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The Booster Organization for the University of Alabama Gymnastics Program
Archived News Items (Summer, 2004)

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Catching up with Terin Humphrey

posted on Monday, August 30, 2004
"We're all going to be part of the T.J. Maxx Tour, which I think has 38 stops across the country (with the closest stop in St. Louis). Then I am going to enroll at the University of Alabama in January. I wanted to enroll this fall, but I'm going to be too busy."

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Terin Humphrey Wins Silver!

posted on Monday, August 23, 2004
Links to Terin Humphrey Stories:

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posted on Monday, August 23, 2004

For Terin Humphrey, good things come in twos. The Bates City, Mo. native, who will join the University of Alabama gymnastics this season, had already earned one silver medal at the 2004 Athens Olympic during the team competition earlier in the week. Now she has two silver medals, having taken second in the uneven bars today.

Humphrey scored a 9.662 to finish just behind France's Emilie Lepennec who took gold with a 9.687. The U.S.'s Courtney Kupets took the bronze with a 9.637. It was a good day for the U.S. team as Annia Hatch took silver in the vault with a score of 9.481. The individual finals of the balance beam and floor exercise gets underway Monday.

"It is unbelievable, so amazing," Humphrey said of the medal. "You can't know what it really feels like, winning a medal, unless you are out there on the podium."

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Coach Patterson's Chalk Talk: update

posted on Tuesday, August 17, 2004

We have a new "Chalk Talk" from Coach Patterson:


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posted on Tuesday, August 10, 2004

Jeana Rice, like so many athletes in her grueling, demanding, all-consuming sport, has spent much of her life in gymnastics. In fact, you could reasonably say her entire life, since Jeana's folks are former gymnasts and still intimately involved with the sport. After all those hours, years - decades - in the gym, then, the concept of a senior season - a 'last year' in gymnastics, so to speak - must have been a little hard to fathom.

The 2004 season found the GymTide looking to replace their reliably high-scoring two-year captain, Kristin Sterner - a daunting task. For the first three years of Jeana's college career, the team benefitted from a real 'embarrassment of riches' in terms of team leadership. Her first year squad was led by no less than a three-time team captain, the indomitable Lissy Smith. 2002, of course - Jeana's sophomore year - was the year of the National Championship and Bama's 'fab five', featuring Andreé Pickens. Never-the-less, that team tapped Junior Kristin Sterner as team captain, a role she naturally retained for the 2003 season.

So, the 2004 Tide seniors, Jeana, Lauren Holdefer, and Stephanie Kite, had to step up more fully into the roles of team leaders. As Jeana told Tom Roberts during an interview broadcast on the Hey, Coach! radio show, "I think that we have tried to kind of 'divvy up' leadership roles...we all play a different part as leaders."26 Naturally, as the season went along a slightly different dynamic began to emerge, but more about that in due time.

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posted on Wednesday, July 07, 2004

CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. - One of the most prolific gymnasts in NCAA history is headed to Southeast Missouri State University. The Southeast gymnastics team announced the signing of Andreé Pickens as new assistant coach. Pickens, a 14-time All-American, joins a Southeast squad that is coming off its best season since 1998.

Pickens has too many accomplishments to list them all, but some of her greatest achievements include winning an NCAA National Championship on balance beam (1999) and uneven bars (2002), earning the 2002 Honda-Broderick Award for gymnastics (given to the national gymnast of the year), and the 2002 NCAA Top VIII Award winner - the most prestigious award given by the NCAA.

"Her accomplishments and success as a collegiate athlete speak for themselves," said Head Coach Tom Farden. "She's had an amazing career and we hope her experience in championship athletics can help our program move forward to a championship level."

