Jon Lugbill
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's canoe slalom | ||
Representing United States | ||
World Championships | ||
1979 Jonquière | C1 | |
1979 Jonquière | C1 team | |
1981 Bala | C1 | |
1981 Bala | C1 team | |
1983 Meran | C1 | |
1983 Meran | C1 team | |
1985 Augsburg | C1 team | |
1987 Bourg St.-Maurice | C1 | |
1987 Bourg St.-Maurice | C1 team | |
1989 Savage River | C1 | |
1989 Savage River | C1 team | |
1991 Tacen | C1 team | |
1985 Augsburg | C1 |
Jon Phillip Lugbill (born May 27, 1961 in Wauseon, Ohio) is a whitewater canoe slalom racer. During the 1980s, he participated in international racing in Men's Individual C1 (a decked canoe, similar to a kayak). He is the only slalom racer to ever appear on the Wheaties box.[citation needed]
Lugbill started canoeing in the 1970s in the Washington, D.C. area. He often trained daily in his C1 using slalom gates set up on a feeder canal next to the Potomac River near Great Falls. During the winter, Lugbill and his fellow paddlers also trained in the David Taylor Model Basin. He and some other fellow racers (notably David Hearn) developed new designs of low volume decked canoes, using nylon, kevlar and fiberglass cloths mixed with epoxy resin.
In 1979, Lugbill won the C1 men's individual World Championship in canoe slalom at the first World Championships to be held on the North American continent at Jonquière (Canada). This was the first time an American had won an individual gold medal in the world canoe slalom championships. Lugbill went on to win gold in his category several more times; 1981 at Bala (Wales), 1983 at Meran (Italy), 1987 at Bourg St. Maurice (France), and 1989 at the Savage River (USA). In 1985 at Augsburg (then in West Germany), Lugbill had to settle for the silver medal after David Hearn bested him for the gold. Lugbill also won seven consecutive world championship gold medals in the C1 team event (1979-1991). His older brother Ron was part of the gold medal winning C1 team in 1981.
Lugbill won three consecutive overall world cup titles in the C1 category including the inaugural edition in 1988.
During the peak of Lugbill's career, whitewater canoeing was not included on the competition program of the Summer Olympic Games. His only appearance on the Olympic stage came in 1992, when the sport returned to the Olympics after a 20-year absence. On the man-made course in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain, Lugbill placed fourth after being assessed for a five-second gate touch penalty at Gate 23 during his first run.
Lugbill is the Executive Director of Metropolitan Richmond Sports Backers and resides in Richmond, Virginia. The Sports Backers have been named the best Sports Commission in America an unprecedented 4 times by the National Association of Sports Commissions.[1]
Lugbill lived in Archbold, Ohio until he was three years old. Then he moved to Vienna and then Fairfax, Virginia. He attended Lanier Intermediate School in Fairfax and Oakton High School. He graduated from the University of Virginia. He has two daughters, Kelly and Stephanie.
World Cup individual podiums
[edit]Total | ||||
C1 | 6 | 4 | 0 | 10 |
Season | Date | Venue | Position | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | 12 August 1989 | Mezzana | 1st | C1 |
15 August 1989 | Augsburg | 1st | C1 | |
1990 | 1 July 1990 | Wausau | 1st | C1 |
1990 | Savage River | 1st | C1 | |
12 August 1990 | Augsburg | 1st | C1 | |
25 August 1990 | Tacen | 2nd | C1 | |
1991 | 30 June 1991 | Mezzana | 2nd | C1 |
10 July 1991 | Reals | 2nd | C1 | |
25 August 1991 | Minden | 2nd | C1 | |
1 September 1991 | Wausau | 1st | C1 |
References
[edit]- ^ "Sports Backers Named Best Sports Commission in the Country | Running USA". www.runningusa.org. Archived from the original on 2017-03-05.
- FFCK.org information on ICF World Championship medalists at the Wayback Machine (archived May 5, 2003)
- ICF medalists for Olympic and World Championships – Part 2: rest of flatwater (now sprint) and remaining canoeing disciplines: 1936–2007 at WebCite (archived 2009-11-09)
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Jon Lugbill". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-18.