gymn
Digest
Mon, 1 Aug 94 Volume 2 :
Issue 156
Today's Topics:
ABC's AA
Assorted Goodwill Thoughts (2 msgs)
Aussie Commenwealth Team Trials
Aussie Commonwealth Team Final (Women, Men and RSG)
GG, W All-Around
GG, W All-Around II (2 msgs)
GG, W Team tidbits (2 msgs)
Goodwill Games (Womens All-Around)
Goodwill Games Coverage
Goodwill Thoughts (2 msgs)
Gymnastics Coverage / Commentators (2 msgs)
Jennie Thompson
TV coverage
Women's AA, ABC style (3 msgs)
Women's AA Comments
This is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu
mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:33:25 EDT
From: <***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
Subject:
ABC's AA
I have to say I was pleasantly surprised by today's coverage of the AA
on
ABC. Lots of routines, ALL the rotations, routines by non-medalists...
What
came over them? But now I'm totally
mystified as to what TBS is going to show
tonight.
I guess I'll find out in an hour.
I meant to comment
last night on how Kathy Johnson criticized Chusovitina
for not landing in handstand in her transitition to low bar, but overlooking
the fact that not a whole lot of gymnasts do. So I'm glad
Nancy brought it up
and reminded me! It really is
unfair to single out Oksana and not mention any
of
the errors the Americans make, especially when so many of our girls do not
land in handstand either. The one gymnast who immediately
came to my mind, even
though she's not at
Goodwill, was Kerri Strug. If I remember right, she
does
that transition and is totally piked, but I've never heard any US commentator
point that out. So leave the foreign gymnasts alone unless
you're willing to
point out the same mistakes by
Americans!
After Kathy said Dina reminded her of Julianne McNamara, I could see
what
she meant. But does she remind anyone but me
of the ice dancer Jayne Torvill?
They seem to
have almost the same facial features. Pod reminds me of a mix
between Lashchenova (face, body
type) and Omelianchik (toe point, form and
expression). And Khorkina kinda looks like a hybrid between Biatova
and
Mostepanova (after Olga got tall). Now is she REALLY 5'4"? I saw
her up close
in Brisbane and she, Dina and Oksana
posed for a candid photo, and although
Svetlana did tower above her teammates, I don't remember her being taller than
me (and I'm not even 5'2"). So she either grew a lot
since April or that height
might not be accurate.
I wonder if someone just messed up the metric
conversions?
How did Shannon make
beam finals with such a low score in team finals? It
never
even occurred to me she'd be in finals until she mentioned it in the
interview today. I guess all the people we didn't see on
beam must have done
REALLY bad...
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 19:22:46 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Assorted
Goodwill Thoughts
Susan said:
>Waiting to hear what the rest of
you thought ...
-I was much more impressed by Khorkina
(and the whole Russian team) here than
at
Worlds. I wonder if this was their
'big' meet (as opposed to Brisbane)
since it was
their first big meet at home
-Here's hoping Kathy Johnson's comment
about Miller preparing a new routine
is true
-Chussy has contracted 'Dawes' Disease' (no UB
releases)
-Pod's music has *got* to go!
-Susan
commented:
>plus that Russian compulsory layout Pak
Hey, if
*something's* going to be compulsory, the layout Pak ain't
a bad
choice!
Better than the oak tree thing!
-it
would be poetic for Chussy to win vault final
-Kotchetkova and Miller do two *entirely* different UB
dismounts
-loved Grosheva's
fx ending (with the *fingers* extended)
-Adriana
commented:
>I'm
inclined to think Russia would win even if Milosovici
>and Gogean were competing
It would certainly have gone
down to the wire. I have a feeling Belu was
watching this meet
closely.
-the Russians have only had a
red/white/blue flag for three years, yet they
managed
to come up with a *much* better leo than the US has
in its
existence...
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 1994 16:48:57 -0700 (PDT)
From: ***@netcom.com
Subject:
Assorted Goodwill Thoughts
>
> -the Russians
have only had a red/white/blue flag for three years, yet they
> managed to come up with a *much* better leo
than the US has in its
> existence...
>
> Mara
Oh COME ON !
The USA has
ALWAYS had dippy outfits.
The leos
always look dumb. The US Olympic
uniform worn to the ceremonies always
makes me
ashamed of my country, and how about those stupid oputfits
they make
the skiers and the speed skaters wear
?
Now if the ice dancers look dumb, thats THEIR doing because USOC doesnt
design
THOSE outfits.
But nearly every outfit the USOC DOES design
makes me wretch.
-texx
Face
down, 9 edge first, roadkill on the information superdata highway...
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:33:25 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Aussie Commenwealth Team Trials
A couple people expressed
interest so here's the highlights from the
article
I mentioned earlier ... from the Australian AP by Terry O'Conner
(the "-" are
taken directly from the
article and all personal quotes are in quotes; the
rest
is my own summary of the main points)...
- [Aussie Fed. Director Peggy
Browne On Hughes selection] "Her selection was
based
on her performance, she was always in
the team subject to her fitness
in terms of
her injury"
Hughes finished 3rd in the trials held yesterday
-[Joanna on her finish] "I was hoping today to just show them I
could perform
in all events"
-Her inclusion
means Clare Cribbes of Victoria has been omitted from
the
final Games squad
Joanna performed a
reduced difficulty FX (worth only 9.4) due to her ankle
injury
-[on wether her FX set will be up to
snuff for Commonwealth] "My routine
wouldn't
be as strong as it could be, but it would
still be good enough to
help the
team,"
- [about her ankle] "The doctors say the ankle is good,
it's still a tiny
bit painful but you don't really feel it in
competition."
