Vancouver Sun

GYMNAST BECAME GLOBAL CELEBRITY

Fung captured Olympic gold in rhythmic gymnastics

- STEPHEN HUME To mark Canada’s 150th birthday, we are counting down to Canada Day with profiles of 150 noteworthy British Columbians.

The sport Lori Fung set out to master at age 13 had such a low profile that almost nobody in Canada had heard of it.

When she was done, she had rocketed from non-entity to global celebrity, asked to perform before British royalty and the Pope.

She even got a part in the movie Catwoman.

Born in Vancouver on Feb. 21, 1963, Fung started training in rhythmic gymnastics in 1976 with coach Mall Vesik after a sharpeyed elementary school teacher noticed her natural talent and introduced them.

Rhythmic gymnastics began in Scandinavi­a in the early 19th century. It emphasizes graceful elements of ballet, muscular gymnastics, creative dance and the simultaneo­us manipulati­on of ropes, hoops, balls, clubs and ribbons. It demands enormous flexibilit­y, powerful jumping skills, agility, strength and great handeye coordinati­on.

Fung seemed born to the discipline. Still, she trained six hours a day except for weekends, when she cut back to three hours. She finished high school by correspond­ence so she could hone routines and increase her physical conditioni­ng without interrupti­on.

Between 1977 and 1984, she won every B.C. championsh­ip. She was national champion at 19. She won that crown in four of the next five years.

Her performanc­es demonstrat­ed, says one of her citations, “incredible strength, poise, and grace with the ball, hoop, ribbon and clubs.” Her meticulous­ly crafted routines, performed with elegance, grace and passion, impressed judges.

In 1984, she overwhelme­d the favourite from gymnastics powerhouse Romania with a nearflawle­ss performanc­e that won her a gold medal at the Los Angeles Olympics.

Bad luck struck in 1987 as she prepared for the world championsh­ip in Bulgaria. A sharp abdominal pain turned out to be not an injury but appendicit­is. She had surgery and could not compete.

She was considered a medal prospect in the 1988 Olympics, but contracted a debilitati­ng virus and developed painful tendinitis in her feet and retired from competitio­n.

Fung became a national team coach for Canada, co-owner of a Vancouver gymnastics club, and still coaches other athletes outside of gymnastics — helping skaters improve flexibilit­y, for example.

She was so good that she was already a member of the Order of Canada and inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame three years before she retired.

Fung was made a member of the Order of B.C. in 1990 and inducted into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame in 2004.

 ??  ?? Vancouver’s Lori Fung brought artistic gymnastics into the Canadian consciousn­ess, winning the gold medal at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
Vancouver’s Lori Fung brought artistic gymnastics into the Canadian consciousn­ess, winning the gold medal at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

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