Gabby Douglas shatters glass ceiling with historic win

LONDON (AP) — Gabby Douglas believed two years ago, when she convinced her mother to let her move halfway across the country.
Martha Karolyi became a convert over the winter, when the bubbly teenager with the electric smile developed the tenacity required to be a champion.
Under the brightest lights, on the biggest stage, that belief shattered a glass ceiling.
Even if the first African-American to win an Olympic all-around title didn't quite realize it.
"I kind of forgot about that," Douglas said with a laugh.
Don't worry, Gabby, the world is going to have fun reminding you.
Douglas soared her way into history Thursday night, leading the whole way to climb a mountain paved by Ron Galimore, Dominique Dawes and a handful of others who showed the sport isn't just for the white or the privileged.
"How inspiring is that?" said Natalie Hawkins, the woman who allowed her then 14-year-old "baby" daughter to move from Virginia to Iowa in 2010 after Douglas convinced her that she was good enough to compete at the top.
She didn't have to wait long to find out.
Douglas was still trying to get used to the feeling of having her second gold medal in three days around her neck when Oprah chimed in.
"OMG I'm so THRILLED for Gabby. Flowing happy tears!!" Winfrey posted on Twitter.
Karolyi, the U.S. women's team coordinator called it "history made" while Liang Chow, the coach who channeled Douglas' precocious talent, believes his star pupil is "ready to move onto higher things."
She certainly looked like it on a flawless night in which Douglas grabbed the gold during her first event and never let silver medalist Viktoria Komova of Russia come close to wrenching it from her hands.
Explosive on vault and exquisite on uneven bars, Douglas never trailed. Though she sealed the third straight women's all-around title for an American with a floor routine that delighted the O2 Arena crowd, it was her pretty set on beam that provided the difference.
The event is a 90-second test of nerves, a twisting, turning ballet on a 4-inch slab of wood 4 feet off the ground. And for months, Douglas struggled to find a rhythm on it.
She led the national championships after the first day, only to hop off the beam moments into her first rotation of the finals, opening the door for world champion and friendly rival Jordyn Wieber to claim the title.
Wieber watched the Olympic finals from 20 rows up in the stands with the rest of Team USA after failing to make it out of qualifying. Teammate Aly Raisman never really recovered from a workmanlike set on bars and an uncharacteristic wobble on beam.
Raisman ended up tying with Russia's Aliya Mustafina for third, but the steely Russian earned the bronze on a tiebreaker, a wrenching setback for the American captain, an integral part of the group that won the first U.S. team gold in 16 years on Tuesday.
There were no such technicalities involved with Douglas, not even on the beam. She dazzled with a sparkling 15.5, never wavering, never wobbling, never losing focus.
This was the same girl who was so out of sorts when the team arrived in London a couple of weeks ago that Karolyi ordered Chow to give her a little pep talk?
Chow's message that day wasn't complicated. He urged Douglas to ignore the pain in her leg from a minor muscle strain and get down to business.
"He just said that everyone has pain, so just go out there and you know, why are you focused on that?" Douglas said. "He said, 'You're at the Olympics, and put that behind you, and, if you don't push it now you don't have a chance, you'll regret it.'"
She didn't. Not after winning her mother over with the idea her future lay in Iowa with Chow instead of her family's home in Virginia Beach. Not after those long days in the gym when she would ask herself, "Why do I have to do this?" only to go and do it anyway.
And not after a little boost from Karolyi. The legendary coach made Douglas a surprising choice for the American Cup in New York in March. At the time, Karolyi said she just wanted Douglas to get some needed experience against a talented field.
But she knew.
She'd known for months.
She'd seen it during the training camps at the Karolyi Ranch north of Houston, where Douglas started to showcase the world-class talent Chow had spent a year unlocking.
Douglas went and won the whole thing that day at Madison Square Garden as an alternate, the asterisk next to her name officially making her ineligible for the title actually won by Wieber.
Still, the message had been sent. Douglas was ready.
"I foresee it," Karolyi said. "She charged every single competition she did better and better."
By then, Douglas' mom was won over. She raised four kids largely on her own, and tearfully made the decision to let her youngest train with Chow. She doubted herself but looked at the list of "pros" and "cons" her eldest daughter wrote up, and understood go she had to let go. Just a little.
Even if it hurt.
"I must have lost my marbles," Hawkins said. "But she wanted this more than anything."
And Douglas worked like it. Chow believes she just needed time to grow up. She's just 16.
Funny, she certainly looked all grown up on Thursday night. On a night that would turn most girls her age to tears, Douglas smiled. She laughed. She acted as if she expected to be here all along.
"She demonstrated she is an Olympic champion," Chow said.
One that could have a major influence on her sport.
Unlike some of her peers, Douglas looks like she's having fun out there. There is no drama when she competes, just joy. She has an energy that will make advertising executives swoon and likely turn her into a millionaire in the near future.
But this was never about money. It wasn't even about breaking down barriers. It was simply about challenging herself.
She never doubted she could be the best. Even when she was the only one who thought so.
"I wanted to seize the moment," she said.