Jenny Smith (age 14) won the trials with a strong
9.712 on vault
-[Smith on her vault] "I was really happy on the
vault because I was doing a
different one today, a backward vault and I
normally do a frontward one"
-[Smith on the selection procedure]
"a bit nerve
racking"
Ruth Moniz (age 16) whom the article says
"just missed" making the '92
Olympic team said
"I was very disappointed to miss the last team but it made
me more
determined to succeed this time and I think I'm a better gymnast
now"
Another interesting note the article says
that team selection includes a
"skinfold
test" (I assume for body fat percentages) which has been quite
controiversial (I bet!). As well
as all members having to score at least 37
points
in the AA at each of *three* trials ... tough selection procedures!!
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 14:46:35 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Aussie
Commonwealth Team Final (Women, Men and RSG)
Found this via the Austrailian AP and will just send the team names
in case
Rachele also posts it. If anyone's
interested in the rest of the article just
drop me
a line.
The national [Oz] team is -
Women: Joanna Hughes (Vic) Ruth
Moniz (NSW) Jenny Smith (WA)
Rebecca Stoyel
(SA) Salli
Wills (WA).
Men: Brennon Dowrick (ACT) Peter Hogan
(NSW) Bret Hudson (NSW)
Nathan
Kingston (Qld). Reserve:
Damien Crozier (ACT).
The three rhythmic sporting gymnasts are Kasumi Takahashi (VIC) Leigh
Marning (NSW) Katie Mitchell (NSW).
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 1994 15:11:39 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
GG, W All-Around
Wow, thanks to Sherwin for such a speedy, detailed
report! To
supplement
that, here's some info from the news wires:
UPI
-This was
Miller's first defeat in two years, since her silver at the
Barcelona
Games.
-Miller's BB, 9.887
-Miller's FX, 9.912 -- including a
10 from the Romanian judge, and a
9.95 from the US judge; however, it was
later discovered that the
Romanian judge, Mirela Szemerjar, had pushed the wrong button; she had
intended to give Miller a 9.9.
-Kochetkova's
FX was a 9.900 -- including a 10 from the Russian judge.
She is the
reigning world champ on FX.
-Kotchetkova
collected $1000 in prize money.
REUTERS
(re
Miller): "The American turned in a superbly choreographed
performance to gain a mark of 9.912, the highest individual
score of
the day for any event." [thought I'd included since Gymn
seems to be
pretty split on whether they like
Miller's choreography.]
Kotchetkova
"looked to have been the victim of dubious judging after
the first discipline, the vault... The Russian performed two
faultless
jumps for a 9.800 score but Miller
received the same mark despite
making a bad
mistake on the second dismount."
Miller slipped slightly when
dismounting from UB.
Lu Li, UB world champ from China, fell off the
bars halfway through
her routine.
Results:
1. Dina Kochetkova
(Russia)
39.325
2.
Shannon Miller (U.S.)
39.268
3. Yelena
Grosheva (Russia)
38.943
4. Liliya Podkopyeva (Ukraine) 38.893
5. Oksana Chusovitina
(Uzbekistan) 38.818
6. Ana Bican
(Romania)
38.793
7. Ionela Loaies (Romania)
38.250
8. Yelena
Piskun (Belarus)
38.230
9. Monica
Martin (Spain)
38.211
10. Oksana Knizhnik
(Ukraine)
38.175
11. Li Chjan (China)
37.798
12.
Oksana Fabrichnova (Russia)
37.729
13.
Angela Ghimpu (Romania)
37.692
14.
Tatyana Malaya (Ukraine)
37.600
15.
Marianna Webster (U.S.)
37.417
16. Lu Li
(China)
37.111
>From the AP, apparatus rankings (I believe
however that these are not
the rankings for event
finals -- those qualifiers were determined
yesterday,
in the team competition -- but no, I did not get a list of
those qualifiers)
Vault--1, Piskun, 9.868. 2, Kochetkova, 9.763. 3, Angela Ghimpu,
Romania, 9.743. 4 (tie), Miller and Chusovitina, 9.731. 6, Podkopyeva,
9.706. 7, Bikan, 9.694. 8, Monica Martin, Spain, 9.687.
Uneven bars--1, Grosheva, 9.825. 2, Kochetkova, 9.787. 3 (tie),
Miller, Podkopyeva and Piskun, 9.750. 6,
Tatyana Malaya, Ukraine,
9.675. 7, Chusovitina,
9.650. 8 (tie), Bikan and Loaies, 9.625.
Balance beam--1,
Miller, 9.887. 2, Kochetkova,
9.850. 3, Oksana
Fabrichnova, Russia,
9.762. 4, Bikan, 9.712. 5,
Oksana Knizhnik,
Ukraine,
9.675. 6, Chusovitina,
9.662. 7, Grosheva, 9.637.
8,
Podkopyeva, 9.587.
Floor exercise--1, Kochetkova,
9.925. 2, Miller, 9.900. 3,
Podkopyeva,
9.850. 4, Grosheva, 9.812.
