Lisa St. John |
1995
Hall of Fame Inductee
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Lisa
St. John can hardly remember when she wasn't up on water skis. And
no wonder. She
took her first ride in the arms of her father in 1956, at the age of 18
months. Thus began a water ski career that filled the St. Johns' home in
Fall River Mills, Calif., with trophies representing victories in the
smallest local tournaments on up to the World Championships. Lisa's
future in the sport seemed almost unlimited until a severe back injury
sustained in the 1973 California International Cup cut short her career.
She skied competitively in the Open Division after that but not with the
unbounded skill and enthusiasm that had marked her skiing before the
accident. Born
Lisa Dale St. John September 30, 1954, in Redding, Calif., Lisa came into
the world of water skiing as a natural extension of her family's favorite
recreational activity. Her father, Dale St. John, not only enjoyed
skiing but was skilled as a boat driver for tournaments that later would
include world class competition. Her mother, Babs, was an
accomplished three-event contestant, winning the Senior Women's National
overall title in 1963. Lisa's younger sister, Lynn, later became a
Nationals-caliber skier. Only her older brother, Dennis, with his 6
- 4, 200 pound plus frame, moved into other high school athletic pursuits
such as football and basketball. Lisa
continued to ride with her father on skis until she was four. Then
she took off on her own, all 30 pounds and 3 1/2 feet of her. At age
five, she was skiing on a single ski and appearing in exhibitions.
She entered her first tournament the next year, 1961, and placed second in
slalom. Later that same year, she finished second in tricks and
third in slalom in the California State Championships - and she was off to
bigger and better things. From
1966 through 1971, Lisa amassed a total of 16 Nationals titles. She
entered her first Nationals at the age of eight in 1963 at Long Beach,
Calif., and continued to ski in Junior Girls competition for a total of
five Nationals, a record for the division. Her
success continued when she graduated into the Girls Division, despite a
knee injury, which hampered her jumping performances. She made a
clean sweep for the Girls overall crown in 1970 and just missed repeating
the feat a year later with victories in slalom and tricks and a second in
jumping. Lisa's
skill earned her an invitation to the Masters in 1966 when, at age 11, she
became the youngest invitee in the history of the tournament. She
responded with a 3208-point performance in the second round of tricks,
which turned out to be the best score among the women contestants even
though a fall in the opening round had kept Lisa out of the finals. She
skied in eight consecutive Masters, winning the slalom title in 1972 and
finishing second overall twice - this at a time when the incomparable Liz
Allen Shetter was dominating women skiing worldwide. Lisa's
career reached its climax in 1973 when she set a world jumping record of
116 feet in June and won the World Overall Championship in Bogotá,
Columbia. Ten days after the world meet, she injured her lower back
in the Cal Cup. Even
though Lisa developed into an excellent jumper, slalom and tricks were her
dominant disciplines early in her career. Her parents didn't permit
her to try the five-foot ramp until 1964, three years after she began
tournament skiing. So
it is not surprising that Lisa recalls her greatest thrill in water skiing
as the time when she leaped 100 feet in the 1970 Masters to become the
eighth woman member of the Century Club. In more recent years, Lisa has lived in Florida. At the time of her induction in the Hall of Fame, she was manager of a restaurant in Orlando. |
1251 Holy Cow Road * Polk City, Florida * 33868-8200
Phone: 863-324-2472 * Fax: 863-324-3996