gymn
Digest
Wed, 6 Jul 94 Volume 2 :
Issue 143
Today's Topics:
College Update (2 msgs)
Commonwealth Games on the Internet
Dortmund TV
General comments
IG Article
More Compulsories
My profile
No-Comp Rule Effect On NCAA
Profile
RSG Get's A Blurb
Sears Directors Cup
Tickets question (cont.)
TV coverage of Worlds
USOF '94: Men's roster
USOF
'94: Rhythmic results
USOF '94: Women's roster
Women in sports study... (3 msgs)
This
is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 3 Jul 1994 11:47:15 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@tenet.edu>
Subject:
set gymn
digest
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 06 Jul 94
01:37:33 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: College Update
To
All:
Okay, here are some
early, early, early predictions on 1995 NCAA Women's
Gymnastics
Nationals, to be held at the University of Georgia.
FINISHING FIRST: Georgia. The big
question mark with Georgia will be the
loss of
Hope Spivey. The Bulldogs clearly were the best team at nationals
this year but their focus seemed to be fuzzy with the loss
of Heather Stepp.
Will that focus be even more fuzzy without Spivey? Perhaps.
But nationals will be at
Georgia, and Georgia is a team that thrives off
emotion
and crowd appeal. Their incoming freshman aren't exactly stellar but
they're certainly solid: Kim Arnold and Julie Ballard. I'm
particularly
anxious to see Arnold. I think she's
going to be something special before her
collegiate
career is done.
FINISHING SECOND -- Utah. For some reason, it seemed like Utah spent
much
of the1994 season trying to find themselves.
For me, they were a hard team to
figure out.
They'd be on their way to a 196.00 in a meet and then they'd fall
like crazy on beam. Then, during the next meet, they'd nail
beam and fall on
floor.
But the real Utes came
through at the end, and I think that this
trial-by-fire
will carry over into next season. Combine that with the best
coach in the NCAA, and you have a team that should be strong
again. Their
incoming freshman class is the
nation's #2-ranked class. It includes Traci
sommer and Monica Shaw.
FINISHING THIRD -- Florida.
With one person quitting the team from
burnout and
two others falling to injury, the Gators really had no right
finishing sixth at nationals this year. But the combination
of Head Coach
Judi Avener and Assistant Coach
Brad Wunderlich may be second only to the duo
at Georgia. Emerging from the era of the previous head
coach, the new Florida
is lean and mean, thanks to
the weight and aerobics program started by
Avener.
The core group that finished
sixth at this year's nationals returns, and
the the two gymnasts who were injured also return. Add to that
the nation's
#1-ranked incoming freshman class,
and you have quite a team. The freshman
include
the nation's #1-ranked incoming freshman (based on competition),
Martha
Grubbs. (You can argue that UCLA's Stellah Umeh is ranked higher, but
she's
been out of commission for nearly a half-year.) Florida's other
recruits include elite gymnasts Kourtney
Gallivan and Sybil Stephenson and
Level 10 gymnast Erica Selga.
FINISHING
FOURTH -- LSU. Okay, I'm going out slightly on a limb here, but
LSU
is scary. In fact, if I had to pick a darkhorse to
win it all, I'd pick
LSU.
The Tigers had more depth of
talent than any team in the country this
year but
the inexperience that came with the team's youth cost them in the
end. "So, why are they scary?" you ask.
Simple. They return EVERYONE
(as in 13 people) --- AND they get another
recruit
(Amy McKlosky). The only thing that could hurt LSU is
the lack of
continuity in the assistant coach
position. For the second time in the past
three
years, the assistant coach has left. And in the most recent case, he
was exceptionally talented.
FINISHING FIFTH -- UCLA or
ALABAMA or MICHIGAN. The race for fith boils
down to one person -- Stellah Umeh. If Stellah lives up to her
talent, she
will be the best gymnast to grace the
ranks of the NCAA since Hope Spivey
arrived. That
will give UCLA a phenonemal push and will give Leah
Homma (my
new favorite NCAA gymnast) a partner in
talent.