5, Chusovitina, 9.775.
6,
Bikan, 9.762. 7, Loaies,
9.650. 8, Knizhnik, 9.625.
[FX
can't be right -- every other wire report says Miller got a 9.912,
the highest score of the day, and that Kochetkova
got a 9.90.]
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 31 Jul
1994 15:24:41 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
GG, W All-Around II
whoops, forgot to include
these morsels of information in that last
post...
Taken
from the AP wire:
Nunno: "Basically it
comes down to: if you've got to beat Shannon,
she's
got to beat herself."
Miller: "I think the little steps I
took out of both my vaults made
the difference. It
was so close."
-Miller stumbled after her full-in mount on
floor.
Miller again: "I did better than I did yesterday, but I
still need to
clean up my landings... (Kotchetkova) deserved to win. She had the
difficulty and she stuck her landings. Hopefully, I'll stick
my
landings next time... I won't say it's not
disappointing, but I've
learned something and I
still have championships coming up. I've
learned
I've got to clean up my landings and increase the difficulty."
-There
were apparently several computer scoring glitches.
First, the
scoreboards were showing only the top
vault instead of the average of
the two
vaults. Then, the computer and the
official scoresheet were
rounding
up rather than rounding down the scores. And finally, the
final scores were originally listed as 39.30 to 39.28.
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:11:28 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: GG, W All-Around
II
The following seriously ticks me off:
>Nunno: "Basically it comes down to: if you've got to
beat Shannon, she's got
to beat
herself."
Even Miller herself said Kotchetkova
deserved the win, but Nunno absolutely
refuses to acknowledge a great performance by another
competitor. Whether or
not Shannon had small errors is not the issue. Giving credit where credit is
due IS!!
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 1994 10:57:45 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
GG, W Team tidbits
Another collage of news wires...
United
Press International--
-Russia led after its first rotation on bars,
and stayed in 1st place
all night.
-Kochetkova is 17 years old (! -- I thought she was one of
those new
14-15 year olds).
-Top score on
bars was Khorkina, with a 9.875. She also got the
highest
score on vault, a 9.85.
-The top score on beam was yet another
Russian, Fabrichnova (9.800).
-The fourth
team member, Yelena Grosheva, *is* one of those new
14-15
kids... she's 15, to be exact. Quote: "I am very happy with
result
... everything was perfect. In the team we are all friends and
we
give each other a lot of support."
Miller:
"I felt good about the floor (exercise), I was trying to
redeem myself. I made mistakes in each event today, and I'll
need to
clean them up before (the individual
competition) tomorrow. As a team,
we could've done
better, but it was a new experience for the other
three."
Now,
from the AP (btw, the writer has the coolest name: SALVATORE
ZANCA):
Miller:
"I felt good about the four exercises as a whole. But tomorrow
I am
coming back to redeem myself after today and do better in
everything."
[I wonder if Miller said "floor"
instead of "four" and
the reporter got
it wrong... it doesn't fit the context, but it seems
odd
for Miller to say she felt good about her four exercises when it
was such a sub-par performance for her.]
-Before
Miller's floor ex that brought her up to 3rd, she had been in
8th.
Miller:
"I felt good about my floor exercise. I was trying to redeem
myself after my beam. I had a wobble, then another wobble
there.
Hopefully, I can clean things up for tomorrow... We could have
done
better as a team, but it was new for the
other three (her teammates).
It involves getting experience. They just have
to go out there and do
what they do all the time
in practice." [Hmm, slightly different
wording
from the UPI... I wonder if she gave each reporter
extraordinarily
similar interviews, or [more likely] if they each
transcribed
the press conference differently.]
-Now here's a good quote from the
AP: "At the world championships in
January, Miller won the all-around
title for the second consecutive
year." [The worlds were in April.]
-Jennie
Thompson is: the youngest ever US Junior Nat'l Champ; 13 years
old as of Friday, 7/29; 4'1"; and 58 pounds. She scored a 9.0 on
vault, sat down on her bars landing to score a 9.15, but
then garnered
a 9.55 on beam.
-Kochetkova got a 9.825 on bars. AP says she had a double layout in
her floor routine (9.875), but I've learned to not trust
general media
coverage regarding names of
skills...
And a note from Reuters... three of the four Russian
gymnasts were in
the top twelve at the 1994
Worlds.
Rachele
Enter choice !
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 14:46:51 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: GG, W Team
tidbits
>-Kochetkova is 17 years old (!
-- I thought she was one of those new
14-15 year olds).<
I
think I've mentioned this before but you can catch Kochet
as far back as
the '91 Jr. circuit and prior to
that in at least the '90 USSR Nationals (the
really
good one since you can see their names on the scoreboard during FX ...
"oh so that fuzzy spot on my video" - with home video of Sov
nationals
they're all fuzzy spots - "was Yulia
Kut" ... FYI, Yulia
had grown about a
foot since '89 and had the highest
double tuck I've ever seen ... man or
women).
>-Kochetkova got a 9.825 on bars. AP says she had a double layout in
her floor routine (9.875), but I've learned to not trust
general media
coverage regarding names of
skills...<
Kochetkova *did* do a double
layout for her FX mount (for once they got it
right
...amazing isn't it?) . She also did a front, front full, punch front;
front, front full, front whip; and a double tuck
dismount. No, my memory is
not quite that good but I thought she did a double lay and
just had to pop
the tape in to check.
