Great American Gymnastics Express

Last updated
GAGE Center
Full nameGreat American Gymnastics Center
NicknamesGAGE
Sport Artistic gymnastics
Founded1979;47 years ago (1979)
Based in Blue Springs, Missouri
Colors  
Head coach Al Fong, Armine Barutyan
Members Madison Desch, Brenna Dowell, Sabrina Vega, Courtney McCool, Terin Humphrey, Katelyn Ohashi, Christy Henrich, Julissa Gomez, Ivana Hong, Sarah Finnegan, Kara Eaker, Aleah Finnegan, Leanne Wong
Website gagecenter.com

Great American Gymnastics Express, known also as GAGE Center or GAGE, is an American artistic gymnastics academy in Blue Springs, Missouri. GAGE was founded in 1979 by Al Fong, who remains its head coach. [1]

Contents

In December 2025, Fong was suspended for five years by the U.S. Center for SafeSport; his wife, also a coach at the gym, received a one-year suspension. [2] [3]

Notable alumni

Among the gymnasts who trained at GAGE are:

Controversy

The deaths of GAGE gymnasts in 1988 and 1994 drew controversy.

In May 1988, Julissa Gomez broke her neck while warming up for vault at a competition in Japan. Observers had noticed her struggle with the apparatus over the months leading up to the competition, including her former coach Béla Károlyi, past and present teammates, and even her own coach, Al Fong. Gomez's technique on the extremely difficult Yurchenko vault had been described as shaky at best, and Gomez was unable to perform the vault with consistency during practices, sometimes missing her feet on the springboard. [4] A teammate from Károlyi's, Chelle Stack, later said, "You could tell it was not a safe vault for her to be doing. Someone along the way should have stopped her." [4] However, Gomez's coaches insisted that she needed to continue training and competing the Yurchenko vault in order to achieve high scores. [4] Gomez fell into a coma during treatment due to a hospital error and never awoke. She died in 1991.

In 1994, Christy Henrich died from anorexia nervosa. Her condition was allegedly spurred by comments from international judges and her coaches. Desperate to move up the ranks in the highly competitive world of Olympic-level gymnastics, Henrich took the criticisms to heart; her drive to lose a few pounds progressed to unhealthy eating habits and, eventually, became full-blown anorexia nervosa. [5] [6] She weighed 47 pounds when she died. Her death led to changes in the way coaches across the nation implement nutrition in training, and how television and media discuss gymnasts' bodies. [7]

In 2020, Fong became the subject of a U.S. Center for SafeSport investigation into about 40 allegations of emotional, verbal, and physical abuse. [2] In December 2025, Fong was suspended for five years; his wife, Armine Barutyan, also a GAGE coach was suspended for one year. [3] [8] [9]

References

  1. "Women's Dragon Team | GAGE Center". Archived from the original on 2015-04-26. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
  2. 1 2 Reid, Scott M. (2023-02-16). "Gymnastics coach Al Fong under investigation by U.S. Center for SafeSport". Orange County Register. Retrieved 2025-12-23.
  3. 1 2 "Suspended & Restricted Persons". USA Gymnastics. Retrieved 2025-12-23.
  4. 1 2 3 Ryan, Joan (1995). Little Girls in Pretty Boxes . Garden City: Doubleday. pp.  17–20. ISBN   978-0-385-47790-1.
  5. "Dying to Win: The Christy Henrich story" Dateline,1995
  6. Obituary New York Times July 28, 1994
  7. "Striking the Balance" Archived 2010-07-17 at the Wayback Machine , Benita Fitzgerald Mosley, Technique magazine, July 1997
  8. Sandmaier, Christy (December 23, 2025). "GAGE Coaches Al Fong and Armine Buratyan-Fong Suspended By U.S. Center For SafeSport". Inside Gymnastics . Retrieved January 17, 2026.
  9. Duffy, Patricia (December 23, 2025). "GAGE coaches Al Fong and Armine Barutyan suspended by SafeSport". gymnastics-now.com. Retrieved January 17, 2026.