Olympics Wiki
(Adding categories)
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 49: Line 49:
 
|height = 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m)
 
|height = 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m)
 
|weight =
 
|weight =
|image =
+
|image = [[File:Kristi_Yamaguchi.jpg|200px]]
 
|hometown = San Jose, California
 
|hometown = San Jose, California
 
}}'''Kristine Tsuya "Kristi" Yamaguchi''' (born July 12, 1971)<ref>Date of birth found on the ''California Birth Index 1905–1995'', under Yamaguchi, Kristine T, on 12 July 1971 in Los Angeles County.</ref> is an [[United States|American]] [[figure skating|figure skater]]. She is the 1992 Olympic Champion in ladies' singles. Yamaguchi also won two World Figure Skating Championships in 1991 and 1992 and a U.S. Figure Skating Championships in 1992. She won one junior world title in 1988 and two national titles in 1989 and 1990 as a pairs skater with [[Rudy Galindo]]. In December 2005, she was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame. Yamaguchi was a local commentator on figure skating for San Francisco TV station KNTV (NBC 11) during the [[Torino 2006|2006 Winter Olympics]]. In 2008, Yamaguchi became the celebrity champion in the sixth season of ''Dancing with the Stars''.
 
}}'''Kristine Tsuya "Kristi" Yamaguchi''' (born July 12, 1971)<ref>Date of birth found on the ''California Birth Index 1905–1995'', under Yamaguchi, Kristine T, on 12 July 1971 in Los Angeles County.</ref> is an [[United States|American]] [[figure skating|figure skater]]. She is the 1992 Olympic Champion in ladies' singles. Yamaguchi also won two World Figure Skating Championships in 1991 and 1992 and a U.S. Figure Skating Championships in 1992. She won one junior world title in 1988 and two national titles in 1989 and 1990 as a pairs skater with [[Rudy Galindo]]. In December 2005, she was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame. Yamaguchi was a local commentator on figure skating for San Francisco TV station KNTV (NBC 11) during the [[Torino 2006|2006 Winter Olympics]]. In 2008, Yamaguchi became the celebrity champion in the sixth season of ''Dancing with the Stars''.
Line 159: Line 159:
 
! Year !! Title !! Role
 
! Year !! Title !! Role
 
|-
 
|-
| [[1994 in film|1994]] || ''[[D2: The Mighty Ducks]]'' || Herself ([[Cameo appearance|Cameo]])
+
| 1994 || ''D2: The Mighty Ducks'' || Herself (Cameo)
 
|-
 
|-
| [[2005 in film|2005]] || ''[[Go Figure (film)|Go Figure]]'' || Herself ([[Cameo appearance|Cameo]])
+
| 2005 || ''Go Figure'' || Herself (Cameo)
 
|}
 
|}
   
Line 192: Line 192:
 
[[Category:Gold Medalists]]
 
[[Category:Gold Medalists]]
 
[[Category:Albertville 1992 athletes]]
 
[[Category:Albertville 1992 athletes]]
  +
[[Category:Athletes]]

Revision as of 22:21, 6 May 2014

 Kristi Yamaguchi has won 1 gold medal at the Olympic Games 


Kristine Tsuya "Kristi" Yamaguchi (born July 12, 1971)[1] is an American figure skater. She is the 1992 Olympic Champion in ladies' singles. Yamaguchi also won two World Figure Skating Championships in 1991 and 1992 and a U.S. Figure Skating Championships in 1992. She won one junior world title in 1988 and two national titles in 1989 and 1990 as a pairs skater with Rudy Galindo. In December 2005, she was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame. Yamaguchi was a local commentator on figure skating for San Francisco TV station KNTV (NBC 11) during the 2006 Winter Olympics. In 2008, Yamaguchi became the celebrity champion in the sixth season of Dancing with the Stars.

Early life

Kristi Yamaguchi was born in Hayward, California,[2] to Jim Yamaguchi, a dentist, and Carole (née Doi), a medical secretary. Yamaguchi is Yonsei (fourth-generation Nikkei). Her paternal grandparents and maternal great-grandparents immigrated to the United States from Japan, originating from Wakayama Prefecture and Saga Prefecture. Yamaguchi's grandparents were sent to an internment camp during World War II, where her mother was born.

