Luke Stannard

American gymnast

Robert Luke Stannard is an American gymnast. He competed for Illinois from 2007 to 2010. In 2009, he won the gold medal on pommel horse at the National championships. In 2010, he placed fourth at NCAA championships on pommel horse and thus earned all-American honors. That year, he was awarded the Nissen-Emery, the gymnastics version of the Heisman.[1][2]

After college, Stannard continued training at Illinois for another year, working as an assistant for Justin Spring. He later moved to the US Olympic Training Center, but back injuries hampered him and he eventually quit the sport. After a nine-month layoff, he decided to try again. He returned to Illinois to train. A finger ligament injury affected him at the 2013 Winter Cup meet and he did not make the National Team. As of February 2013, he was uncertain if he would continue in gymnastics.[3]

Stannard is unusually tall for a gymnast. His long, thin body type (6–1, 170#) is suited for pommel horse, which is his best event. However, his favorite event is floor exercise.[3][4][5]

References

  1. ^ Luke Stannard (2013-08-19). "Luke Stannard Bio". Fightingillini.Com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-10. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  2. ^ "USA Gymnastics | Luke Stannard wins 2010 Nissen-Emery Award". Usagym.org. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  3. ^ a b "Luke Stannard back to train with coach Justin Spring - The Daily Illini : Men's Gymnastics". The Daily Illini. 2013-02-14. Archived from the original on 2013-07-24. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  4. ^ "Luke Stannard: Gymnastics 101". Fightingillini.Com. 2008-02-27. Archived from the original on 2013-04-10. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  5. ^ "Illinois". Fightingillini.Com. Archived from the original on 2013-08-10. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
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Nissen-Emery Award
  • 1966: James Curzi
  • 1967: Steve Cohen
  • 1968: Dave Thor
  • 1969: Robert Emery
  • 1970: Pete Difurio
  • 1971: Brent Simmons
  • 1972: Tom Lindner
  • 1973: John Crosby Jr.
  • 1974: Steve Hug
  • 1975: Jay Whelan
  • 1976: Gene Whelan
  • 1977: Peter Kormann
  • 1978: Tim LaFleur
  • 1979: Kurt Thomas
  • 1980: Mario McCutcheon
  • 1981: Bart Conner
  • 1982: Jim Hartung
  • 1983: Peter Vidmar
  • 1984: Roy Palassou
  • 1985: Matt Arnot
  • 1986: Wes Suter
  • 1987: Spider Maxwell
  • 1988: Tom Schlesinger
  • 1989: David Zeddies
  • 1990: Mike Racanelli
  • 1991: Jarrod Hanks
  • 1992: Scott Keswick
  • 1993: John Roethlisberger
  • 1994: Kip Simons
  • 1995: Josh Stein
  • 1996: Darren Elg
  • 1997: Blaine Wilson
  • 1998: Dan Fink
  • 1999: Todd Bishop
  • 2000: Jeff LaVallee
  • 2001: Jamie Natalie
  • 2002: Justin Toman
  • 2003: Daniel Furney
  • 2004: Dan Gill
  • 2005: Guillermo Alvarez
  • 2006: Justin Spring
  • 2007: Matt Cohen
  • 2008: Jonathan Horton
  • 2009: Casey Sandy
  • 2010: Luke Stannard
  • 2011: Steven Legendre
  • 2012: Paul Ruggeri
  • 2013: Eddie Penev
  • 2014: Sam Mikulak
  • 2015: Ellis Mannon
  • 2016: Jesse Glenn
  • 2017: Akash Modi
  • 2018: Sean Melton
  • 2019: Yul Moldauer
  • 2020: Stephen Nedoroscik
  • 2021: Shane Wiskus
  • 2022: Brody Malone
  • 2023: Paul Juda
  • 2024: Colt Walker


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