Must mention that in '94
Euros Oksana (Fabrichnova) was doing *the* most
wonderful 1 1/2 Yurchenko (high,
clean, and totally laid out) I've ever seen
... she
must have thought since they were so far ahead that this was a good
time to try a new vault (the double) that has a better
chance of sticking
once she masters it. That makes a double, full, 1/2, and 1 1/2 Yurt that
I've seen her do. She also has a cool
handspring pike front with a half.
It's a damn shame that they didn't
show her bars since her double double is
cleaner and *higher* then most girls full-in's. I personally
think that she
has the best set of the bunch (real
clean Geinger and I think Tkatchev
plus
that Russian compulsory layout Pak) ... which
is quite an accomplishemnt when
you look at the Russian talent on that event (UB).
>And
a note from Reuters... three of the four Russian gymnasts were in the
top twelve at the 1994 Worlds.<
Kochetkova 3rd
Khokina
9th
Grosheva 12th
Fabrichnova
only did one event - beam - since she had broken some fingers in
podium training. She got the bronze medal behind Shannon
& The Pod on that
event
During the
preview they did Friday night I saw Nikoleayeva (sp?) working out
so maybe they
were training her in case Fab couldn't compete (that fever Bart
and Kathy kept mentioning). BTW, she (Nikoleayeva)
does front handspring
front not-quite-a-layout on
beam a lot like Bobrova ... now where did Bobrova
scurry off to
anyway?
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:05:33 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Goodwill Games
(Womens All-Around)
Hi all again. Hmm, I
haven't received any E-mails at all this weekend,
there may be something wrong with our mail server here. I
hope you'll
get this OK although I didn't get
anything in return (not even my own
gymn
message from yesterday). Anyway what I'm trying to say is if there
had been any comments about my last message, I'm sorry I
can't reply to
them now simply because I haven't
received them.
Swiftly into the gymnastics (sorry about the non-gymn rubbish in the
last
paragraph). The Goodwill Games womens all-around
final has just
taken place and here are my
thoughts. The German TV was showing it
live but
they were mixing the broadcast with the women volleyball which
was going on at the same time though, so I missed some of
the important
routines...
There were 16
competitors in this field, presumably the top 16 from
the
team comp. They are Kochetkova, Fabrichnova,
Grosheva (RUS); Miller,
Webster (USA); Bican, Ghimpu, Loaies (ROM); Luo Li, Zhang Li
(CHN);
Podkopayeva, Knizhnik,
Malaya (UKR); Chusovitina (UZB); Piskoun
(BLR);
and Martin (ESP).
I'll describe what
happened chronologically...
1st Rotation:
Fabrichnova
surprised us (or me anyway) by not doing her double-twisting
double-back dismount from bars... instead she just did a
double back pucked
for
only 9.537. (Oh yes I got more scores from the TV than yesterday.)
Miller's
1/2-twisting Yurchenko has a now familiar step
forward to it for
9.800 (first vault). Her second
had two steps staggering backwards for an
average
score of 9.731. Kochetkova scored 9.763 for her front
VT with
1/2 turn. Loaies's VT had a large side
step after her 1/2-twist-Yurch.
The caption on TV says Oksana Knizhnik is 17 years-old (? She doesn't
look like one?). Webster's bars was nice, she had a big
smile on her face
after landing her double layout
dismount.
2nd Rotation:
Luo Li the World
champion on bars fell off them after losing her swing
gradually
throughout the routine. Knizhnik lost her leg form
badly during
her Jaeger release from bars, but did
a nice double pike to finish.
(That's all for the 2nd rotation... the TV
channel was showing volleyball
instead for most of
this period...)
3rd Rotation:
Webster fell on her head in her
full-twisting double-pike tumble on FX
(don't
worry, there wasn't an injury). Webster's posture was VERY like
that of Miller's, her hands and feet movements and her body
shape was
very reminiscent of Shannon Miller. I'm
not saying it's boring, but I
think it'll be more
interesting if the US had sent some gymnasts who
were
not from the Nunno camp. Miller herself did a nice
beam for 9.887.
Chusovitina's floor was still
very good with all her power. Her first
tumbling
pass was double layout, and then striaght back down
the diagonal
for a double twist punch front. Kochetkova remained on top with 9.850 on
beam.
4th Rotation:
Miller's FX, though old,
was still very good and she seemed to do her
last
front tumbling pass very well now (which was causing her problems
in Worlds'94). Her score was 9.912. Kochetkova
soon followed on FX, I
didn't know her score but
hers too was a nice routine (I love her dance).
Anyway that was enough to
hold off Miller for the AA Gold medal.
Fabrichnova
did her approach wrong and only did a straight Yurchenko
for
her first vault. (Think she did a double-twist
Yurchenko for her second)
Bican's
FX was good with a clean high full-in stuck to start, and a
triple twists to end. Loaies's FX
was just starting when the satellite
TV lost the picture (It can only
happen to gymnastics) and it's a few
minutes
before the pictures return, and then they were showing volleyball
again.
Anyway these were the results:
Goodwill
Games 1994 Womens All-Around Final (Top Eight) :
1. Dina Kochetkova (RUS) 39.325
2.
