Showing posts with label Sportsmen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sportsmen. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

100 Greatest Sports Stars - Number 93 - Shaun White

Two time Olympic gold medallist Shaun Roger White had things stacked against him in his early years.  Before he was even one year old he underwent two open-heart operations to deal with a heart defect known as a Tetralogy of Fallot.  As a dual sportsman in the field of both snowboarding and skateboarding he comes in at number 93 on our list of the 100 greatest sports  stars.

And a star he certainly is.  The best of the best in his sports fields, White spent his early years in and around the ski resorts of Southern California and some argue that he is immediately identifiable with the state both in terms of his heritage and his overall look.

At 1.73 meters tall he may not be the tallest snowboarder ever but he is certainly the best – something that can occasionally be judged by the amount of nick names a sports star picks up during their career.

He has had several – the most notable being The Flying Tomato, of which he tired (and who wouldn’t) but not without wearing a read bandana for a number of years.  If you are old enough to remember The Muppet Show you will instantly recognise his second – Animal!

Let's take a look at him in action at the pipe finals at Burton Open New Zealand 2009.



Like other sports stars on this list White’s dual career took place at the same time.  His skateboard career went hand in hand with his rise through the snowboarding ranks.  He was spotted by a professional skateboarder, Tony Hawk, at the age of nine: Hawk saw his potential immediately and mentored him for a number of years, eventually helping him turn professional at the young age of seventeen.

Here is Shaun White snowboarding at the age of ten.



While winning coveted titles such as the Action Sports Tour Champion and the Summer and Winter X Games, White’s interest in snowboarding burgeoned.  In fact he had taken up the sport two years before skateboarding, at the age of six (before which he had been a skier!).  By the time he was seven he was already signing sponsorship deals.

Below, White talks about combining both careers (from 2008).



Born in 1986, White was twenty when he represented the USA at the 2006 Winter Olympics where he won the gold in the snowboard pipe event, repeating this achievement four years later.  He has also won a medal at every Winter X Games since 2002, giving him a total of 2 bronze, 3 silver and an amazing 10 gold.

The 2006 Winter Olympics was a touch and go affair.  The first run saw White score a meagre 37.7 and it looked as if he was heading out of the competition.  However, his second run saw his score shoot up to 45.3.  He bettered this in the finals, with a score of 46.8, beating the nearest other snowboarder by 2.8 points.  Considering the maximum score is 450 this was some achievement.

His third consecutive US Open Snowboarding Championship title came in 2008 as did his third US Open slopestyle competition.  Although there is not as much money to be made in the sport as, say, soccer, White managed to take $210,000 at the 2007 Open – plus a brand new Corvette.  He diversified away from straightforward sponsorship in 2008 when he released his first video game (see above), Shaun White Snowboarding.

Although we do not have figures for income generated it was the 20th best selling game in the Christmas market of that year in the enormous American market.  You do not need to do the math to realise that it is quite a lot of money.  He also appeared on the cover of Rolling Stone Magazine.

At the same time, White does not neglect his skateboarding career.  Here he is in action in September 2010.



In 2009 he competed in the FIS World Men’s Halfpipe event at Cypress Mountain and managed in his finals run to achieve the highest ever FIS halfpipe score – a remarkable 47.3.  He followed this up with a gold in the Halfpipe at the Winter Olympics (Vancouver) in the following year, securing the gold medal on his first run. 



Without the need he decided to do the second run anyway – as a kind of victory lap.  Ending with a Double McTwist 1260 (which he calls The Tomohawk) he was given a score of 48.4.  No one can score 50 at snowboarding – but is there any need to guess what the highest score possible is.  Right – 48.4.  Here is the action.


No doubt, we haven’t heard the last of Shaun White yet. At number 93 on our list of the 100 greatest sports stars it seems almost inevitable that he will rise further up the chart in the years to come.

Image Credit - Shaun White open plaid shirt - Flickr User Veronica Belmont

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

100 Greatest Sports Stars - Number 99 - Ian Thorpe


Ian Thorpe breaks the 400m World Record in 2002.
Nicknamed the Thorpedo or Thorpey, Ian Thorpe, the Australian freestyle swimmer, comes in at number 99 on our list of the top 100 greatest sports stars ever.  All told he won five Olympic gold medals which is a record for an Australian and he was also the first person ever to win six gold medal in a single World Championship.  His results are staggering, 11 World Championship golds (the second highest ever by a swimmer).  The pool was his natural home and as well as being made Australian Swimmer of the Year for four years in a row he was also given the title of Young Australian of the Year in 2000.


He started young, too, first representing his country at the tender age of 14.  Plus he was the youngest individual World Chamion when he won the 400 meter freestyle in 1998 (when he was 16).  From that point there was no stopping the boy wonder and he dominated the 400 meters until his break after the Olympics of 2004.

He had 13 individual long course world records to his name and with teammates five relay world records,  When he won the bronze in Athens for the 100m freestyle it made him the only man to have ever won medals in the 1-2-4 hundred meter combination.  It is unlikely that this track record will be beaten any time soon.

In this video, Thorpe shows the five major strokes important to success in the freestyle event.

Thursday, 22 July 2010

100 Greatest Sports Stars - Number 100 - Andrew Johns


At Number 100 on our list of the greatest sports stars (ever!) is the legend who goes by the name of Andrew Johns.  An Australian Rugby League footballer he is thought of by many as the best player of all time.  During his career he was often trumpeted as the world's best halfback.  During the 1990s and the 2000s he captained the Newcastle Knights team at home and played 249 games for the team 0 a record.  He also represented Australia in 2 World Cups and played in twenty one test matches for the Aussie national side.

He retired from the game of rugby league at the age of thirty two in 2007.  This was young, but he had had a lot of injuries which, had he continued playing, would have seriously threatened his health both on the pitch and in the future.  However, he finished playing rugby league as the highest points scorer in the history of the Australian First Grade premiership.  How many pointa?  A total of 2,176.


Andrew Johns was announced as the Best Player of the Last 30 Years by the influential Rugby League Week.  For the imaginary Team of the Century  he was named as halfback.  An outstanding career which places him at number 100 in our list of the 100 greatest sports stars in the universe!
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