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Elfi Schlegel

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Full name
  
Elfi Schlegel-Dunn

Weight
  
33 kg

Country represented
  
Name
  
Elfi Schlegel

Disciplines
  
Artistic gymnastics

Height
  
1.38 m


Elfi Schlegel httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages23045532941b

Born
  
17 May 1964 (age 59) Toronto, Ontario, Canada (
1964-05-17
)

Books
  
The Gymnastics Book: The Young Performer's Guide to Gymnastics

Profiles

Elfi schlegel fx 1984


Elfi Schlegel-Dunn (born 17 May 1964), née Elfi Schlegel, is a sportscaster for NBC Sports and a former college and national champion gymnast from Canada.

Contents

Elfi Schlegel Elfi SchlegelDunn takes a relaxed approach to teaching movement

8th team can elfi schlegel fx 1978 world gymnastics championships 9 50


Early years

Elfi Schlegel ARCHIVED Image Display Canadian Olympians Library and Archives

Schlegel was born in Toronto, Ontario, to parents Peter and Vlasta Schlegel, immigrants from Switzerland. Growing up in the Toronto suburb of Etobicoke, she started gymnastics at the age of 7. She attended Silverthorn Collegiate Institute in Toronto, and graduated with her diploma after her grade twelve year—a year early in the (then) thirteen-year Ontario education system.

International career

Elfi Schlegel Canadian athletes remember sadly 1980 Olympic boycott Toronto Star

Schlegel established herself as one of the best gymnasts in Canadian history when she won a gold medal in the all-around and team competitions in gymnastics at the 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Alberta. At the 1979 Pan American Games in San Juan, Puerto Rico, she won a bronze medal as the third-best gymnast in the games, two silver medals for the uneven bars and vault, and a gold medal as a member of the first-place Canadian team. She also won a bronze medal in the vault at the 1980 World Cup in Toronto, the first-ever World Cup medal for a Canadian.

Elfi Schlegel The Gymnastics Book The Young Performers Guide to Gymnastics YouTube

She was selected as a member of the Canadian national team for the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Russia, but was unable to participate when Canada joined the United States–led boycott of the Moscow Games in protest of the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union. (Russia was then the dominant constituent republic of the Soviet Union.)

College career

Elfi Schlegel Elfi Schlegel Etobicoke Sports Hall of FameEtobicoke Sports Hall

After graduation from high school, Schlegel wanted to continue to compete, but Canadian universities did not offer intercollegiate gymnastics competition or athletic scholarships. She sought and received an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where she was a member of coach Ernestine Weaver's Florida Gators women's gymnastics team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition from 1982 to 1986. As a Gator gymnast, she was a four-time individual Southeastern Conference (SEC) champion–all-around (1983), twice in the balance beam (1983, 1986), and vault (1984). The Gators qualified for the NCAA national championship tournament all four of Schlegel's years on the team, and finished third at the 1983 NCAA tournament. She received six All-American honors.

Schlegel graduated from Florida with a bachelor's degree in telecommunications production in 1986, and was inducted into the University of Florida Athletic Hall of Fame as a "Gator Great" in 1997.

Broadcasting career

She began her broadcasting career as a part-time gymnastics commentator for CTV, moved to CBC for the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Korea, and has been with NBC Sports as an Olympic broadcaster since 1992. The 2012 Summer Olympics was her tenth Olympics as a broadcaster. In 2000 and 2004, she served as analyst for both artistic and rhythmic gymnastics and trampoline reporter in Sydney and Athens. She has served as a reporter for curling events in the 2002, 2006, and 2010 Winter Olympics. She has also covered skiing and major Horse Racing events, including the Breeders Cup, for NBC Sports from 1993 to 1999.

Personal

Schlegel is married to Marc Dunn, a former Olympian who represented Canada in beach volleyball at the 1996 Summer Olympics. They have three children and live in Toronto.

References

Elfi Schlegel Wikipedia