Kristi and her siblings, Brett and Lori, grew up in Fremont, California. Yamaguchi attended Mission San Jose High School her junior and senior year where she graduated. While at Mission, Kristi's excellence in skating prompted a "Kristi Yamaguchi Day" on February 24, 1989. Mission held an assembly honoring her, where she was presented with an honorary varsity jacket.

Yamaguchi began skating and taking ballet lessons, as a child, as physical therapy for her club feet.

Pairs career

With Rudy Galindo she won the junior title at the U.S. championships in 1986. Two years later, Yamaguchi won the singles and, with Galindo, the pairs titles at the 1988 World Junior Championships; Galindo had won the 1987 World Junior Championship in singles. In 1989 Yamaguchi and Galindo won the senior pairs title at the U.S. Championships. They won the title again in 1990.

As a pairs team, Yamaguchi and Galindo were unusual in that they were both accomplished singles skaters, which allowed them to consistently perform difficult elements like side by side Triple Flip jumps, which are still more difficult than side by side jumps performed by current top international pairs teams. They also jumped and spun in opposite directions, Yamaguchi counter-clockwise, and Galindo clockwise, which gave them an unusual look on the ice. In 1990, Yamaguchi decided to focus solely on singles. Galindo went on to have a successful singles career as well, winning the 1996 U.S. championships and the 1996 World bronze medal.

Singles career

In 1991, Yamaguchi moved to Edmonton, Alberta, to train with coach Christy Ness. There, she took psychology courses at the University of Alberta. The same year Yamaguchi placed second to Tonya Harding at the U.S. championships, her third consecutive silver medal at Nationals. The following month in Munich, Germany, Yamaguchi won the 1991 World Championships. That year the American ladies team, consisting of Yamaguchi, Harding and Nancy Kerrigan, became the only national ladies team to have its members place first, second and third at Worlds. In 1992, Yamaguchi won her first U.S. title and gained a spot to the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. Joining her on the U.S. team were again Kerrigan and Harding. While competitors Harding and Japan’s Midori Ito were consistently landing the difficult triple axel jump in competition, Yamaguchi instead focused on her artistry and her triple-triple combinations in hopes of becoming a more well-rounded skater. Both Harding and Ito fell on their triple axels at the Olympics (though Ito successfully landed the jump later on in her long program after missing it the first time), allowing Yamaguchi to win the gold, despite errors in her free program, including putting a hand to the ice on a triple loop and a double salchow instead of a planned triple. Yamaguchi went on to successfully defend her World title that same year.

Professional and personal life

Kristi Yamaguchi turned professional after the 1992 competitive season. She toured for many years with Stars on Ice and also participated in the pro competition circuit.

Since July 8, 2000, she has been married to Bret Hedican, a retired professional hockey player she met at the 1992 Winter Olympics when he played for Team USA. Yamaguchi and Hedican reside in Northern California with their two daughters, Keara Kiyomi (born 2003) and Emma Yoshiko (born 2005). Hedican is a TV sports analyst who covers the San Jose Sharks ice hockey team.

In 1996, Kristi established the Always Dream Foundation for children. The goal of the foundation is to provide funding for after school programs, computers, back-to-school clothes for underprivileged children, and summer camps for kids with disabilities. Commenting in 2009, she explained her inspiration for the project:

"I was inspired by the Make-A-Wish foundation to make a positive difference in children’s lives. We’ve been helping out various children’s organizations, which is rewarding. Our latest project is a playground designed so that kids of all abilities can play side by side. That’s our focus now."[3]

Yamaguchi is the author of Always Dream, Pure Gold, and Figure Skating for Dummies. In 2011, she published a children's book, Dream Big, Little Pig, which was #2 on the New York Times bestseller list; a portion of the proceeds went to the Always Dream Foundation to support early childhood literacy programs.[4] A sequel, It's a Big World Little Pig, is scheduled to be published March 6, 2012.[5]

Yamaguchi made a fitness video with the California Raisins in 1993 called "Hip to be Fit: The California Raisins and Kristi Yamaguchi". As an actress, she appeared in the PBS series Freedom: A History of Us portraying Haruko Obata, one of the first teachers of ikebana in the San Francisco Bay Area. She has appeared as herself on Everybody Loves Raymond and in D2: The Mighty Ducks, Frosted Pink, and the Disney Channel original movie Go Figure. Yamaguchi has also performed in numerous television skating specials, including the Disney special Aladdin on Ice, in which she played Princess Jasmine.

