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One father said he doesn't feel as inspired watching Kerri Strug's 1996 one-leg vault in Atlanta after Simone Biles announced her 2020 Tokyo Olympics exit ...
Strug's historic second vault on an already-injured ankle became perhaps the defining moment of the 1996 Summer Games It seems strange in retrospect, but Kerri Strug went into the 1996 Summer ...
Kerri Strug is an Olympic Gold medalist for gymnastics who won gold in Atlanta in 1996. Kerri joined Ken and Steve to talk about her famous vault which she nailed to win the Gold medal while not ...
Kerri Strug is standing at the end of the vault runway, pumping her foot, clearly injured. From the sidelines, her coach, Bela Karolyi, yells, "You can do it!" in his deep Romanian accent.
It turned out the U.S. would've still won by 0.309 points even if Strug had not taken her famous vault, according to the official Olympics website. Coach Bela Karolyi urged Strug to continue with ...
Strug, who soared into Olympic history when she landed a strong Yurchenko vault on a severely sprained ankle to clinch the first U. S. women’s team gold medal ever, is doing her best to recover.
Simone Biles has some rethinking 1996 Kerri Strug moment. ‘She shouldn’t have jumped’ By TJ Macias July 29, 2021 8:57 AM ...
Kerri Strug deserved to scratch that vault with pride. But it’s not 1996 anymore, and Simone Biles did have a choice, and that choice just empowered an entire new generation of gymnasts to have ...
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