Top Los Angeles Olympians
Allyson Felix, who grew up in Valencia and became a teenage sprinting sensation at small Los Angeles Baptist High in North Hills, celebrates her silver medal in the women’s 200-meter final. Felix also took silver in the 200 four years ago in Athens. Felix would help the U.S. women win gold in the 1,600-meter relay. (Itsuo Inouye / Associated Press)
Brenda Villa, the pride of Commerce and the U.S. captain, tries to shoot past Lefke Van Belkum of the Netherlands during the women’s water polo final. The Dutch scored in the final minute to pull out a 9-8 victory. (Rungroj Yongrit / EPA)
Henry Cejudo, who was born in Los Angeles to illegal immigrants from Mexico and moved throughout the western U.S. as he grew up, celebrates winning a gold medal after defeating Japan’s Tomohiro Matsunaga in the men’s 55-kilogram freestyle final. (Toshifumi Kitamura / AFP/Getty Images)
Kim Rhode, who was born in Whittier and grew up in El Monte, was forced to learn a new Olympic event after dominating women’s double trap (gold in 1996 at age 17, gold in 2004 and bronze in 2000). She took silver in women’s skeet shooting in Beijing. (Spencer Weiner / Los Angeles Times)
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Tony Azevedo of
Misty May-Treanor, a native of Costa Mesa, goes for the ball against China in the women’s beach volleyball gold-medal match at the 2008 Olympics.
(Natacha Pisarenko / Associated Press)Advertisement
Irvine’s Aaron Peirsol, right, and
Ryan Millar, who was an All-American player at Highland High in Palmdale, was a steady force for the gold-medal winning men’s volleyball team, which knocked off top-ranked and defending champion Brazil in four games. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)