UCLA's
weakness, though, is depth of talent. They always seem to have 1-3
strong finishers, but the first two or three up seem kind of
week. If UCLA
can plug those holes, they'll be a
force with which to reckon. (One other
note: I've
heard a rumor the female half of the UCLA head coaching duo quit.
If this
is true, it could hurt.)
Now, let's look at Alabama. I have plumb learned to expect miracles
from
this team, and they almost pulled off a
miracle at this year's nationals. So
why don't I
think they'll finish higher next year? Well, put simply, they had
a horrible, horrible, horrible recruiting year, recruiting
Merritt Booth,
Danielle McAdams and Shay Murphy. The talent just isn't
there to break in
with the big boys.
And, finally, there's scary
Michigan. The Wolverines could finish as high
as
second, depending on how well American Twisters recruit Heather Kabnick
performs. She's pretty
awesome, and if she tag-teams in the talent department
with
current Wolverine Beth "I throw any trick in the book" Wymer, Michigan
will be
formidable. (Michigan's other recruit is Lauren Labranche,
whom I've
never heard of.)
Okay, other
predictions:
*North Carolina State will make it to nationals,
will finish in the top
10 and the head coach will
be named NCAA Head Coach of the Year. This guy has
almost
brought his team to nationals the past three years with just TWO
(count 'em, 2) scholarships. Most
other teams in the top 20 have 10
scholarships.
Well, this year, NC State has 7 scholarships.
*Stanford's Freshman
Keri Monahan will be the surprise gymnast everybody
will
have wished they recruited.
*And people will
call Minnesota "surprising."
--- Ronald
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 6 Jul 1994 14:52:18 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
College Update
Ron,
I was just wondering how the rankings get
determined and who does it
for the incoming
freshmen class. Because, for
example:
re: Georgia:
> Their incoming
freshman aren't exactly stellar but
> they're
certainly solid: Kim Arnold and Julie Ballard. I'm particularly
Kim
Arnold is a most respected gymnast, particularly because she is
known to excel on vaulting with a hand piked
front. I would say she's
most definitely a prized recruit, unless she's been injured
or something.
re: Utah:
> incoming freshman class is the nation's #2-ranked class. It
includes Traci
> sommer
and Monica Shaw.
re: Florida:
>
#1-ranked incoming freshman class... Martha Grubbs... Florida's other
> recruits include elite gymnasts Kourtney
Gallivan and Sybil Stephenson and
> Level 10 gymnast Erica Selga.
Now
see, these make no sense to me. I
have heard of both Traci Sommer
and Monica Shaw, and they're both supposed to be
awesome.
Particularly Sommer... she was in the
'92 Olympic Trials. Now, for
the four gymnasts mentioned for Florida, the only one I've
heard of is
Martha Grubbs. And
while she's pretty good too (in my opinion, Sommer
is better than Grubbs), I'd much rather have Shaw and Sommer over
Grubbs and three gymnasts whose names I've
never heard of.
I'm not criticizing the
rankings; I'm just wondering what the source is.
Also, you mentioned
that you'd never heard of Lauren Labranche. She's
a
very strong gymnast from New England Gymnastics Express. I believe
she's
elite.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 4 Jul
1994 11:39:55 UTC-0700
From: <***@cs.ubc.ca>
Subject:
Commonwealth Games on the Internet
Hi everyone,
The special project run by
the Victoria Freenet will also allow me, your
Commonwealth
Games gymn reporter, to file my reports from on site
each day
and will allow me to get questions from
you to ask during the press
conferences. If you have any questions about the
competition, you can email
me (I'm going to try to
remember to type in the list of countries competing
tonight.)
Karen
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 01 Jul 94 20:54:30 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Dortmund TV
This
was on the AOL gym board from David Michaels and since I don't know if
he was planning on posting something similar here (he's on
"Gymn" too) I'll
take
it upon myself to do so.
