Figure Skating Wiki
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==Television Appearances==
 
==Television Appearances==
Scott Hamilton was featured in '''' Olympic special as a host for the Fairy Olympics and voiced the dog dancing commentator on the episode "Dances with Dogs".
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Scott Hamilton was featured in ''The Fairly OddParents'' Olympic special as a host for the Fairy Olympics and voiced the dog dancing commentator on the King of the Hill episode "Dances with Dogs".
   
He appeared on the August 26, 2008 episode of , where he finished 2nd, losing to . In 2009, he will appear in the second season of . Throughout the season, each celebrity will be raising money for a charity of their choice; Hamilton has selected the Clinic.
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He appeared on the August 26, 2008 episode of Wanna Bet?, where he finished 2nd, losing to Bill Engvall. In 2009, he appeared in the second season of Celebrity Apprentice. In the second episode Scott acted as the project manager in charge of generating a comic-book style brand ambassador for Zappos.com. Scott ultimately sealed his own fate by naming the character "EEE" rather than capitilizing on the brand's existing association with the letter Z.
   
 
==Competitive highlights==
 
==Competitive highlights==

Revision as of 04:22, 20 March 2009

Hamilton 1
Quote1
I started skating and I kind of liked it because I could run circles around the guys that wouldn't pick me to play baseball. "We don't want him. He's too short. He can't hit the ball over second base." But I could skate circles around them. And I ended up playing hockey just out of peer pressure. I didn't want to be the sissy figure skater, you know. So I played hockey for three years and I did quite well. It's just a big man's sport, you know, and I really was undersized. So, figure skating was a great vehicle for me to kind of be competitive at something without having to be big.[1]
Quote2

Scott Scovell Hamilton (born August 28, 1958 in Bowling Green, Ohio) is an American figure skater] andOlympic gold medalist. He won four consecutive U.S. championships (1981-1984), four consecutive World Championships (1981-1984) and the 1984 Olympics.

Latest News

  • On March 18, 2008, Scott Hamilton announces return to Ice Skating [2].
  • Scott Hamilton was the second competitor fired from the U.S. reality series "The Celebrity Apprentice" this season [3].

Videos

Scott Hamilton: Hat Trick 1997 Scott Hamilton & Kurt Browning Upside Down & Move It
1999 Improv on Ice Kurt Browning Meditation from Thais 1981 Scott Hamilton Worlds

Trivia

Quotes

Quote1
The most important thing for my skating was the commitment I made after my mother passed away. She had done so many things for me throughout her life.[4]
Quote2

Childhood

Hamilton 2

Scott Hamilton & his wife

Scott-Hamilton-Golf
Hamilton 3
Hamilton 4

Hamilton was adopted at the age of six weeks by Ernest S. Hamilton and Dorothy McIntosh of Bowling Green, Ohio. He has two siblings, older sister Susan and younger brother Steven (also adopted). He attended Kenwood Elementary School. When Scott was two years old he contracted a mysterious illness that caused him to stop growing. After numerous tests and several wrong diagnoses (including a diagnosis of cystic fibrosis that gave him just six months to live), the disease began to correct itself. His family physician sent him to Boston Children's hospital to see a Dr. Shwachman. Sources are unable to verify if he was actually diagnosed by Dr. Shwachman as having Shwachman-Diamond syndrome. It is said that a special diet and exercise cured the problem. However, he grew to only 5-foot-2½ and he weighed only 108 pounds during his peak skating years.

At age 13 he began training with Pierre Brunet, a former Olympic champion. In 1976, however, he was almost forced to quit skating because the cost of training was too high, and he enrolled in college. However, Helen and Frank McLoraine stepped in to provide financial support for Hamilton to continue his training.

Skating career

In 1980, Hamilton finished third in the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, earning him a place on the U.S. Olympic team. He finished in fifth place at the 1980 Winter Olympics, where he also had the honor of carrying the American flag in the opening ceremony. His breakthrough performance was in the 1981 U.S. Championships. He performed flawlessly and the audience was at a standing ovation several seconds before the end of the performance. He never lost a competition again. In 1981 he won gold in the World Figure Skating Championships. He won gold again in 1982 and 1983 at the U.S. and World Championships, and won the gold medal at the 1984 Winter Olympics. He won that year's World Championships and then turned professional in April 1984.

After turning professional, Hamilton toured with Ice Capades for two years, and then created "Scott Hamilton's American Tour," which later was renamed Stars on Ice. He co-founded, co-produced and performed in Stars on Ice for fifteen years before retiring from the tour in 2001 (though he still returns for occasional guest performances).

He has been awarded numerous skating honors, including being the first solo male figure skater to be awarded the Jacques Farvat Award (in 1988). In 1990 he was inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame.

Hamilton was a skating commentator for CBS television for many years, beginning in 1985. He has also worked for NBC television. In 2006 he was the host of the FOX television program "Skating with Celebrities." He currently serves on the Board of Directors for Special Olympics International.

Television Appearances

Scott Hamilton was featured in The Fairly OddParents Olympic special as a host for the Fairy Olympics and voiced the dog dancing commentator on the King of the Hill episode "Dances with Dogs".

He appeared on the August 26, 2008 episode of Wanna Bet?, where he finished 2nd, losing to Bill Engvall. In 2009, he appeared in the second season of Celebrity Apprentice. In the second episode Scott acted as the project manager in charge of generating a comic-book style brand ambassador for Zappos.com. Scott ultimately sealed his own fate by naming the character "EEE" rather than capitilizing on the brand's existing association with the letter Z.

Competitive highlights

Event/Season 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984
- - 5th - - - 1st
11th - 5th 1st 1st 1st 1st
3rd 4th 3rd 1st 1st 1st 1st

Personal

In 1990, as the honored its 10th birthday, Scott Hamilton was recognized as the Foundation's first ever "Celebrity Wish Granter of the Year." In 1997 Hamilton had a much-publicized battle with . He made a return to skating after his treatment and his story was featured in magazines and on television. It was announced on that Hamilton had a benign brain tumor, which was treated at the . He has also helped to benefit and the where he is a honorary board member.

On he married Tracie Robinson, a nutritionist. The couple have two sons, Aidan McIntosh Hamilton (born in 2003) and Maxx Hamilton (born in 2008). The family resides in .


References

  1. Academy of Achievement, Scott Hamilton Interview, Olympic Hall of Fame, June 29, 1996.
  2. PR Newswire
  3. Scott Hamilton fired from 'Apprentice', UPI.com
  4. Academy of Achievement, page 2.

External links