Neil Thomas (gymnast)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born (1968-04-06) 6 April 1968 (age 58)
Chirk, Wrexham, Wales
Height162 cm (5 ft 4 in)
Country
represented
Neil Thomas
Born (1968-04-06) 6 April 1968 (age 58)
Chirk, Wrexham, Wales
Height162 cm (5 ft 4 in)
Gymnastics career
DisciplineMen's artistic gymnastics
Country
represented
ClubLiverpool Gymnastics Club
Medal record
Artistic gymnastics
Representing  Great Britain
World Championships
Silver medal – second place1993 BirminghamFloor
Silver medal – second place1994 BrisbaneFloor
Representing  England
Commonwealth Games
Gold medal – first place1990 AucklandFloor
Silver medal – second place1990 AucklandTeam
Gold medal – first place1994 VictoriaAll-Around
Gold medal – first place1994 VictoriaFloor
Bronze medal – third place1994 VictoriaVault

Neil Roderick Thomas MBE (born 6 April 1968) is a retired English artistic gymnast who experienced most of his success in the floor exercises. An acknowledged inspiration to the golden generation of British gymnasts from 2004 onwards, and a pathfinder for his national programme, he was former world silver medalist and Commonwealth Games Champion and one of the most successful British gymnasts in the history of the sport.

Born in Chirk, Wrexham in Wales on 6 April 1968, Thomas was noteworthy as a successful gymnast at world and international level at a time when British gymnastics generally did not figure at that level, and is regarded as an important torchbearer in the sport for the later successes of Beth Tweddle and Louis Smith which in turn ignited, and helped secure funding for, the revolution in British gymnastics in the 2010s that saw Great Britain become a leading nation in the sport.

Winner of three gold medals spanning two Commonwealth Games, Thomas also added a world silver medal on the floor in 1993, and repeating the feat in 1994. he finished 20th at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992. Representing England he won a Commonwealth gold medal on the floor and a silver in the team competition in Auckland, New Zealand.[1][2]

He also won the vault bronze medal at European Championships in 1990. In 1993 he won Great Britain's first World Championship medal in Artistic Gymnastics (silver) 1993. A year later he won a gold medal on floor and became All-around champion at the 1994 Commonwealth Games, and also won the silver medal on floor at World Championships in Brisbane.[3]

Post-retirement and personal life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI