Bart Conner

American gymnast
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Also known as: Bart Wayne Conner
Quick Facts
In full:
Bart Wayne Conner
Born:
March 28, 1958, Chicago, Illinois, U.S. (age 66)
Also Known As:
Bart Wayne Conner
Awards And Honors:
Olympic Games
Notable Family Members:
spouse Nadia Comăneci

Bart Conner (born March 28, 1958, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.) is one of the most successful gymnasts in U.S. history. He was the country’s first gymnast to capture gold medals at all levels of national and international competition. Conner is especially known for his performance at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, where he scored two perfect 10s to earn a gold medal on the parallel bars. He then led the U.S. team to the country’s first gold medal in the men’s all-around event in some eight decades.

Early life and collegiate career

Conner is the second of three sons born to Jackie May (née Holsey) Conner and Harold Wayne Conner, a structural engineer; the couple later divorced. They encouraged him and his brothers to try many sports, and, from an early age, Bart Conner, who was energetic and small, excelled at gymnastics. At age 10 he began formal training in the sport, and he progressed rapidly. Soon he was working out with a local high-school team.

Conner captured the Amateur Athletic Union junior title in 1972. Two years later he won his first United States Gymnastics Federation all-around crown. At the 1975 Pan American Games he won bronze medals in the floor exercise and rings, and he helped the U.S. team capture a gold in the all-around event. Shortly after he graduated from high school in 1976, he competed at the Montreal Olympics. Conner, the youngest member of the U.S. national gymnastics team, finished in the top 50 in the all-around event.

Silhouette of hand holding sport torch behind the rings of an Olympic flag, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; February 3, 2015.
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Also in 1976 Conner won the American Cup and enrolled at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, where he studied journalism (B.A., 1984). The following year he tied for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) all-around title. In 1978 he won the individual all-around national intercollegiate championship, and he helped Oklahoma take the NCAA team title in 1977 (a tie with Indiana State University) and 1978. During his college career, Conner also won 14 NCAA All-American titles.

Injuries and the 1984 Olympics

In 1979 Conner won the world championship on the parallel bars, and he became the first American gymnast to win a World Cup gold medal with his victory in the pommel horse. Conner was expected to have a strong showing at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, but in March of that year the United States announced that it was boycotting the Games to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Nevertheless, the Olympic trials were held, and there Conner suffered a bicep tear that would likely have caused him to miss the Games. Following surgery and a lengthy recovery, Conner returned to competition in 1981 and regained the American Cup, a title he successfully defended the next year.

In late 1983 Conner suffered another bicep injury. Successful surgery and physical therapy enabled him to qualify for his third Olympic team. At the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles the U.S. men’s team, which also included such notables as Peter Vidmar and Mitch Gaylord, defeated the previous year’s world champions in the all-around, the People’s Republic of China, to win the gold. Conner also won an individual gold medal for his performance on the parallel bars. In the floor exercise, he earned the then highest rank ever attained by an American—fifth place.

Later activities and personal life

After the 1984 Olympics, Conner retired from competition. He subsequently worked as a motivational speaker, performed in exhibitions, and served as a television commentator. In 1985 Conner published a book he had written with his coach, Paul Ziert, entitled Bart Conner: Winning the Gold. Seven years later the two men opened the Bart Conner Gymnastics Academy in Norman. Conner was inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame (1991) and the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame (1997).

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In 1996 Conner married Romanian gymnastics champion Nadia Comăneci, who was also involved in running his gymnastics academy. In addition, the couple was active in the Special Olympics. In 2006 they had a son, Dylan Paul Conner.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.