Charlotte Drury


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Charlotte Frances Drury (born June 4, 1996) is an American trampoline gymnast. At the 2014 Minsk World Cup, she finished at the top the podium in the individual event, becoming the first American woman to win a gold medal in trampoline at a World Cup.[5] That same year, she was crowned national champion at the USA Gymnastics Championships.[6] She has been a member of the US Trampoline and Tumbling National Team since 2011,[7] pursuing her goal to compete at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

Charlotte Drury
File:Charlotte Drury 2015 USA Gymnastics Championships.jpg

At the 2015 USA Gymnastics Championships

Personal information
Full nameCharlotte Frances Drury
Nickname(s)Char, Char Char, Charlie
Country represented United States
BornJune 4, 1996 (age 28)[1]
Laguna Beach, California
HometownLaguna Niguel, California
Height5 ft 8 in (173 cm)
DisciplineTrampoline
LevelSenior International Elite
GymWorld Elite Gymnastics (WEG)
Head coach(es)Robert Null[2][3]
Former coach(es)Peter Dodd[4]

Medal record

Representing  United States
World Cup
Gold medal – first place 2014 Minsk, Belarus Individual
Bronze medal – third place 2014 Minsk, Belarus Synchro
Pan Am Gymnastics Championships
Bronze medal – third place 2014 Toronto, Canada Synchro
USA Gymnastics Championships
Bronze medal – third place 2015 Greensboro, NC Individual
Gold medal – first place 2014 Louisville, KY Individual
Silver medal – second place 2014 Louisville, KY Synchro
US T&T Championships
Silver medal – second place 2013 Kansas City, MO Individual
Gold medal – first place 2013 Kansas City, MO Synchro
Bronze medal – third place 2011 San Antonio, TX Dbl Mini
US Elite Challenge
Gold medal – first place 2015 Colorado Springs, CO Individual
Silver medal – second place 2014 Spokane, WA Individual
Gold medal – first place 2014 Spokane, WA Synchro
Silver medal – second place 2013 Frisco, TX Individual
Gold medal – first place 2013 Frisco, TX Synchro
Silver medal – second place 2012 Tulsa, OK Individual
Silver medal – second place 2012 Tulsa, OK Dbl Mini
Bronze medal – third place 2011 Fort Worth, TX Individual
Gold medal – first place 2011 Fort Worth, TX Synchro
Stars and Stripes Cup
Gold medal – first place 2014 Daytona Beach, FL Individual
Gold medal – first place 2014 Daytona Beach, FL Synchro
Silver medal – second place 2013 Daytona Beach, FL Individual
Loulé Cup
Gold medal – first place 2012 Loulé, Portugal Individual
Winter Classic
Gold medal – first place 2012 St. Petersburg, FL Dbl Mini
Frivolten Cup
Gold medal – first place 2011 Herrljunga, Sweden Dbl Mini

Early life

Drury began artistic gymnastics at age three. When she was around five years old, she started practicing at the National Gymnastics Training Center in nearby Aliso Viejo, California, where she first met fellow aspiring gymnasts McKayla Maroney and Kyla Ross. Together they worked their way up the levels, eventually completing level 10 at Gym-Max Gymnastics in Costa Mesa, California.[8]

However, when it came time to commit to continuing at the elite level, she soon realized her enthusiasm for artistic had waned. "I was in artistic gymnastics from 3 to 13," Drury said. "And it’s not that I didn’t still love artistic. I just didn’t have the same passion. I was healthy but in my heart I just didn’t have the drive for artistic gymnastics anymore. I didn’t have the passion to push myself anymore."[9]

Still needing an outlet for her energy, she was encouraged to find something else to stay busy. "That first day (after leaving artistic) I was bouncing off the walls and I remember my mom saying ‘You need to do something or you’re going to drive me insane,’" Drury recalled. That night she showed up at a trampoline class. "That first time it was like ‘this is where I’m supposed to be. This is home.’" Drury said.[9]

She began training at Team OC Gymnastics in Costa Mesa, California and within her first year was competing at level 9. In June, 2010, she participated in the Junior Olympic National Championships in Virginia Beach, Virginia. She ended up winning her age group in the double mini event with a total score of 63.500[10] and finished seventh in the individual event with a total score of 53.500.[11]

Junior career

2011

Moving gyms yet again to World Elite Gymnastics, Drury began her elite career in March at the Winter Classic in Houston, Texas. She finished eighth in the individual event with a total score of 28.975[12] and fifth in the double mini event with a total score of 61.700.[13]

