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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sacramone ready for another go-around

Gymnast returns to competition

Nancy Armour Associated Press

CHICAGO – Olympic silver medal in hand, Alicia Sacramone left the gym after Beijing with no intention of coming back. Her body was beat up and, at 20, she was ready for a life that wasn’t dictated by a training schedule.

Yet two years later, here she is again, competing in her first gymnastics meet since the Beijing Games with an eye toward making the world championship team – and maybe even another Olympics.

“As I healed up and started working out and getting back into shape, I realized gymnastics isn’t something you can do forever,” Sacramone said Friday. “If I’m still lucky enough to have the ability to keep going, I might as well tough it out for a couple more years and see what I can do.”

Beijing all-around champion Nastia Liukin and runner-up Shawn Johnson were the stars of the U.S. team during the last Olympic go-around, but Sacramone was its backbone.

Her routines were done with a style and sass the folks in Vegas would envy, and her oversized personality gave the Americans swagger as they ruled the world in the lead-up to Beijing.

But untimely injuries and uncharacteristic mistakes left the Americans with the silver medal while China won gold. Sacramone fell off the balance beam during team finals, when teams must count the scores of all three gymnasts on each apparatus, and fell during the floor exercise.

“We did what we could with what our circumstances were, and I’m so proud of all the girls. In my mind, we did a great job,” Sacramone said. “Granted, it wasn’t my best performance. I hold myself to a higher standard, and I should have done better than that. I’m a better athlete than that.

“I think that’s another part of the reason I came back, to show that I can do better. And to prove to myself that I can do better, not just to everybody else.”

Sacramone first started toying with coming back last summer. Though she had moved to California with her brother after Beijing, she still kept up with coach Mihai Brestyan.

In September, she moved back home to Winchester, Mass., and started working out with Brestyan. After a year away, the idea was simply to get back in gymnastics shape.

Before she knew it, she was vaulting again.

“I went from zero to 60 in like four seconds,” she said.

At 22 (she’ll be 23 in December), Sacramone spends only about three hours a day in the gym. She does physical therapy and dance classes as well, but the shortened training schedule helps spare her body.

“It gives me plenty of time to go to take care of my body, rest. I’m doing online credits to keep getting credits toward graduation, so it gives me time to be able to do those things,” she said. “And I’m not getting sick of going to practice because I’m not in the gym all day long, every day.”

Sacramone will compete on vault and balance beam at today’s meet, a qualifier for next month’s national championships.