>>ESPN might be persuaded to take some
of Dortmund, but most of the good
stuff will air
on NBC. Of course >>good stuff<< is a value judgement.
Final
decision on Dortmund will be coming soon. It might be 2 hours of
coverage.
What would you like to see in that time
frame?
David<<
via Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 3 Jul
94 03:48:00 UTC
From: ***@genie.geis.com
Subject: General comments
Dear
Mara, Ron, George, et al,
I am
still getting used to this Inet format. The notes come in faster
than i can read them, let alone
reply to.
Let me see
here....
Mara: I don't think I have '87 worlds. I tend to tape over old tapes if
they have no relavance to current
compositional rules. I keep the
tapes to
practice judge. Once the rules have changed, I want
current routines.
Regarding the reference to page 10 of Technique (deduct .1 for poor
composition on bars if a non-element transition is
used). That is a very
valid deduction for that level of meet. You need a way to seperate
the
scores on the higher and lower level
routines. Composition is the
best
place to look for that option. It is not uncommon for these sorts of
things
to be brought up at a judges meeting prior
to a big international meet.
It
usually doesn't effect the higher level
gymnasts, but makes for a greater
score
range.
Ron: Is Stella Umeh
going to UCLA? For
sure? I heard that she
might
still be considering Michigan. That might be old news.
Wow... Stella Umeh
and Leah Homma on the same team and Dominique Dawes and
(keep
your fingers crossed) Larrisa Fontaine at
Stanford. It is Pac-10
heaven. I'll get
to see them all. (Big Grin) Is UCLA becoming the new
Canadian
Connection? This was Florida's
prime roll.
George: I have mixed feelings about dropping the
compulsories. To quote
Marshall
Avener (yes, Judy's ex-) " Compulsories is like
handing the same
recipe to many different
cooks. They will all make the same
thing, but each
dish will come out a little
different." It is so
true. I enjoy watching
compulsories to see the differences between gymnasts. I recall at the
Montreal Olympics,
when Nadia Comenci performed her compulsory bars,
many
people wondered why she got to do a different
routine. She had so much more
extension, that it looked like a different routine. Also, compulsories are
unforgiving on a gymnast's weakness.
I think it would be great if
the collegiate gymnasts participated in
international
competition because of dropping the compulsories. I am not
sure
all female gymnasts reach their prime at 17. I think the strength of
our '84 Olympic team came from gymnasts that stuck around
because of the '80
boycott. Kathy Johnson, Julianne McNamara and Tracee Talavera all missed
their
chance in '80. I don't think
they would have gone for a second
Olympiad if they had been able to compete
in Moscow. By the way, I think
Hope
Spivey- Sheeley is a perfect example of a gymnast
that improved through
her collegiate years.
Well, I had better send this
before my teens get home and hog the phone
line.
Kathleen
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 5 Jul 1994 10:31:58 -0400
From: <***@wam.umd.edu>
Subject:
IG Article
Hey Ron,
More comments for you.....now
that you mention that you were trying to make
it
easy for people to read your article you'd be surprised to know
how many people (especially children) do not know what a
modem is. Obviously
there are different styles of
writing...but I don't think the journalist way
of
writing a story means misinforming the readers just to make point or
to make it easier to understand. Alot
of times reading an article that
contains an unknow concepts stimulates curiousity
in individuals and
this drives them to find out
more info.....I'm not writing this note to
FLAME...just wanted to comment......
later!
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 01 Jul 94 19:42:14 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: More
Compulsories
I personally lament the loss of compulsories but
realistically think that
little change will be
felt in the standings of competitions. While all of
gymnastics
is a truly political game (for better or for worse) people without
a country (ie: anyone but the
USSR, Romania, and the US) were basically
royally
screwed when it came to compos...or scored fairly depending on how
you look at it. When compared to the big three the scores
are ludicrously low
but overall they seem more
fair and accurate.