In April, Drury was in Fort Worth, Texas for the US Elite Challenge. Competing for the first time in the synchronized event, she placed first with partner Deana Parris with a combined score of 121.400.[14] She also placed third in the individual event with a total score of 49.110[15] and finished fifteenth in the double mini event with a total score of 32.100.[16]

In June, Drury was in Europe where she claimed her first title outside the United States. Competing at the 28th International Frivolten Cup in Herrljunga, Sweden, she won the double mini event with a total score of 63.900.[17] She also finished eighteenth in the individual event with a total score of 64.550.[18]

In July, Drury competed at the US T&T Championships in San Antonio, Texas. She finished twenty-fifth in the individual event with a total score of 65.200,[19] fourth in the synchronized event alongside Parris with a combined score of 99.200[20] and third in the double mini event with a total score of 63.700.[21]

2012

In February, Drury added to her double mini titles by winning the event at the Winter Classic in St. Petersburg, Florida with a total score of 129.300.[22] She also finished seventh in the individual event with a total score of 41.490.[23]

In March, she competed at the US Elite Challenge in Tulsa, Oklahoma, placing second in both the individual and double mini events with total scores of 47.990[24] and 128.900[25] respectively. In the synchronized event she finished fourth with new partner Maggie Gallagher with a combined score of 113.100.[26]

In May, Drury was in Cleveland, Ohio for the Stars and Stripes Cup. Competing in all three events, she finished seventh in individual with a total score of 38.065[27] and fifth in double mini with a total score of 119.700.[28] Paired again with Gallagher, they finished sixth with a combined score of 106.700[29] in synchronized.

In July, Drury competed at the US T&T Championships in Long Beach, California. This time the Drury/Gallagher duo finished fourth in the synchronized event with a combined score of 114.700,[30] while in the individual event she finished nineteenth with a total score of 47.515.[31]

Loulé, Portugal in September was the setting for Drury's last competition of the year and another international victory. At the 7th International Loulé Cup, she won the individual event with a total score of 138.690.[32]

Senior career

2013

In May, Drury competed at the US Elite Challenge in Frisco, Texas. Another partner change saw her winning the synchronized event with Texas native Shaylee Dunavin with a combined score of 77.700.[33] She also placed second in the individual event with a total score of 147.948.[34]

In July, Drury matched her performance from May by placing first and second in the synchronized and individual events respectively, at the US T&T Championships in Kansas City, Missouri. Her scores were 121.000[35] in synchronized and 144.000[36] in individual. At the end of the month she was off to Cali, Colombia for the World Games. However, after a routine examination by the International Federation of Gymnastics, the venue was deemed not meeting minimum safety requirements and therefore USA Gymnastics decided its athletes should not compete.[4]

In August, Drury was in Daytona Beach, Florida to take part in the Stars and Stripes Cup. Competing only in the individual event, she placed second with a total score of 184.485.[37]

In November, Drury participated in her first World Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria where she and Dunavin qualified for the synchronized finals in third-place. During their final routine, Dunavin traveled after the first skill and the routine was interrupted, leaving them in seventh-place with a combined score of 9.300.[38] In the individual event Drury reached the semi-finals with a total score of 52.535,[39] garnering her a twelfth-place finish.

2014

In May, Drury returned to the Stars and Stripes Cup in Daytona Beach, Florida. She won both the individual and synchronized events, again partnered with Dunavin. Their combined score was 41.900,[40] while Drury herself netted a total score of 52.670[41] in the individual event.

In June, Drury competed at the US Elite Challenge in Spokane, Washington. This time jumping with Hayley Butcher, they won the synchronized event with a combined score of 94.000.[42] Butcher went on to win the individual event, while Drury placed second with a total score of 137.690.[43] At the end of the month Drury competed internationally at the 48th Nissen Cup in Arosa, Switzerland where she finished fourteenth in the preliminary round with a total score of 96.160.[44]

Drury was back in the United States in July for the USA Gymnastics Championships in Louisville, Kentucky. Reunited with Dunavin, the pair placed second in the synchronized event with a combined score of 118.200,[45] less than a point behind first. Drury claimed the individual national championship with a total score of 201.180,[46] while Dunavin placed second.

