Description
Philadelphia Phillies Roy Halladay celebrates his no hitter with catcher Carlos Ruiz against the Reds October 2010
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Philadelphia Phillies Roy Halladay pitches a no hitter against the Reds
Philadelphia Phillies Roy Halladay celebrates his no hitter with catcher Carlos Ruiz against the Reds October 2010
Weight | N/A |
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Dimensions | N/A |
Available Sizes | 8×10 Matted, 8×10 Matted & Framed, 16×20 Matted, 16×20 Matted & Framed |
Team | 2019 Hall of Fame, Philadelphia Phillies |
At the age of 15, Tara Lipinski took home the Gold at the 1998 Nagano Olympics. She became the youngest individual Gold Medalist ever in Winter Games history. The record was previously held since 1928 by Figure Skater Sonja Henie.
Tara skated a flawless program during the Olympics, which included seven triples and her signature triple loop/triple loop jump combination. Known for her technical abilities and breaking records, Tara became the first female to land a triple loop triple loop in competition.
Leading up to the Olympics, Tara became the youngest National and World Champion, as well as the first skater to win two consecutive Grand Prix Final titles in 1997 and 1998.
Jamaica running legend, Usain Bolt, flashes his signature pose– a lightening bolt after winning the Gold Medal in the men’s 100meter event at the London Olympics. Usain set an Olympic record of 9.63 seconds.
USA runner, Sanya Richards-Ross, wins the women’s 400Meter event. while her partner Trotter earns a bronze medal.
Dominique Moceanu was expected to be a major medal threat at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. However, following the 1996 U.S. Nationals, where she placed third in the all-around, she was diagnosed with a stress fracture in her right tibia.Her injury forced her to sit out the Olympic Trials, and she was petitioned onto the team on the strength of her Nationals scores.
At the Olympics, still struggling with her injury and sporting a heavily bandaged leg, Moceanu contributed to the team gold medal by turning in strong performances, good enough to qualify her for the event finals on balance beam and floor exercise. However, she faltered in the last rotation of team optionals, falling on both vaults and forcing the U.S. chances of a gold medal to rest solely on teammate Kerri Strug’s final vault. With Strug injuring herself in the successful attempt, Moceanu took her place in the all-around finals. Unfortunately, mistakes cost Moceanu a medal there, and she placed ninth. In the balance beam event final, Moceanu fell when she missed a foot on a layout and crashed into the balance beam on her head. She finished the exercise and went on to a strong performance in the floor finals later that day, finishing fourth and just missing a medal.