Shannon Miller (USA) 39.268
3.
Elena Grosheva (RUS) 38.943
4. Liliya Podkopayeva (UKR) 38.893
5. Oksana Chusovitina
(UZB)
38.818
6. Ana Maria Bican (ROM) 38.787
7. Ionela Loaies (ROM) 38.250
8.
Elena Piskun
(BLR)
38.230
More tomorrow from the women apparatus
finals!
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 11:27:56 EDT
From: <***@MIT.EDU>
Subject: Goodwill
Games Coverage
My main impression of both the ABC and TBS coverage
was that it seemed
like they only had one camera
there -- they were jumping around like
crazy
trying to get the most important thing going on at the time on
tape. Sometimes
you missed the beginning of someone's routine (at least
one
beam routine with no mount!) and often they showed
only one of a
girls 2 vaults, and not always the
better one, so it seemed like they
had missed
getting the other one on tape or something.
In general though, I
thought that they showed a fair number of routines,
without
too much jabber in between.
--Robyn
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 13:47:52 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Goodwill
Thoughts
Hi! I just
couldn't resist commenting on the meet to y'all. :)
First, on Susan's msg:
>I am constantly
annoyed how they point out every little fault on the foreign
athletes and the American's only make "little
errors."
I totally hate that too, but when I say so, my mom says,
"Remember who's
paying
them." Which doesn't make it
any better, but helps remind me that
there is a
rational explanation (not to be confused with an excuse) and that
they might not actually be that biased in real life (which
does make me feel
a little better).
>Speaking
of Spain ... they are really improving.
Kinda hard to say on the basis of two routines.
>Edwikomova really doesn't get the credit for that layout
front vault that
she deserves. Way cool. Has any
other girl ever attempted that?
Denisse
Lopez (MEX) does it. Unfortunately,
I missed it at the PR Cup, but
everybody seemed to
agree it was better than Evdokimova's (who was
also
there, so direct comparison was
possible). She (Lopez) does it
hollow rather
than arched, I'm told, and if her
tumbling is any indication, she has the
power to
do a great one.
>I'm ticked that they cut away from that cool
little Russian kid (with that
punch into immed. slow front
walkover/something-or-other ... >what would you
really
call that?)
That was a roundoff layout punch
front walkover. It was slow b/c she
didn't
hit the handstand right and had to strain
to make it over the top. I was
ticked they cut her off in the middle, too. When the local kids look like
that, <sigh>.
Wonder why the Hungarians didn't show?
Finally (since this will
make for a good segue into my own comments):
>The Russian's were
amazing!! They were not only lovely but
consistent
Blech. Like I commented to Susan last night:
overall, "everybody sux." I
now wish
to modify that to "everybody suck*ed*",
since a lot of people didn't
have their best meet
and w/o the falls might look considerably better. Plus
they
looked a little better to me upon reviewing the tape this morning.
Russia
was clearly better than the other teams.
Of course, we saw all of 4
Romanian routines, but if they were any
indication, I'm surprised they even
finished 2nd,
and I'm inclined to think Russia would win even if Milosovici
and Gogean were competing.
V: Khorkina. That vault is incredibly cool and so
well done.
UB: This was where
I had the least problems. Overall I
thought most
everyone looked at least decent; some
had better form than others. I
just
*cringe* every time I see a girl bend her
knees on a straddle jam, and just
about everyone
who did one did (there's just *no* excuse.
If she's too
short, then let her do
something else: a regular jam or stand on the bar or a
toe-on
to catch the hb like Jennie T. did. Much as I dislike standing on the
bar, it's not so bad if she does a toe-on or something to
keep the rhythm
going, and I think I prefer it to
a form break). The Russians
looked
excellent. Gorgeous Tkatchevs. Would've liked to see Fabrichnova and
Kochetkova (maybe today?).
Malaya's Xiao was cool.
Shannon has to do
something about her knees
on her giants. She used to have
such impeccable
form, then she started bending
before her double layout, and it's been
spreading
to her other giants like a disease.
BB: You'd think there was an earthquake the
way everybody was shaky and/or
falling. It seemed like everyone was going from
requirement to requirement
like a checklist. Podkopayeva, Knizhnik, Kochetkova were nice
enough,
though. The Americans (except Meduna -- those knees) weren't too bad (esp.
Jennie's
tricks, but her leaps -- eeek), but those Omelianchiks do look
suspiciously
like back walkovers. I **love** Khorkina's tricks and
extension,
but she was blah, and those spazzy hands... :-P
I thought the
Romanians were just awful. Romania used to have such great
routines. Btw, I
thought Bican looks more Hungarian
than Romanian, with those hyperextended
elbows of
hers. Oh, and btw again,
>(the Milosovici oak tree thing
<g> ... not a true Omelianchik which is a
1/4
turn swing to hip"catch"
crosswise on the beam)
Omelianchik herself
continued to a back hip circle, but the trick which
bears
her name in the Code ends at the handstand,
so what Milosovici does is in
fact
an Omelianchik (of course, what the Code says and
reality are not always
the same thing. Omelianchik
did a 3/4 twist as far as I can tell, but that's
not
what the Code says).
FX:
I don't think I've ever seen so many ugly routines in one meet with
so
many of the world's best (and adding the ones
who were missing probably
wouldn't help
much). Frankly, I thought the
Americans had the best
choreography, despite all
four routines being variations on the same theme.