In August, Drury represented her country at the Pan American Gymnastics Championships in Toronto, Canada. Competing in the individual event she finished twentieth in the preliminary round with a total score of 57.155.[47] In the synchronized event with Dunavin, they placed third with a combined score of 43.600.[48] Composed of Drury, Dunavin and Clare Johnson, Team USA finished fifth overall with a combined score of 114.290.[49]

File:Charlotte Drury 2014 Minsk World Cup.jpg
Drury wins gold and bronze at the 2014 Minsk World Cup

Drury's next stop was Belarus for the Minsk World Cup in September. After a preliminary round score of 95.870,[50] Drury qualified for the eight-person finals with less than half a point to spare. Canadian Rosie MacLennan, the reigning World and Olympic champion at the time, was in first with a score of 102.225. Renowned for her clean lines and long time of flight, Drury executed a near flawless performance, catapulting her to the top of the leaderboard and capturing the first women's gold medal for an American trampolinist at a World Cup with a total score of 54.430.[51] She also won bronze with Dunavin in the synchronized event, missing silver by three-tenths of a point with a combined score of 44.400.[52]

The year came to a close in November at the World Championships in Daytona Beach, Florida. Drury made it to the semi-finals in the individual event, finishing thirteenth with a total score of 51.560[53] and finished just out of the medals with Dunavin in the synchronized event in fourth with a combined score of 46.400.[54]

2015

Drury began her season in April with a first-place performance at the US Elite Challenge in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Her total score of 152.405[55] in the individual event had her placing ahead of previous Pan Am teammates Johnson and Dunavin.

Greensboro, North Carolina was host to the USA Gymnastics Championships in June, where Drury was defending national champion. Despite competing with an injury, she placed third in the individual event with a total score of 142.815.[56]

Drury travelled to Toronto, Canada in July for the quadrennial Pan American Games. Offering a multitude of events over various disciplines, the Games hosted only the individual event in trampoline, where she finished fifth with a total score of 50.190.[57]

In September, Drury was in Spain for the Valladolid World Cup. She finished the preliminary round of the individual event in eleventh-place with a total score of 97.495.[58] At this event a maximum of two athletes per country were eligible to advance to the final round, leaving Drury just outside of qualifying for the eight-person finals by 0.020.

Another World Cup competition followed in October, in Mouilleron-le-Captif, France. In the individual event Drury finished twenty-fourth in the qualification round with a total score of 97.365.[59] Competing in the synchronized event for the first time all year, Drury joined up with long-time partner Shaylee Dunvavin to finish eighth in the qualification round with a combined score of 80.900.[60] However, only one pair per country was eligible for eight-team finals, which was taken by teammates Nicole Ashinger and Clare Johnson, who qualified in fourth-place with a combined score of 83.200.

Drury travelled to Frankfurt, Germany at the end of November for a brief training camp and opportunity to acclimate before arriving in Odense, Denmark for the World Championships. This was the first of two qualifiers for the 2016 Summer Olympics, where the top eight competitors would automatically earn their nation a quota place. Having the fifth best score in the optional routine, along with the second highest time of flight, Drury easily qualified for the individual event semi-finals in ninth-place overall with a total score of 100.825.[61] In the semi-final round, she finished with a total score of 53.730,[62] missing the finals by less than half a point. Her eleventh-place finish secured a berth to the Pre-Olympic Test Event in April, 2016, where the United States will have a second chance to qualify for Rio.[63]

2016

On January 20, 2016 USA Gymnastics named Drury to the US trampoline team for the 2016 Pacific Rim Gymnastics Championships in Everett, Washington April 8-10, 2016.[64]

Competitive history

Year Event TR SY DM
2011 Winter Classic (junior) 8 5
US Elite Challenge (junior) 3rd 1st 15
Frivolten Cup (junior) 18 1st
US T&T Championships (junior) 25 4 3rd
2012 Winter Classic (junior) 7 1st
US Elite Challenge (junior) 2nd 4 2nd
Stars and Stripes Cup (junior) 7 6 5
US T&T Championships (junior) 19 4
Loulé Cup (junior) 1st
2013 US Elite Challenge 2nd 1st
US T&T Championships 2nd 1st
Stars and Strips Cup 2nd
World Championships 12 7
2014 Stars and Stripes Cup 1st 1st
US Elite Challenge 2nd 1st
Nissen World Cup 14
USA Gymnastics Championships 1st 2nd
Pan American Gymnastics Championships 20 3rd
Minsk World Cup 1st 3rd
World Championships 13 4
2015 US Elite Challenge 1st
USA Gymnastics Championships 3rd
Pan American Games 5
Valladolid World Cup 11
Mouilleron-le-Captif World Cup 24 8
World Championships 11

TR=Individual SY=Synchronized DM=Double Mini

Personal life

Drury was born in Laguna Beach, California, to Michael and Ann Drury. She has two older siblings: brother James and sister Emma; and a younger sister Olivia. She graduated from Dana Hills High School in Dana Point, California in 2014 and now attends Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo, California studying International Relations with a focus on Political Science. Her hobbies include photography, writing, hiking and swimming.[1]

In addition to her national and international successes as a gymnast, Drury has drawn interest from a number of advertisers. She has done promotional spots for footwear company Skechers[65] and apparel company Vooray.[66][67]

References

  1. ^ a b "USOC Athlete Profile".
  2. ^ "FIG Athlete Profile".
  3. ^ "Zoominfo Profile".
  4. ^ a b "Laguna Niguel Trampoline Athlete a Fearless Flier".
  5. ^ "Drury Wins Trampoline Gold at Minsk World Cup".
  6. ^ "Six Senior U.S. Titles Won at 2014 USA Gymnastics Championships".
  7. ^ "US T&T Past National Teams".
  8. ^ "Maroney, Ross and Drury: The Gymnastics Fairy Tale".
  9. ^ a b "Drury's Turn in the Spotlight".
  10. ^ "2010 JO Championships Double Mini Finals" (PDF).
  11. ^ "2010 JO Championships Trampoline Finals".
  12. ^ "2011 Winter Classic Trampoline Finals".
  13. ^ "2011 Winter Classic Double Mini Finals".
  14. ^ "2011 US Elite Challenge Synchronized Finals".
  15. ^ "2011 US Elite Challenge Trampoline Finals".
  16. ^ "2011 US Elite Challenge Double Mini Finals".
  17. ^ "28th International Frivolten Double Mini Finals" (PDF).
  18. ^ "28th International Frivolten Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  19. ^ "2011 US T&T Championships Trampoline Finals".
  20. ^ "2011 US T&T Championships Synchronized Finals".
  21. ^ "2011 US T&T Championships Double Mini Finals".
  22. ^ "2012 Winter Classic Double Mini Finals".
  23. ^ "2012 Winter Classic Trampoline Finals".
  24. ^ "2012 US Elite Challenge Trampoline Finals".
  25. ^ "2012 US Elite Challenge Double Mini Finals".
  26. ^ "2012 US Elite Challenge Synchronized Finals".
  27. ^ "2012 Stars and Stripes Cup Trampoline Finals".
  28. ^ "2012 Stars and Stripes Cup Double Mini Finals".
  29. ^ "2012 Stars and Stripes Cup Synchronized Finals".
  30. ^ "2012 US T&T Championships Synchronized Finals".
  31. ^ "2012 US T&T Championships Trampoline Finals".
  32. ^ "7th International Loulé Cup Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  33. ^ "2013 US Elite Challenge Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  34. ^ "2013 US Elite Challenge Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  35. ^ "2013 US T&T Championships Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  36. ^ "2013 US T&T Championships Individual Finals" (PDF).
  37. ^ "2013 Stars and Stripes Cup Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  38. ^ "2013 World Championships Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  39. ^ "2013 World Championships Trampoline Semi-Finals" (PDF).
  40. ^ "2014 Stars and Stripes Cup Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  41. ^ "2014 Stars and Stripes Cup Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  42. ^ "2014 US Elite Challenge Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  43. ^ "2014 US Elite Challenge Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  44. ^ "48th Nissen Cup Results" (PDF).
  45. ^ "2014 USA Gymnastics Championships Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  46. ^ "2014 USA Gymnastics Championships Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  47. ^ "2014 Pan American Gymnastics Championships Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  48. ^ "2014 Pan American Gymnastics Championships Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  49. ^ "2014 Pan American Gymnastics Championships Team Finals" (PDF).
  50. ^ "2014 Minsk World Cup Trampoline Preliminaries".
  51. ^ "2014 Minsk World Cup Trampoline Finals".
  52. ^ "2014 Minsk World Cup Synchronized Finals".
  53. ^ "2014 World Championships Trampoline Semi-Finals" (PDF).
  54. ^ "2014 World Championships Synchronized Finals" (PDF).
  55. ^ "2015 US Elite Challenge Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  56. ^ "2015 USA Gymnastics Championships Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  57. ^ "2015 Pan Am Games Trampoline Finals" (PDF).
  58. ^ "2015 Valladolid World Cup Results".
  59. ^ "2015 Mouilleron-le-Captif World Cup Trampoline Qualification Results" (PDF).
  60. ^ "2015 Mouilleron-le-Captif World Cup Synchronized Qualification Results" (PDF).
  61. ^ "2015 World Championships Trampoline Qualification Results" (PDF).
  62. ^ "2015 World Championships Trampoline Semi-Finals" (PDF).
  63. ^ "Trampoline - Qualification Procedure for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games".
  64. ^ "USA Gymnastics Names U.S. Trampoline Team for 2016 Pacific Rim Championships".
  65. ^ https://twitter.com/charlotte_drury/status/368584155526725632
  66. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7J7tUnQJbg
  67. ^ https://instagram.com/p/7c8D6-tbza/