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posted on Friday, July 02, 2004

The 2002 seniors rode out in style on a 'high tide' of accomplishment; a fitting end for Bama's 'fantastic five'. A team championship and Andreé Pickens' championship on the uneven bars combined to bring a long chapter in Crimson Tide gymnastics to a close. It had been an exciting ride, going all the way from missing out on the Super Six in 1997 to winning it all in 2002. And fans, coaches, and the Tide gymnasts returning for the 2003 season could look back with pride at all that had been accomplished during that time. The record-setting scores, the record-setting crowds, the seemingly endless chain of All-Americans, Academic All-Americans, and NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarships, the trend-setting and widely-recognized involvement in community outreach and charity programs - yes, the Bama GymNation had much to pause and reflect back over while resting on their well-deserved laurels.

Yeah, right. No sooner did the Tide get those laurel leaves in a nice pile and all fluffed up, when bunch of imps showed up to scatter them to the four winds. And a wide-eyed, sunshine-after-a-rain, girls-just-gotta-have-fun bunch of talented imps they have turned out to be, too. Of course I'm talking about the 2003 freshman class.

One of the fascinating features of college athletics is the 'ebb and flow' of it all. Just about the time your favorite team rounds into shape, they all graduate. The next thing you know, a bunch of freshmen are milling around, bumping into each other. You can't see any possible way they can pick up the slack. And they don't, really, it's all a lot more complicated than that - complicated and interesting.

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posted on Thursday, June 24, 2004

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Alabama gymnast, Jeana Rice, the 2004 NCAA All-Around Champion, has been named the 2003-04 Roy F. Kramer Female Athlete of the Year by a vote of the Southeastern Conference's athletics directors. Arkansas trackster Alistair Cragg earned the men's award.

"I am extremely excited for Jeana," Alabama head gymnastics coach Sarah Patterson said. "This is an incredible honor, especially considering the level of competition in the Southeastern Conference. To be judged the best athlete in the nation's top conference says volumes about the kind of season and career Jeana has had. She has been consistently spectacular throughout her career, and this is a testament to all she has achieved."

This season, Jeana Rice earned a postseason 'triple crown', winning the all-around at the SEC Championships, the NCAA West Region Championships and the NCAA Championships. She also earned the Honda Award for Gymnastics denoting the nation's best gymnast. She is the fifth Alabama gymnast to win the Honda since 1985.

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posted on Friday, June 18, 2004

Senior gymnast Stephanie Kite of the University of Alabama, one of eight repeat selections on the first team, heads the 2003-04 Academic All-America® Women's At-Large team announced today by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

The Women's At-Large program for the Academic All-America program includes the sports of bowling, crew, fencing, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, ice hockey, lacrosse, rifle, skiing, swimming, tennis and water polo.

"Stephanie has again made the University of Alabama and the Crimson Tide gymnastics family very proud," head gymnastics coach Sarah Patterson said. "It is one thing for her teammates and coaches to know the effort and dedication that went into all she has accomplished, but it is even more gratifying when that effort, and its results, are recognized on a national level."

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posted on Wednesday, June 16, 2004

by David Patterson

The Friday before our annual Ride of Love for the children of Camp Smile-A-Mile, I felt great, knowing what awaited me on Monday, June 14. In 2002, I joined Stephanie Wilkins on the ride she began the previous year. Last year we ended up with 13 riders and I was thrilled to know that our group had grown to over 40 riders this year. As in the past, the ride exists to benefit children that have been forced to deal with the horrors of cancer. My training had gone well, and I had put in more miles this year than ever before in preparing the ride. I was also looking forward to riding with coach Bryan Raschilla, former gymnasts Whitney Morgan and Kristin Sterner, as well as our team doctor, Jimmy Robinson.

Then, on the Saturday before the ride, I woke up and found myself with a sore throat, congestion, and a hacking cough. I did not leave the house on Saturday or Sunday, trying to conserve my energy. Monday morning, the day of the ride, I felt a little bit better, and was determined to give the ride my best, knowing that these children had faced far worse days in their lives. Sarah and some friends that came to see us off were obviously worried about me. David Truhett, our Sunday school teacher, sent an emergency email to those in our class requesting their prayers to help me through the day.