Secondly, with new life compos already had little
effect on the AA and
EF...even team was somewhat predestined with the big
three scoring high
regardless of performance (BTW,
Bontas' beam in Barcelona was the highest
compo beam score given...a 9.9 for a 8.9 performance). The seperation of
teams was a
godsend simply because now there was a great Soviet and Chinese
in every round to watch. The scores were totally uneffected IMHO by this
cosmetic
change.
Basically, the FIG was moving to this descision
for the past ten years and
have so hobbled the
compos that they are the expensive lame duck of the
competition
and only rightly should be axed. Of
course they could have
changed the rules and made
them viable again but obviously they no longer
wanted
to bother. Basically the compulsory
excercises were already on life
support and they just decided to pull the plug.
There
will be no revoltuions of collegiate gymnasts moving
back onto the
Int'l scene and the US men will not surge in the world
rankings (they'll fall
simply due to the break-up
of the Soviet Union). The red sea will not part
and
pigs will not fly (hmm...really that's not an inadvertant
NCAA girl slam
;-)
I'm so sad that I can longer see my favs at their simplistic best but I doubt
that anyone else (beyond our baised
little group that is) really gives a rip!
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 05 Jul 94 20:14:36 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: My profile
Here's
my profile for those who would like to know more about me.
Name:Brian
Age:16
Place of residence:Seattle, Wa
Occupation:Student, Actor
Connection to gym:I have never
been a gymnast. I started
following
gymnastics after Barcelona. I was caught up in
all the Zmeskal hype
and watched it. I fell in
love
with the sport and have been following it
with
a
microscope ever since.
Particular
interest:International and National Men + Women.
Favorite
gymnasts: I have MANY so, I'll write a group of my
very favorites.
Kim Zmeskal, Tatiana Lyssenko, Silvia
Mitova, Kerri Strug
Tatiana Groshkava, Daniela Silivas,
Brandy Johnson,
Natalia Laschenova, Tatiana Gutsu, Henrietta Onodi,
Svetlana Boginskaya, Cristina Bontas, Aurelia Dobre,
Natalia Kalinina, Yang Bo, Michelle Campi, Olyssia
Dudnick and Hilary Grivich.
(In no order except KZ is
my
favorite.)
I have probably forgotten a few. I like every gymnast basically except
for
one or two. Many of you may recognize my name from
IG. I've had letters
published in the past.
If have any other ?'s
for me about anything, feel
free to write
anytime.---Brian
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 01
Jul 94 23:25:40 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: No-Comp Rule Effect On
NCAA
To All:
Will we see more NCAA female gymnasts in USGF competition once the
no-compulsories rule goes into effect?
Oh yeah.
I've heard again and again, from
NCAA gymnasts of all skills, that they
wouldn't
mind competing some club competitions while in college but either
1)hate compulsories or 2)haven't trained for them because
they're not
required in college.
Now, do I think NCAA gymnasts
could fare well in national competition?
Oh yeah.
Don't look for any NCAA gymnast to
win an all-around, but I do think
you'll see NCAA
female gymnasts entering competitions with the specific goal
of being a top-3 finisher on various apparatus. And they'll
do it.
Simply because of
the size and strength that comes with age, I've yet to
see
a club gymnast on the national level who can vault with better power,
height and distance than the top collegiate vaulters. (Of course, the NCAA is
under
the old code for vault, where a handspring-front tucked with a half is
a 10.00, so that would hurt them in scoring.)
And two and three years ago, the
nation's best tumbler was not on the
national team
but was rather at the University of Georgia. I saw Hope Spivey
in one competiton throw a
front-tuck to a double-layout. Then she followed
that
up with a full-in, then ended with a front-tuck to a full-in.
Not even Dominique was
throwing such raw power back then.
And then there is just the sheer
grace and power that NCAA gymnasts will
bring to
national competition -- and with that comes excitement. Yes, most
will be looked at as "oddities" who excel at only
one or two events, but
those oddities create
excitement -- and that causes more people to watch, and
more
sponsors to contribute..and
so on.
