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Anne Abernathy

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Anne Abernathy (born April 12, 1953 in St. Thomas) is a luge athlete from the United States Virgin Islands and is the oldest female athlete to compete in the Winter Olympics. The 2006 Winter Olympics were her sixth. Despite her age, she is a consistent competitor with frequent World Cup podium finishes, and she is consistently ranked in the top 20 world rankings. She is known within luge circles as "Grandma Luge."

Her top finishes include third place at the Nations Cup in Igls, Austria in January 2004, and third place at the Nations Cup in Königssee, Germany, February 2004. She finished in the top 10 in seven of the eight events in the 2004-2005 Nations Cup series. [1] Abernathy finished 25th in the 37th World Championships in 2004 in Nagano, Japan, but did not compete 2005 championships in Park City, Utahdue to injury.

Abernathy suffered a serious accident during a World Cup race in Altenberg, Germany in January 2001 that resulted in a severe brain injury. To recover from the injury, she used an alternative medicine treatment involving controlling rockets in a video game through electrical impulses from brain waves, a therapy designed to help her retrain her brain to compensate for the damaged areas. The therapy was successful and Abernathy was able to return to competition in time to qualify for the 2002 Winter Olympics.[2] The story of Abernathy's crash and recovery was featured on the Discovery Health Channel series .

During practice for the competition at the 2006 Winter Olympics, Abernathy crashed and broke her wrist and her scapula, and was forced to withdraw from competition.

Abernathy was the first woman to qualify for 6 Winter Olympics. In the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City she became the oldest woman to ever compete in the Winter Games. She is the oldest female Olympian in any Olympic Games (Winter or Summer) and the first woman over the age of 50 in the Winter Olympics.

During the Albertville Winter Olympics, she became the first athlete to compete with a camera on board. A feat that was nominated for an Emmy in technical broadcast achievement.

In the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, Abernathy became the first athlete to create an on-line diary (now know as a blog)which was an exclusive on AOL.

Before her first Olympic appearance in 1988, Abernathy was diagnosed and treated for non-Hodgkins lymphoma (cancer). Although the cancer returned several times during her sports career, the fact was kept hidden from the public through 3 Olympic appearances until it was revealed in a front page article of the Washington Post prior to the 1998 Nagano Olympics.

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