The day was overcast and we experienced some showers, but the sun and the heat never became a problem, and for that I was grateful. My struggles started just prior to lunch. When going up hills, my right leg was on the verge of cramping and I had developed a loud wheezing when trying to take deep breaths. On the steeper hills, I started using my right arm to push my leg down to try to take some of the pressure off and prevent a full fledged cramp from locking my leg up. I had experienced severe cramping once several years ago and I knew if it happened, I would not be able to keep up with the group.

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More photos from Camp Smile-A-Mile!

Here are a few of the Photos:
(Click on a thumbnail to view a full size picture)

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A tired David Patterson gets a hug from Sarah
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CampSAMers and staff go to greet the Riders

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posted on Monday, June 14, 2004

More than 40 riders left the parking lot of the Tuscaloosa IHOP this morning at 6 a.m. to make the one-day, 150-mile trek to Camp Smile-A-Mile located at Children's Harbor in Alexander City, Ala.

The "Ride of Love" raises money for Camp SAM, an organization that provides children with cancer the opportunity to participate in the summer camp experience. The Ride will wind through 6 counties - Tuscaloosa, Bibb, Chilton, Coosa, Tallapoosa, and Elmore - over all the hills and valley's in between.

And among those 45 riders there will be several with ties to the Alabama Gymnastics program, chief among them is assistant head coach David Patterson. This will be Patterson's third year participating in the Ride, which has raised nearly $70,000 in its first three years of existence. The Ride, in its fourth year, is the brainchild of Stephanie Wilkins, the gymnastics team's nutritionist and a counselor and board member of Camp SAM. Wilkins made the first ride solo in 2001. The next year she was joined by Patterson, himself a cancer survivor. Last year the duo was joined by several more riders. Each year the Ride has raised more money than the year before. The goal in 2004 is $40,000.

We've got a photo album for the event!

Here are a few of the Photos:
(Click on a thumbnail to view a full size picture)

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SarahDavidJordanPatterson

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posted on Friday, June 11, 2004

There are many days, especially after mid-April when the collegiate season ends, that David Patterson, assistant head coach of the University Alabama's four-time NCAA Champions gymnastics squad, rides his bicycle farther than most people in Tuscaloosa will drive their cars in a week.

These aren't idle rides through the country side. Patterson is a man with a mission, fitting long training hours into an already packed schedule so that he will be ready for the annual "Ride of Love", a one-day, 150-mile trek through Alabama which raises money for Camp Smile-A-Mile. Camp SAM provides children with cancer the opportunity to participate in the summer camp experience.

The 2004 Ride, which gets underway at 6 a.m. Monday, June 14, will wind through 6 counties - Tuscaloosa, Bibb, Chilton, Coosa, Tallapoosa, and Elmore - over all the hills and valley's in between.

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Coach Patterson's Chalk Talk: update

posted on Friday, June 11, 2004

We have a new "Chalk Talk" from Coach Patterson:


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USA Gymnastics Championships!

posted on Friday, June 04, 2004

Follow Alabama signee Terin Humphrey's progress at the 2004 USA Gymnastics Championships being held in Nashville, Tenn. this week.


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posted on Friday, June 04, 2004

"Sophomore Slump to Super Six sensation. . ."

"The off-season, regardless of how well the team finishes the year before, is always a time of hope and anticipation for gymnastics fans. And it is a frustrating time, as well. Unlike the more 'high profile' sports - like football and basketball, say - it is often difficult to find out what is going on with the new gymnastics recruits. The complexities of the NCAA rules and regulations concerning recruiting, even when the rules don't actually prohibit the coaches from talking about a signee, tend to make them, understandably, reluctant to do so. In fact, until the very recent advent of an internet site or two, there was virtually no place to go to get an idea about what impact incoming freshmen might have. And, unlike football (but like basketball) one or two recruits in gymnastics can make a huge difference."

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