Why is rulon not on the biggest loser finale




















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The reason? The insider said the rumor is that Rulon was caught multiple times with a cell phone a big no-no on the Ranch , and may have even snuck his wife into the Ranch late at night which is no easy fete, according to past contestants! This was not the only reason he was asked to leave, but the source said this is the basic gist of what happened.

Also surprising? Rulon and his partner Justin are no longer friends! This may explain why there was no mention whatsoever of Rulon on the Finale show last night. And the producers did reach out to him about participating in the finale, but they unfortunately did not hear back from Rulon, but we wish him the best. And then, when he beats her, they fraudulently gave the victory to Tara anyway!!! What crooks! I lost my respect and trust to Biggest Loser. The short version, Rulon says, is that he was presented an opportunity to invest in a real estate venture in A friend introduced Rulon to their niece, who just needed a small loan to get more financing.

She presented a business plan that looked solid. She showed him real estate purchase agreements, contracts and more. The problem: She had been fabricating documents, according to the FBI, including the ones she showed Rulon. Rulon was partially on the hook.

After an FBI investigation, she pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering and was sentenced to 34 months in prison. Even as he gets his feet under himself and recovers financially, he feels betrayed. He thinks about headlines in the Star Valley Independent, back in his hometown in Wyoming that was so happy to claim him when things were going well.

Few knew the ironic twist, the only reason he even had a chance to earn back his medal. He has two lawyer friends in particular whom he talks to about business decisions. Just quit. Not on the TV show. Not during the night on the mountain waiting for a rescue helicopter to spot him, or the grueling recovery from frostbite and hypothermia.

Not even after his failed Olympic attempt. He made another comeback attempt before the Rio Olympics at age Part of that, he concedes, was because nothing helped him keep his weight down like wrestling.

When he was an active athlete, he never took a day off. And he was searching for that mindset again. Rulon is walking carefully. It takes the lower half of his body a little longer to warm up in the morning, and he happened to roll his ankle two or three times yesterday. So can wrestling mats. Even if a mat is just an inch or two thick, a full day of stepping on and off of them can lead to a few missteps. Gardner's snowmobile wreck made a lasting impression on him: He reflects on it frequently, and it has cost him feeling in his feet.

His wrestlers are also, more literally, taking a while to warm up. Some kids want it more than others, but few want it as bad as he used to, 20 or 30 years ago. That would be impossible. Rulon has to toe the line.

He wants to push the kids as hard as he can, the way old coaches pushed him, trying to be a force in their lives that leads them to greatness. He wants the best for all his kids. He wants to convince every college recruiter to give his kids a shot, and a head start on the rest of their lives.

His word carries sway and people love to talk. As heavier weights, they just have a little more time before their semifinal bouts. Once they eventually make their way down from the bleachers and warm up, after the announcer over the loudspeaker instructs everyone to clear the mats, Rulon gathers them in the holding area and offers some last-minute reminders. Then they both win and advance. The finals are a spectacle. The arena staff rolls up six mats, leaving two in the center of the gym, one for the 5A championships and one for 6A.

Herriman competes in 6A, the classification for the biggest schools in the state. They dim the lights and extend the lower level of the bleachers, with extra rows of yellow seats now closer to the action. Rad, like many coaches, has put on a tie. Rulon is wearing the same short-sleeved, button-down shirt from the speech in New Jersey.

As they play the national anthem, Rulon stands in the athlete warmup area, along with other coaches who have kids in the finals.

He is looking almost straight up at the flag, at attention. He closes his eyes and puts a hand over his heart. He says that hearing the anthem play, especially in a gym full of wrestlers, always takes him back to that moment atop the podium in Sydney—with Rulon on the top step, and the Russian Bear, incredibly, below. For many high school wrestlers, this will be the pinnacle of their athletic careers, and the moment is treated with that gravity. Rulon, in his life, has collected medals upon medals, each one from high school through college saved in Ziploc bags in his home to prove it.

Now, standing in the dark, he watches the kids under the spotlight trying to earn their own. Rulon and Rad follow Talmage out to the mat. The two coaches are animated as their wrestler gets on the scoreboard first, both coaches standing throughout the match. He briefly loses his lead, then pulls back ahead and coasts through the final period to a state championship.

He runs to Rad first and gives him a big hug. Here comes Traycee, running in to compete on the same mat. Rulon gives his incoming wrestler a high-five, then high-fives his state champ and match No. This match ends as abruptly as it begins. In the second period, Traycee connects on a headlock and sends his opponent to his back. The arena explodes as the referee slaps the mat to signal a pin, and Rulon claps excitedly.

Herriman High has back-to-back state champs. Their contingent leaves the mat and the two teammates save their most excited celebration for each other. They share a big hug and run into the tunnel, into the basement level of the arena, to go celebrate.

This is their moment, and he wants to let them have it. After the finals, the arena lights come on and the whole Herriman cheering section swarms the group on the floor. Tournament organizers hold medal ceremonies, one weight class at a time, with wrestlers posing atop the podium with their new hardware. In one photo, egged on by the people around him, Rulon grabs both state champs in playful headlocks, one under each arm.

They all smile as he pulls them in tight. Both lightweights who qualified for States credit Rulon for helping them with the mental aspect of the sport. The two heavier weights point first to the technique they learned from him.

Traycee was a heavyweight last season, before cutting down to this year. He didn't even start wrestling until his freshman year of high school and became a state champ his senior year. He drew a direct line between what Rulon taught him about good positioning and how he was able to throw his opponent in the finals. Knowing that he's the guy that's in the practice room every day that I get to learn from Rulon and his assistant coaches address the team.

He pulls a few aside individually and talks to them about being the ones wearing medals next year. Rulon is sentimental. In that episode of The Biggest Loser where Rulon went bungee jumping, he blew away Bob Harper by telling him shortly before his jump that it was the anniversary of his plane crash into Lake Powell. He jumped anyway. At one point during the conversation about The Biggest Loser , he whips out his phone and calls Moses Kinikini, a fellow contestant on that season.

Rulon calls Moses brother , though he calls a lot of people brother. And he seems fine with the arrangement. I asked him what advice he would give to somebody at a low point right now—a surprisingly apt question less than a month before the initial surge of a pandemic that would kill more than , Americans and send many more to unemployment amid a devastated economy.

Gardner's goal is to get near the weight at which he competed. Walter Iooss Jr. Keep pushing. Myself, right now, my biggest thing is my weight. The one person that can change it is me. Rulon still looks to his old buddy Dremiel Byers for inspiration. The background on his phone is a picture of Byers, still in his singlet, right after Rulon beat him at the U. To get back to that weight.

He hopes now that the high school season is over, he can refocus on himself. Everyone just wants Rulon to be healthy. If I turn my mind on and do it, I'll do it. I make a lot of excuses for myself. And that's wrong. I gotta make some changes.



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