Danell Leyva
Sport: Gymnastics
Nation: United States of America
DOB: October 30, 1991
Hometown: Miami, FL
Career Highlights: Leyva was born in Cuba and was a year old when his mother and father, members of the Cuban gymnastics team, defected to the
United States and put their son on a course to develop into a 2012 Olympian. That happened when Leyva won the U.S. trials
and cemented his status as a serious threat to take gold in all-around in London. The 2011 world champion on parallel bars
also helped the United States to a team bronze at worlds that year, and he was the 2011 U.S. champion as well. Leyva's specialties
are the parallel bars and the horizontal bar, the latter being his favorite event in which he combines high-flying release
moves, highly difficult routines and originality. Those dynamic performances on the apparatus may prove to be among the most
attention-grabbing moments of the Games. Despite his accomplishments, Leyva may head into the Olympics feeling he has something
to prove after a last-place finish in the all-around at worlds last year, as he clipped his chin on the horizontal bar on
a release move and fell. Even that low moment eventually exhibited a positive for Leyva, who showed his resilience two days
later by winning gold in parallel bars. He is a seven-time U.S. champion - six in individual events - and he won the 2012
American Cup while defending his U.S. titles in parallel bars and horizontal bar. The theatrical and energetic Leyva forms
half of a 1-2 punch with 2012 national champion John Orozco that leads a talented but young U.S. team, one seeking its first
all-around Olympic gold since 1984. He is coached by stepfather Yin Alvarez, also a member of the Cuban gymnastics team who
defected and is known for his uncommonly enthusiastic cheering for his stepson during routines.
Olympic History: None