Four years
ago, there was a gymnast at UF named Pam "Air" Titus. When she
did her layout-pikes, her *HIPS* were 8 feet in the air or
higher. No
exageration.
Crowds would gasp in awe. In warm-ups, it was hilarious because
the coach could not spot her until she came down.
Incredible. Imagine the excitement
that would be brought to the floor at a
national
competition?
I
think having NCAA gymnasts competing at national competitions in the
future can do nothing but great things for the sport.
Imagine the hype that would have
occurred if former Olympians Hope Spivey
and Missy
Marlowe had competed nationally last year. Or what about in 4
years, when Stella Umeh and
Dominique Dawes are still competiting at the
collegiate level? I suspect they'll create a stir if they
have left national
compeition
and decide to rejoin it.
One more example: remember Chelle Stack?
Well, she's at Oklahoma now
and will be competiting collegiately next
year. How many faces will smile and how many memories will
be jogged if she
tries to compete nationally in a
year or two?
Sure, she
may not win anything, but the memories and the happiness will be
there.
I can't wait.
-- Ronald
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 05 Jul 94 21:14:31 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Profile
There
were a few things I forgot to put down.
My favorite male gymnasts:
Ivan
Ivankov(my
favorite), Valeri Liukin,
Dmitri Bilozerchev, Alexei
Veropaev,
Grigori Misutin, Igor Korobchinski, Scott Keswick, Li Ning,
and
Peter Vidmar.(No
order except Ivankov is my favorite.)
I also forgot to put Doni Thompson in my list for the women. She's going to
be
a star next year.---Brian
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 05 Jul 94 23:38:22 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: RSG Get's A
Blurb
Amazingly enough I found a speck of RSG Olympic Fest news and
here it is
(from a larger O. Fest article)...
DATE:
Tuesday, July 5, 1994
SOURCE: Julie Deardorff.
COLUMN:
SHORT TAKES. Festival notes.
Newspaper: Chicago Tribune
Illinois
in rhythm: Illinois boasts six athletes on the rhythmic gymnastics
roster, the most from any state. Two clubs are the reason:
Rhythmic Gems in
Evanston and Illinois Rhythmics, located in Northfield and Wilmette.
"It's
not dance; it involves a good deal of
gymnastics," explains Russian coach
Lana Lashoff,
who started Rhythmic Gems three years ago. "It requires two
risk elements, such as tumbling underneath high tosses (of
balls or clubs)."
Gymnasts to
watch include Skokie's Natalie Lacuesta, 12, who won
the
junior all-around in this year's rhythmic
national championships, and
Winnetka's Caroline Hunt, a two-time junior
national champion and runner-up
in this year's
senior division.
Posted By Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 01 Jul 94 20:21:09 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Sears Directors
Cup
To All:
Hey, I couldn't help but comment about the Sears Director Cup, given
to
the best collegiate sports programs.
There was an effort by the
University of Florida to have gymnastics
included
in the core sports for tabulation. It looked like UF and the rest of
the SEC schools were making headway until it became apparent
that Florida,
year after year, was the only SEC
school consistently making it in the Top 5.
When the other schools
didn't have a prayer (ostensibly because UF is the
richest
SEC school and attracts the best coaches by waving huge salaries),
the idea fell.
Similarly, there was an SEC
Awards Cup, given to the best SEC schools.
Well, guess what? Because UF has
dominated both the mens and womens
side of
the cup for the past 3-4 years, the SEC
voted to do away with it.
So, down the tubes went to the push for gymnastics to be included in
the
core tabulation for the Sears Director's
Cup.
--- Ronald
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 05 Jul 94 13:52:25 EST
From: ***@email.cfr.org
Subject: Tickets
question (cont.)
Hello all!
A month or so ago someone posted
advise on how/when to buy tickets
to gym
events. Unfortunately I did not
save it or print the message out.