History was just a bonus.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Really tired of the far left media pushing race. It is such hypocrisy. They sit there and decry "it isn't about race" and "it shouldn't matter what color you are and "TREAT PEOPLE EQUALLY" and "everyone is supposed to be the same" and "quit using race as an excuse"....and yet then we read a story like this, where race IS made the issue!!! You go girl! Gabby didn't become the 'first black girl to win the competition'--she is a super AMERICAN ATHLETE and won the competition. And WAY TO GO GABBY----THAT should be the cry here--THAT should be the claim. THAT should be what we're proud of. MAN what hypocrisy. Let the girl have her day in the sun because of WHAT SHE ACCOMPLISHED-----not because she's the first BLACK girl to accomplish it. Geez!
 @oldarmysoldier Are you black?  No?  Then you wouldn't understand.  It is definitely NEWS that Gabby was the first black person to make such an accomplishment.  In more ways than one... The only one playing the race card today, is you.  Believe that.
Why is the world going to "have fun reminding her"? She didn't even put her win in that context. Why should we?
 @keeper Because it's a great thing and she's proud of it.
She's american NOT african-american. Why do they always have to saddle people with those labels?
Great job Gabby!!!!!
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Take the letters in Gabby's last name and twist them around and it spells: USA GOLD
It was pure destiny. Atta girl. The country is proud of you!
One of the most fun performances to watch in Olympic history. She is a great role model for little girls. I have a jock of a daughter who plays basketball and fastpitch and has never been interrested in gymnastics and has just become the sports biggest fan! I hope the endorsement role in, this family deserves it!
Congrats on the win. Will have to wait for the day that the winners race will be so commonplace that it isn't mentioned. I'd like to think that Miss Douglas' race had nothing to do with her winning, rather the hard work she put in...
 @boeman IF you thought her race had anything to do with it, you weren't watching. She was amazing! She must have been 20 feet in the air on those uneven bars!Â
 @whoareyou I never said I thought her race had anything to do with her winning. I am sure she deserved to win. It is just a shame that the media had to go to the race thing in their article. She won because of the work she put in, pure and simple as that. Nobody said anything about the race of other winners because it isn't a factor. She is a champion, period.
 @boeman Anyone who watched her performance and knows anything at all about gymnastics knows she deserved to win. Of course there are going to be those out there who are going to insist otherwise. Unfortunately we live in a world where some people ONLY see Race and to them they will never accept the fact that she won fair and square. Thankfully evolution is seeing to it that there are less and less of their kind every year.
 @Petwlkr  @boeman She was rock solid steady in all her routines. We've been watching her the last 2 yrs when she could be unreliable, bit of a mess at times, but when she went  to the Olympics she delivered when it counted the most. Team Gold, and then the all around event. Can't wait to see what happens this Sunday. She's incredible period, race not even an issue really.
@whoareyou
whoareyou So then you saw how they scored the Russians a tad higher than they should have in some cases. I almost felt bad for anyone going up against the flying squirrel! Her floor routine is as infectious of anyone's I ever seen. LIVE the energy is kinetic. Wish I could have seen the Olympics live in person... : '-/
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 @whoareyou She is a tiny little powder keg. Saw her in San Jose when they announced the Olympic team, the adage tiny but mighty comes to mind. They are terrific role models and tougher than any football player I've ever seen.
 @alexcrowley Agreed. Watching it, nobody (including the Russian) was even close!
 @boeman The world will be a much better place when race is no longer an issue in anything.  I realize this will probably never happen but I do try to be optimistic on occasion. Â
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She really did a great job last night. Â
 @stamperzann Race wasn't an *issue*; it was/is a topic.  Don't make it an issue.
 @boeman That will be a good day...today is a step in that direction!
 @Dawgfan67 How is today a step in that direction. The article seemed to be more about the color of her skin than the fact that she put in the time and effort to become a champion. I am happy for her, she deserves all of the accolades she gets because SHE IS A CHAMPION, and she would be a champion no matter what the color of her skin is...
 @keeper @boeman @Dawgfan67  Just no hope for you guys.  I'm sure you are of the "older generation" because your posts reek of being color blind.  (literally...)  Don't act like years of oppression did not occur.  Don't act like we shouldn't celebrate this huge accomplishment for what it is... a breakthrough. Don't be blind (ignorant) to color.
 @boeman Exactly!
Sounds like she did AWESOME!
Gotta appreciate her winning and being a 1st at breaking the perennial glass ceiling. Especially when you are Gabby and you can jump and reach beyond that glass ceiling, she can vault and hit the rafters. It's incredibly impressive. Congrats Miss Douglas job well done.
 @alexcrowley Well said.
 @alexcrowley Right sentiment, wrong word. "Perennial" refers to something annual (like a flower).Â
 @keeper OK.... A perennial comes back year after year. And an annual dies every year.
 @keeper agree wordsmith, I'll replace with PERPETUAL instead. :-P
 @boeman You are ignorant.  Plain and simple.Â
 @alexcrowley  @keeper I have a hard time buying into the line that there was somebody actively working all these years to prevent blacks from winning the gold at Olympics gymnastics. That is what your are saying about the "glass ceiling". If she had not been "black" the ceiling would still be there? The BEST contestant wins every year no matter what their race is!! That is what makes them a CHAMPION!!!