two others without shelter or fire in 28 degree Fahrenheit (−2 °C) air temperature. His amazing luck streak continued when a fisherman, out of his usual route, found and picked them up in the morning. [1]
[edit] Personal life
Rulon has been married twice, most recently to Lisa.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ a b sportsillustrated.cnn.com, Olympian Gardner survives small plane crash (AP report), accessed February 26, 2007
- ^ "Gardner taking his moves home", USA Today, August 24, 2004
[edit] External links
- Official Website
- Rulon Gardner's page from the National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum
- Rulon Gardner's MMA record
- Rulon Gardner's U.S. Olympic Team bio, featuring a typical day at the Training Center
- Rulon vs. Karelin on YouTube.com
- "Nine minutes: How the Sydney Olympics changed wrestler Rulon Gardner's life", Deseret Morning News, 11 February 2007