The post suggested that it might be a
better idea to buy tickets from
the arena box
office when the competition is about to start (ie. on
a
visitors arrival) rather than buy it way in
advance. Better seats can be
gotten this way, because many return their tickets.
Question:
I'm
planning to attend the team trials in Richmond, Virginia. Should I
take
the chance to buy my ticket(s) on arrival, or in August through a
Ticketron outlet?
Thanks to all (sorry for
redundancy of post)!
Connie
(who has been "burnt" in the ticket buying jungle :-( )
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 5 Jul 1994 14:35:27 +1000
From: <***@pharm.med.upenn.edu>
Subject:
TV coverage of Worlds
David - and any other TV people:
Please try to convince your
sponsors that you should cover GYMNASTICS - as
much
as possible. Not equipment - we
know the beam is 18' wide (just
kidding, but a
good close-up and ONE comment about 4" --make sure the girl
has big feet more impressive--) and drop the topic.
If you need to do the up-close
and personal bits - can we have it be
someone not
as likely to make it big (Shannon Miller - she'll probably get
coverage in '96 even if she doesn't make the olympic team) and show a
couple
of their routines. I always feel
bad for the people who make it,
but
you would never know it unless you happened to be at the meet. In
other
words - give each country some sort of attention. I think I have
mentioned
before that the US is made up of lots of different ethnic
backgrounds - maybe a multi-cultural approach would
work.
I would also like
to mention gender-equity. Don't
favor one sex over the
other, maybe a guys floor
than a woman's - show some equal elements,
discuss
differences in landing expectations, height, dance, transitions.
Then do
the same for vault, high bar - uneven bars. This might help some
people learn that there is lots of sharing in this sport, it
is not one of
dividing lines.
A theme presentation may help
a lot in this type of a broadcast.
Probably
a lot of work, but then the
gymnasts work hard to give a good show, lets
reward
them by putting as much of their hard work (on the mats) on the air.
Thank
you for listening (in advance)
Mayland
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 6 Jul 1994 07:23:21 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
USOF '94: Men's roster
Here's an old press release from USA
Gymnastics:
June 14, 1994
Luan Peszek,
Director of Public Relations
Ramonna Robinson,
Manager of Public Relations
USA GYMNASTICS ANNOUNCES
MEN'S
U.S. OLYMPIC FESTIVAL TEAM
1994 World Championships team member Mihai Bagiu leads the men's
gymnastics roster for the U.S. Olympic Festival-'94, July
1-10, in St.
Louis, Mo.
Bagiu has
vaulted from 34th all-around at the 1991 U.S. Championships
to third all-around on the Men's Senior National Team at the
1994
Winter Cup Challenge. That
finish also earned him a spot on the 1994
World
Championships Team. 1994 has been a product ive
year for Bagiu.
After World Championships, he
took sixth place at the 1994 Hilton
Challenge and helped the U.S. men win
the gold medal in that
competition, defeating
China and Belarus. Bagiu is also scheduled to
compete June 10-11 in the 1994 Budget Rent a Car
Invitational, a dual
competition between Romania
and the United States.
Also scheduled to compete at Festival is Bill
Roth who captured five
gold medals at the 1990 U.S.
Olympic Festival, tying the record for
gymnastics
set in 1983 by Olympian Scott Johnson. Roth also holds the
record of highest score on the high bar at a U. S. Olympic Festival
with a 9.9.
Steve McCain will compete in his third
Festival this year, after
participating in both
1991 and 1993. Several members of the 1994 U.S.
Olympic
Festival men's gymnastics roster will be making their second
appearance at Festival. They include Brian Yee (19 91
Festival),
Lindsey Fang (1993), John Macready (1993), Rob Keiffer (1993),
Jay Thornton (1991) and Mike Dutka (1993).