In 2006 Yamaguchi was the host of WE tv Series Skating's Next Star, created and produced by Major League Figure Skating.

Kristi Yamaguchi received the Inspiration Award at the 2008 Asian Excellence Awards. Two days after her Dancing with the Stars champion crowning, she received the 2008 Sonja Henie Award from the Professional Skaters Association. Among her other awards are the Thurman Munson Award, Women's Sports Foundation Flo Hyman Award, and the Great Sports Legends Award. She is also a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee Olympic Hall of Fame, World Skating Hall of Fame, and the US Figure Skating Hall of Fame.

In 2010 Yamaguchi worked as a daily NBC Olympics skating broadcast analyst on NBC's Universal Sports Network.

Research done in 2010 by Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. for the PBS series Faces of America showed that Yamaguchi's heritage can be traced back to Wakayama and Saga prefectures in Japan and that her paternal grandfather, Tatsuichi Yamaguchi, immigrated to Hawaii in 1899.[6]

For the 2012 U.S. presidential election, she appears in a Restore Our Future ad touting the organizational credentials of Republican Mitt Romney in relation to his involvement with the 2002 Winter Olympics.[7][8]

Dancing With the Stars

On May 20, 2008, Kristi Yamaguchi became the celebrity champion[9] on ABC's reality program Dancing with the Stars 6th season paired with Mark Ballas, defeating finalist couple Jason Taylor and Edyta Śliwińska.

Competitive highlights

Singles

Event 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90 1990–91 1991–92
Winter Olympics 1st
World Championships 6th 4th 1st 1st
World Junior Championships 1st
U.S. Championships 10th 2nd 2nd 2nd 1st
Skate Canada 1st
Skate America 3rd 1st 2nd
Nations Cup 1st
Trophée Lalique 2nd
NHK Trophy 2nd 2nd
Goodwill Games 1st

Pairs

(with Rudy Galindo)

Event 1984–85 1985–86 1986–87 1987–88 1988–89 1989–90
World Championships 5th 5th
World Junior Championships 5th 3rd 1st
U.S. Championships 5th J. 1st J. 5th 5th 1st 1st
Skate America 5th 2nd
NHK Trophy 3rd 4th
Skate Electric 1st
J. = Junior level

Filmography

Year Title Role
1994 D2: The Mighty Ducks Herself (Cameo)
2005 Go Figure Herself (Cameo)

Selected books

Notes

  1. Date of birth found on the California Birth Index 1905–1995, under Yamaguchi, Kristine T, on 12 July 1971 in Los Angeles County.
  2. Kristi Yamaguchi: First Asian American Woman to Bring Home the Gold
  3. Ability Magazine: Kristi Yamaguchi Interview" (2009). Retrieved on 2012-04-03.
  4. Wengen, Deidre. "Figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi turns best-selling children's author", phillyburbs.com, March 29, 2011. Retrieved on March 29, 2011.
  5. It's a Big World, Little Pig!. amazon.com. Retrieved on January 30, 2010.
  6. "Faces of America: Kristi Yamaguchi", PBS, Faces of America series, with Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., 2010.
  7. Heinze, Christian "Ex-Olympic stars make Romney pitch", The Hill, Washington, 30 July 2012. Retrieved on 30 July 20012.
  8. http://www.politico.com/blogs/burns-haberman/2012/07/restore-our-future-makes-million-ad-buy-on-romneys-130465.html
  9. "Kristi Yamaguchi Wins Dancing with the Stars", Pacific Coast News, 2008-05-21.

References

Further reading

External links


Wikipedia-logo-v2
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Kristi Yamaguchi. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Olympics Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.