Sarah Hughes
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- For the US District Court judge, see Sarah T. Hughes.
Personal Info | ||
---|---|---|
Country: | United States | |
Residence: | Great Neck, New York | |
Height: | 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) | |
Weight: | 42 kg (93 lb) | |
Skating Club: | The SC of New York, Inc. | |
ISU Personal Best Scores |
Best Results: | |||
---|---|---|---|
Event | Points | Finish | Year |
Olympic Winter Games | - | 1st | 2002 |
World Championships | - | 3rd | 2001 |
National Championships | - | 2nd | 2003 |
Grand Prix Final | - | 3rd | 2001–02 |
Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Olympic Games | |||
Ladies' figure skating | |||
Gold | 2002 Salt Lake City | Singles |
Sarah Elizabeth Hughes (born May 2, 1985 in Great Neck, New York) was the Olympic gold medalist in women's figure skating at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Hughes is the fourth of six children; her father is a Canadian of Irish descent [1] and her mother, Amy Pasternack, is a Jewish American.[2] Her younger sister, Emily Hughes, was the women's 2006 bronze medalist in the U.S. National Figure Skating Championships, and she also placed seventh at the 2006 Olympics in Turin.
Hughes's mother Amy is a breast cancer survivor, and Hughes has become a breast cancer advocate by doing a commercial for General Electric promoting breast cancer awareness and research. Hughes stated: “I always said that if I can get one person to get a mammogram, I've accomplished something." [3]
Her father, John Hughes, was captain of the NCAA Champion 1969-70 Cornell University Ice Hockey team, which is the only NCAA Hockey team in history to finish unbeaten at 29-0-0.
[edit] Early Success
Hughes showed promise when she won the 1998 U.S. Junior Championships, then placed second at the 1999 World Junior Championships. Dubbed a "baby ballerina" along with Naomi Nari Nam and Sasha Cohen, Hughes placed fourth in her debut at the senior level at the 1999 U.S. championships. One year later at Nationals, she won the bronze medal behind Michelle Kwan and Cohen. Because she medaled at the Junior World Championships one year prior, Hughes was "grandfathered" into the senior World Championships, where she placed fifth. In 2001 she took bronze at the Grand Prix Final and the World Championships.
[edit] 2002 Olympics
The week before the opening of the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City, Hughes appeared on the cover of Time magazine, even though she was considered only the third-best American skater, behind Kwan and Cohen, the top two finishers at the 2002 U.S. National Championships. During the event, Hughes was in fourth going into the long program, and few people predicted she would win. But she landed seven triple jumps, including two triple-triple combinations, and narrowly won the event, edging out Russia's Irina Slutskaya in a tie-breaker after Michelle Kwan faltered and fell to third place.
After her Olympic win, Hughes was honored with a parade in her hometown of Great Neck. Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke at the event and declared it Sarah Hughes Day.
Hughes did not compete at the 2002 World Figure Skating Championships. While she finished 2nd at the 2003 U.S. Championships, she faltered at the World Championships one month later and finished in 6th place.
[edit] Post-Olympics
In 2002, she received the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the U.S. Hughes decided not to return to competitive figure skating and defend her Olympic gold medal title at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Instead, she skated professionally and began attending Yale University. She took the 2004-2005 year off to skate professionally with the Smuckers Stars on Ice tour company.
In 2006, she traveled to Turin to cheer on her younger sister Emily Hughes, who took seventh place in the ladies' figure skating event.
[edit] Trivia
- Hughes is a baseball fan who roots for the New York Mets.
- Olympic champion Hughes never won a World or U.S. National figure skating title.
- Tania Bass has been designing costumes for Sarah Hughes since she began skating competitively.
[edit] Competitive highlights
Event | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Junior U.S. Nationals | 1st | |||||
Junior Worlds | 2nd | |||||
U.S. Nationals | 4th | 3rd | 2nd | 3rd | 2nd | |
Worlds | 7th | 5th | 3rd | 6th | ||
Olympic Games | 1st | |||||
Grand Prix Final | 3rd | 3rd | ||||
Skate America | 4th | 2nd | 2nd | |||
Skate Canada Int. | 1st | |||||
Trophee Lalique | 3rd | 2nd | ||||
Cup of Russia | 3rd | |||||
Nations Cup | 2nd |
[edit] External links
- USFSA Athlete Bio: Sarah Hughes
- Sarah's U.S. Olympic Team bio links to interviews, photos
[edit] Navigation
1908: Madge Syers-Cave | 1920: Magda Julin | 1924: Herma Szabo | 1928: Sonja Henie | 1932: Sonja Henie | 1936: Sonja Henie | 1948: Barbara Ann Scott | 1952: Jeannette Altwegg | 1956: Tenley Albright | 1960: Carol Heiss | 1964: Sjoukje Dijkstra | 1968: Peggy Fleming | 1972: Beatrix Schuba | 1976: Dorothy Hamill | 1980: Anett Pötzsch | 1984: Katarina Witt | 1988: Katarina Witt | 1992: Kristi Yamaguchi | 1994: Oksana Baiul | 1998: Tara Lipinski | 2002: Sarah Hughes | 2006: Shizuka Arakawa |
Categories: 1985 births | American figure skaters | Figure skaters at the 2002 Winter Olympics | James E. Sullivan Award recipients | Jewish American sportspeople | Living people | Olympic competitors for the United States | People from Long Island | People from Nassau County, New York | Winter Olympics medalists | Breast cancer activists | Olympic gold medalists for the United States