Casey Sandy

Canadian artistic gymnast

Casey Sandy (born 21 May 1984) is a Canadian gymnast who competed for Penn State from 2006 to 2009. In 2007, Sandy participated in World Championships. In 2008, Sandy was the NCAA all-around national champion. He was discouraged by Canada from trying for a place on its 2008 Olympic team. In 2009, Sandy was the Canadian national champion. In that year, he also was awarded the Nissen-Emery award (the "Heisman" of men's gymnastics).[1][2]

Personal

Sandy was born in Montreal, Quebec and has a sister. He is black.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Casey Sandy Profile - Penn State Official Athletic Site". Gopsusports.com. Retrieved 2013-08-20.
  2. ^ a b "Penn State's Casey Sandy Wins 2009 Nissen-Emery Award" (PDF). Collegegymnastics.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-09-08. Retrieved 2013-08-20.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Nissen-Emery Award
  • 1966: James Curzi
  • 1967: Steve Cohen
  • 1968: Dave Thor
  • 1969: Robert Emery
  • 1970: Pete Difurio
  • 1971: Brent Simmons
  • 1972: Tom Lindner
  • 1973: John Crosby Jr.
  • 1974: Steve Hug
  • 1975: Jay Whelan
  • 1976: Gene Whelan
  • 1977: Peter Kormann
  • 1978: Tim LaFleur
  • 1979: Kurt Thomas
  • 1980: Mario McCutcheon
  • 1981: Bart Conner
  • 1982: Jim Hartung
  • 1983: Peter Vidmar
  • 1984: Roy Palassou
  • 1985: Matt Arnot
  • 1986: Wes Suter
  • 1987: Spider Maxwell
  • 1988: Tom Schlesinger
  • 1989: David Zeddies
  • 1990: Mike Racanelli
  • 1991: Jarrod Hanks
  • 1992: Scott Keswick
  • 1993: John Roethlisberger
  • 1994: Kip Simons
  • 1995: Josh Stein
  • 1996: Darren Elg
  • 1997: Blaine Wilson
  • 1998: Dan Fink
  • 1999: Todd Bishop
  • 2000: Jeff LaVallee
  • 2001: Jamie Natalie
  • 2002: Justin Toman
  • 2003: Daniel Furney
  • 2004: Dan Gill
  • 2005: Guillermo Alvarez
  • 2006: Justin Spring
  • 2007: Matt Cohen
  • 2008: Jonathan Horton
  • 2009: Casey Sandy
  • 2010: Luke Stannard
  • 2011: Steven Legendre
  • 2012: Paul Ruggeri
  • 2013: Eddie Penev
  • 2014: Sam Mikulak
  • 2015: Ellis Mannon
  • 2016: Jesse Glenn
  • 2017: Akash Modi
  • 2018: Sean Melton
  • 2019: Yul Moldauer
  • 2020: Stephen Nedoroscik
  • 2021: Shane Wiskus
  • 2022: Brody Malone
  • 2023: Paul Juda
  • 2024: Colt Walker
  • v
  • t
  • e
Stub icon 1 Stub icon 2

This biographical article related to Canadian artistic gymnastics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e