Gail Emery is an American former synchronized swimmer and a Hall of Fame synchronized swimming coach for both age-group and collegiate programs. In an unprecedented achievement, Emery coached her primary team, the Walnut Creek Aquanuts to 10 consecutive national championships beginning in 1980 and served as a member of six U.S. Olympic coaching staffs.
In elite international competition, she served as coach of every U.S. world championship team from 1982-1998, winning seven of the available 18 gold medals.
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Early life
Emery was born in 1951 in Lafayette, California
Lafayette (formerly La Fayette) is a city in Contra Costa County, California, United States. As of 2020, the city's population was 25,391. It was named after the Marquis de Lafayette, a French military officer of the American Revolutionary ...
, about 20 miles Northeast of San Francisco, and 4 miles West of Walnut Creek. She is a graduate of California State University-Hayward.
Competitor
She was introduced to synchronized swimming
Synchronized swimming (in British English, synchronised swimming), also known as artistic swimming, is a sport where swimmers perform a synchronized choreographed routine, accompanied by music. The sport is governed internationally by World A ...
in 1959 by her mother, Sue Ahlf.[ Emery initially trained with the Solfettes in ]Walnut Creek, California
Walnut Creek is a city in Contra Costa County, California, United States, located in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, about east of the city of Oakland, California, Oakland. Walnut Creek has a total population of 70,127 per t ...
, before joining the Howell Swim Club in Danville. Later, she trained with the Santa Clara Aquamaids, under Hall of Fame Coach Kay Vilen, the club's first Head Coach. While competing with the Aquamaids, she won a national team championship in 1972 and was part of a demonstration team at the Munich Olympics in the same year.
Synchronized swimming did not become an Olympic event until 1984, due significantly to the efforts of Emery.[
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Coaching
Emery started coaching the Walnut Creek Aquanuts around 1972, shortly after they were founded by her mother Sue Alf, and continued at least through 1998.[ In 1980, the Aquanuts defeated the Santa Clara Aquamaids, marking the start of a decade-long run of national championships.][
In 1979, Emery was appointed as the U.S. national team's coach, a role she held through four Olympic cycles.][ She was the head coach for the 1988, 1992, and 1996 Olympics, and a coach/manager in 1984.][ Athletes coached by Emery, including Karen Josephson, twin sister Sarah Josephson and ]Kristen Babb-Sprague
Kristen Elizabeth Babb, (born July 29, 1968) also known by her married name Kristen Elizabeth Babb-Sprague after February 1991, is an American former synchronized swimmer who competed for the Walnut Creek Aquanuts and was a 1992 Barcelona Olympi ...
, won Olympic medals, with Babb-Sprague winning a solo gold in 1992 and the Josephson sisters earning a silver in 1988 and a gold in 1992. In the 1996 Olympics, five of Emery's athletes were part of the team that won a gold medal. In 1984, working with Head Coach Charlotte Davis, Gail helped coach Tracie Ruiz to the gold medal in the solo event and to a second gold medal in the duet event with Candy Costie. Ruiz won the silver medal in 1988. [
Emery coached the U.S. team in international competitions at the World Championships from 1982 to 1998, during which her teams won seven gold medals.][ In FINA World Cup competitions, her teams won 25 gold and four silver medals. Her athletes also won various years of gold medals in the Pan American Games.][
Under Emery's tenure, synchronized swimming evolved in technical and athletic aspects. She implemented new training methods and cross-training regimens.][
In her long career, she has coached 15 Olympic gold medalists, and three silver medalists. She has developed training and coached over 50 international champions and more than 100 national event winners.][
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Stanford University
In 1998, Emery became the coach of Stanford University
Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University, is a Private university, private research university in Stanford, California, United States. It was founded in 1885 by railroad magnate Leland Stanford (the eighth ...
's synchronized swimming program, winning the NCAA National Championship in her first year of coaching, 1998-1999.[ In 2000, Emery's team included Shannon Montague, the Collegiate Athlete of the Year, in addition to six All-Americans and six Academic All-Americans. Two of Emery's athletes, Lindsay Wigginton and Katie Norris, became the first Stanford synchronized swimmers to secure a place on the United States' World Championship Team. Emery left Stanford in 2001 to spend more time with her family.]
Honors
She became a member of the International Swimming Hall of Fame around 2000, and was honored as a new member of the Women Sports Hall of Fame in October, 1997. She was admitted to the Elvira College Hall of Fame in 2000.[
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References
External links
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Synchronized Coach, Gail Emery
Stanford University Online, March 5, 2005, Gail Emery Resigns as Stanford's Synchronized Swimming Coach
{{DEFAULTSORT:Emery, Gail
Living people
1951 births
Synchronized swimming coaches
International Swimming Hall of Fame inductees
Stanford Cardinal swimming coaches
College swimming coaches in the United States
Olympic coaches for the United States
21st-century American sportswomen
20th-century American sportswomen