I enjoyed watching them. The Russians stood around a lot. And what was
depressing
was that they were even trying to perform instead of just going
through the movements (at least at times), but they had
nothing to work with,
like giving a good actor a
lousy script. Podkopayeva
was cute. But
Bulakhova can't keep her knees tight on a
ff, yuck.
Again, I didn't like the
Romanians at all. Tumbling was a different story. Fabrichnova
does her
piked full-in
with her legs together; now that's a rarity. I think
Khorkina's
triple full was the highlight for me; that and Podkopayeva's
double front and Grosheva's Thomas
(Neil, not to be confused w/ Kurt, who
also owns a
FX trick) Front tumbling seems to
be improving some as gymnasts
try harder, more
worthwhile combinations (for which they get mega bonus
points). But what was with the Russians and
back-to-back (but unconnected)
passes?
Overall
I enjoyed Khorkina most, b/c she's so original and
uses her
extensions. I liked Meduna
least. I expected her to be better
than she was.
Mainly I was
surprised that she was so lacking in form.
I thought Jennie
Thompson looked good despite the mishaps; very promising.
On the coverage, we should've
seen more of Romania, considering they were
second. I'm also sick of them showing the little
baby gymnasts like Jennie
Thompson crying and talking about the sacrifices
they make. Sure, that's
part of it, but these girls also have a great time and I
never hear them get
to talk about how much they
like what they're doing.
See how it goes today.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 14:47:10 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Goodwill
Thoughts
>>Speaking of Spain ... they are really improving.<<
>Kinda hard to
say on the basis of two routines.<
Well I
was commenting on what I've seen of them lately from Europeans and
other meets since Barcelona. Did you see the Gymnix
Invite out of Canada
from early this year? Well they
sent some real *little* kids and they were
quite
cool. Rulfova's, double layouts, Deltchev's
... real high level tricks
and funky dance and
with good form.
I agree that the Russian's dance is miserable
considering the way Grosheva
and
Fab *can* move. Kochet
just is not all that graceful so I think I'll
have
to settle for good extension and form. I mentioned what a waste I think
Khorkina's choreography is. She's also never on her toes (I
cant spell
releve).
In fact she always looks stoned. Kind of Yurchenko's
enthusiasm on
valium (eek!).
>But what
was with the Russians and back-to-back (but unconnected)
passes?<
It
seems like a trend. Like standing on the low bar. Not something I really
like either but it seems very intentional ... in other words
it 'fer sure
doesn't
look like it was supposed to be connected.
>Frankly, I thought the
Americans had the best choreography, despite all four
routines
being variations on the same theme.<
I agree that their routines
looked the smoothest and most together. Of course
they've
all had those routines *forever*. I don't know with all the Russians
but Fab's is 'fer
sure new and I've never seen Kochet do that one
until
worlds (and it is bad don't get me wrong). Khorkina had a diff. one in '93
too.
I also think that they lost a *lot* of choreographers. I mean look at
the Brit girls with Illienko and
how great their dance looks now.
>FX: I don't think I've ever seen so many
ugly routines in one meet with so
many of the
world's best<
Well I disagree I think we hit bottom in '93 Worlds
(skill, form, difficulty
and dance all lacking
from almost every set on every event) and are getting
better.
We're not back to what
I would say is "normal" yet but we're getting
better. In Brummie I could count the number of
watchable floor ex's on one
hand ... easy.
>V: Khorkina. That vault is incredibly cool and so
well done.<
For fear of sounding like
Kathy Johnson her stiff straddled legs and totally
flexed
feet (and with legs that long it really shows) really bother me. The
vault is cool though.
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 30 Jul 94 23:56:28 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Gymnastics
Coverage /
Commentators
>Also, Kathy Johnson drives me nuts! She
is completely obsessed with toe
point,<
I
don't think that Kathy is obssessed at all. She
usually says someone has
"wonderful
form" when they obviously don't. Toe point is a crtical
element
that seperates
gymnasts from circus performers. Presentation (form, body
line, extension, and toe point) are as much a part of
gymnastics as double
layouts and full-in's.
My
problem with her comments about Shannon is that she didn't really make it
clear that her drastic shortness on the landing and total
lack of amplitude
was an *error* regardless of wether or not she got it around.
As for Dagget; just say no (as a
commentator I mean he seems like a nice
guy).
Really he has the natural on camera spontenatity of a
sea sponge. He
only knows to things to say
"wonderful" and "too bad." Of course that's just
this nosey, annoying, loudmouthed gymnastics fan's
opinion.
Susan
PS-My god there's a 26 year old women with *7*
kids that she gave to her
boyfriend so that he
could collect welfare on them on "Cops" and know she
can't find them. God bless America. Oops, I just realized that I
admitted
publically now that I watch
"Cops" ... oh the horror!!!
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 1994 08:28:13 -0400
From: ***@cykick.jvnc.net
Subject:
Gymnastics Coverage /
Commentators
Well, I see everyone's beginning to get their licks in about the TV
coverage
(or lack thereof)... In part:
>>Also,
Kathy Johnson drives me nuts! She is completely obsessed with toe
>point,<
>
>I don't think that Kathy is obssessed at all. She usually says someone has
>"wonderful form" when they obviously don't....
...
>As
for Dagget; just say no...
A
few observations/comments:
1. Every commentator has his/her area of
emphasis where "analysis" is
concerned. Kathy may appear "obsessed"
with toe point, I recall Cathy
Rigby constantly citing a
competitor's "dance" skills on FX. Of course,
these
"experts" may be going on about stuff THEY kept hearing about
from
coaches and others when THEY were active
competitors...
2. It's Elfi Schlegel, last I
noticed.
3. Perhaps part of the problem with the quality of commentary is
that there
are ONLY "expert analysts"
covering for both TBS/ABC. A
knowledgeable
sportscaster might have been able to
draw out some of the explanations we
might be looking
for here. (Greg, who was on the
late lamented Triplecast
- and
whose last name escapes me - immediately comes to mind.)
4. Following up from Item 3, Bart
appears flustered trying to be both
expert and
host. I've seen him do much better
at other events, so perhaps
TV folk get just as nervous as competitors when
it comes to major events...
5. Not to make any excuses for ABC, but I did
notice that Julie Moran sent
get well greetings to
(among others) Chuck Howard at the end of yesterday's
broadcast.
Chuck has been one of ABC's top
producers for big events over
the years (at least
since Roone Arledge moved
to the news side) - perhaps
this is a sign that
his absence is indeed sorely missed.
6. Interesting to see how ABC edited
the intro to the event - I THOUGHT it
looked a
little choppy yesterday afternoon!
Breakfast time! Now to see how much of this stuff (if
any) has made the papers!
Helena
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 11:32:27 EDT
From: <***@MIT.EDU>
Subject: Jennie
Thompson
>Kathy Johnson made a good point in regards to the US
Gymnastics 'community'
>putting excessive
expectations on Jennie Thompson.
>'94 and '95 *should* be learning years for Jennie. Perhaps it is even better
>for her not to get too much attention yet.
I have
just one question: "WHY was
Jennie competing with a broken toe?"
(which
Kathy mentioned during her floor exercise)
Was this competition
really
SO important an experience for her?
It can't have been great for
her toe, and
it certainly must have been very painful.
I hate to say it, but it makes me wonder about whether having
little kids
embroiled in such fierce competition
is such a great idea, once again.
--Robyn
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 30 Jul 1994 14:31:12 PST
From: ***@electriciti.com
Subject: TV
coverage
Hi everyone,
Gotta take my
turn trashing the coverage...
Quick, anchors: How many syllables in
"triathlon"? BZZZT! Wrong. You lose.
Tri-ath-lon. Three.
Oh, and thanks for showing us Chinese
FX & V. Wouldn't want to miss those.
We saw few, if any, releases
to overshoot to handstand on low, Kathy. Why
pick
on just one kid?
Did the Russians get their music from Romania? At
least the giraffe -er,
Khorkina
- had some class. "Carmen" is awfully popular among ex-Soviets
these days.
On the positive side, nice to see form, attack,
"real" difficulty and
presentation all
in the same exercise, and by more than one gymnast. A
couple
of girls even listened to their music. Whatever next?
BTW, I tried the
Goodwill bbs (perhaps Rachele
has, too?) for results, but
no luck so far. They
had track stuff from yesterday (I tested to see if
they'd
posted anything). Guess they're behind. Maybe the AP wire will yield
something.
Anyone wanna start a pool on AA winner? Maybe I'll go with
the underdog,
Pod. Guess it's her, Koch, Fab and Shannon. One will fall,
the others
medal. Or will someone pull a Kolesnikova?
Based on previous Games, K's a lucky
letter (Kalinina won in '90), so the
money's gotta go on Kochetkova. Oh yeah, she's also good - and consistent.
Trivia:
In the '90 Goodwill Games, an unknown 13-year-old Soviet competed
exhibition and did some cool beam tricks. Two years later,
she was Olympic
champ.
...should
we keep an eye on Kuznetsova? Or start a second pool:
How long
before she blows her achilles,
reversing direction on beam? Ouch.
Okay, I'll leave you alone
now.
Nancy's evil twin
(whose opinions do
not in any way reflect those of the IG management or
staff,
except when they do)
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 1994 18:42:53 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu
Subject:
Women's AA, ABC style
First
of all, my figurative hat off to Shannon Miller, who didn't turn
around and slug Donna DeVarona
during her rudely phrased questions, that went
something
like:
D:"You've grown 4 inches, had injuries and, well,
gained weight. How do
you manage to
cope?"
S:"Well, I'm still only 4'10", and the weight
helps my tumbling and
vaulting."
And the press
talks about how eating disorders among women are such a
tragedy
in sport...
What's
with the brunette craze among ex-national teamers? First Kim
then *whoa!* Kristie. I wasn't that thrilled with the
imbalanced tone of the
interviews, and how many
more times can we watch the '92 BB fall? Like it cost
her
the AA title or something like that, which it did not. Just ask Kerri
Strug. They could've easily grabbed 90% of the retired
national team members,
especially the ones who
competed collegiately, and had completely positive
responses.
Why not show a variety of opinions? Grrr.
I liked Kathy's
comment at the end about how one judges success doess
not have to be in terms
of winning.
The
Pod rocks my world. THAT vault is the best Yurch-1/2 in the world,
even with AA steps.
Okay,
so Khorkina does look like a giraffe with pink eyeshadow on
Valium. But the choreography, for the most
part, I consider wonderful,
especially the
sequence to the prone position. What cool stuff with the music.
Someone
should go over and over tapes of her and Bogie in '89 Euros with Soni
and tell her that she CAN
look like that if she tries.
I
wanted to jump off a tall building when I heard "Disco Carmen". Yech.
Yay
for Chussy! Isn't this her highest individual finish
in major intl
competition?
Yay! Why was Kathy knocking her bars last night? Was she having a
bad hair day? I mean, Chussy is whipping around eagle giants and Kathy's
going
"she just lacks that extension..."
At least she shut her mouth more for AA. she
should have more releases, but then, so should Dom. And
Shannon should have
more tumbling. And on, and on.
Shannon's
actually working a new floor routine? I'll believe that when
I see it.
Chussy looks sooooo much like Shushunova now,
it is scary. So they
compare
her to.... ah, Mary Lou Retton! That's it! Duh.
Okay, this isn't
strictly gymnastics, but why are the inbetween
segments for ABC *this* lame? Hello, I think everyone is
doing drugs with Bart.
Earth to ABC sports... do y'all have to be this
stupid when covering women's
events, like the
triathlon (3 syllables, yes...) and gymnastics? I don't recall
this much stupid stuff inbetween
during the boxing coverage.
Enough ranting for now. Susan, Gimnasta,
Nancy, Sherwin, and the rest
of y'all - you rock
my world, you're soooo funny! When I drop music, I'll
go
into broadcasting, and I'll bring y'all with
me. Forgot Rachelle and Beth in
there as
well.
Apologies for the long post. ----
Cara
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 31 Jul 94
20:11:34 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Women's AA, ABC style
>I
don't recall this much stupid stuff inbetween during
the boxing coverage.
Virtually every gym event on tv has a spot on the dangers of gymnastics to
young girls, yet there never seems to be a spot on the
danger to young boys
of a sport whose objective is
beating your opponent bloody into the ground.
Also, what
about football <gasp>, wrestling, etc. If I had a child I would
much rather have him/her involved in gym!
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:33:12 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Women's AA, ABC
style
> Okay, so Khorkina does look like
a giraffe with pink eyeshadow on
Valium. But the
choreography, for the most part, I consider wonderful,
especially
the sequence to the prone position. What cool stuff with the
music.<
My biggest problem with Khorkina is that she has the potential to be one of
the best ever. All the ingredients are there; she doesn't
use them properly
... or at least she uses them inconsistantly.
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 31 Jul 94 20:11:53 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Women's AA
Comments
Grosheva's FX tumbling and
execution is impeccable. Every landing - out of
the
most difficult passes I've ever seen - stuck cold. Form and line
completely tight and yet she scored a tenth less then
Shannon who had far
inferior tumbling and no
better execution. While Grosheva's dance was
nothing
special neither is Shannon's (again her
program is slightly smoother and more
complete but
the tumbling doesn't even begin to match up).
On beam a similar
situation as Dina rocked a far harder set and scored a
*lot*
less then Miller with several wobbles. 9.887 for Shannon vs
9.537 (?)
for Kochetkova.
It's
not that I don't like Shannon 'cause I do ... it's just that after all
this Bart still had the gall to say after Kochetkova's floor routine [about
her
upcoming score] "... Well we *are* in Russia." No need
to judge the
world by America's own judging bias
Bart.
On the other
events; while Kochetkova's vault was far cleaner
& had greater
amplitude and was overall much
better executed then Shannon's. Miller's vault
is
worth a 10.0 (I've already gone into how I feel about that) and Dina's
only a 9.9 so the scores were pretty reflective (9.8 for
Dina and a 9.8+ avg.
for Miller). Now comparing
Shannon's vault to Pod's would be more accurate.
Lilyia
actually does the vault correctly (perfectly to be exact ...
completely laidout and impossibly
high) with a slightly worse landing today
(both
had steps foreward but Pod's were less controlled)
and scored a tenth
or so less then Miller who
get's no deductions for her very obvious pike.
***Where is the motivation to
develop new moves and superior execution when
it
goes totally unrewarded in favor of the stuck landing?***
It's so sad
to see Chussy vault now. She used to be such a god on
that event
and now is only so so.
Poor ChuChu ... she won that event in both '91 and
'92
it's just that no-one noticed (including the
judges).
Kochetkova really attacks those unevens!
Overall, to me anyway, Grosheva looked like the strongest gymnast today.
BTW,
Fab won the bronze on beam in '94 not on bars like Bart said. I mean
they are at these comps, they have the stats in front of
them, plus
researchers to help them out and still
they make endless technical errors
(it's a Xiao Rhizu that Malya does a 3/4 - not
a true full - out of not a
Kim Gwang Suk as Kathy said yesterday). Rather pathetic actually.
Shannon
has *not* grown four inches this last year ... since '91 maybe (she
was listed as 4'6 1/2" in Indy and claims to be 4'
11" now). The '94 USAG
media book lists
Shannon as 4' 10" and 79 pounds and those are probably the
stats they took at '93 Nationals (last August). 1 inch in a years time is
hardly a catestrophe that
needs to be rehashed more times then she has even
competed
on events.
Shannon had a fairly good perfromance
overall and these endless excuses only
detract
from that.
Susan
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************