1994 U.S. Olympic Festival
Men's
Gymnastics Team Roster
NORTH
Steve McCain
John Macready
Larry
Johns
Josh Birkelbaw
Guard Young
Scott
Finkelstein
SOUTH
Jeff Lutz
Rob Kieffer
Jay
Thornton
Dan Ryssman
Sanjuan
Jones
Jamie Natalie
EAST
Bill Roth
Garry Denk
Spencer Slaton
Tim Dalrymple
Tim
Elsner
Lindsey Fang
WEST
Mihai Bagiu
Bo Haun
Mike Dutka
Dan
Fink
Kendall Schiess
Jason Furr
The North Team will be coached by Tom Gardner
of Byers Gymnastics and
Mark Williams of the University of Oklahoma will
coach the South Team.
Joe Stallone of Gymnastrum
will coach the East Team while Gold Cup
Gymnastics' Ed Burch will coach the
West Team.
The U.S. Olympic Festival is America's premiere event for
the
country's best athletes and is a primary
developmental vehicle for
U.S. Olympic teams. The
U.S. Olympic Festival-'94 will feature 3,000
American athletes competing in
37 different sports throu ghout
the
Metropolitan Area of St. Louis and Southwestern
Illinois.
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 6
Jul 1994 07:18:59 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
USOF '94: Rhythmic results
This is via the AP wire:
ST. PETERS, Mo. (AP) -- Final
results Tuesday of the Rhythmic Gymnastics
competition
at the U.S. Olympic Festival (JR-junior competitor):
All-around
1, Tamara
Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., (East), 73.050. 2, Jessica
Davis, San Anselmo, Calif., (North),
71.175. 3, Caroline Hunt,
Winnetka, Ill., (West),
70.275. 4, Lauri Illy (JR), (South), 70.125.
5,
Lori Fredickson (JR), Sandwich, Ill., (East), 69.175.
6, Natalie
Lacuesta (JR), Skokie, Ill., (North), 68.900. 7, Tina Tharp (JR),
Jacksonville, Fla., (South), 68.250. 8, Jennifer Lim (JR),
Skokie,
Ill., (West), 67.350. 9,
Sara Sieber, (North), 66.450. 10, Christi
Tucay, Burbank,
Calif., (East), 66.150. 11, Kristin Lee (JR),
Mountlake
Terrace, Wash., (West), 63.800. 12, Kelsi
Kemper (JR), Gia
Harbor, Wash.,
(East), 63.000. 13, Vanessa
Vander Pluym, Redondo
Beach
Calif., (South), 62.675. 14, Johanna Shoemaker, North Potomac,
Md.,
(South), 62.100. 16, Liriel Higa, Los Angeles, (North), 59.750.
Roxanne Pietrasik, Glenview, Ill., (West), 31.875 (injured after
four
events).
Rope
1, Lauri Illy (JR), Virginia Beach,
Va., (South), 17.250. 2, Lori
Fredrickson (JR),
Sandwich, Ill., (East), 17.100. 3, Tina Tharp (JR),
Jacksonville, Fla., (South), 17.050. 4, Natalie Lacuesta (JR), Skokie,
Ill., (North),
17.050. 5, Sara Sieber (JR), Glenview, Ill.,
(North),
16.600. 6, Jennifer Lim (JR), Skokie, Ill.,
(West), 16.250. 7, Johanna
Shoemaker (JR), North
Potomac, Ill., (South), 15.350. 8, Kelsi
Kemper
(JR), Gia Harbor, Wash.,
(East), 15.000. 9, Kristin Lee (JR),
Mountlake
Terrace, Wash., (West), 14.800. 10, Liriel Higa (JR), Los
Angeles, (North),
13.750.
Hoop
1, Tamara
Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., (East), 18.225. 2, Jessica
Davis, San Anselmo, Calif., (North),
18.075. 3, Christi Tucay,
Burbank, Calif., (East), 17.400. 4, Caroline Hunt, Winnetka,
Ill.,
(West), 17.325. 5, Vanessa Vander Pluym, Redondo Beach, Calif.,
(South),
15.950. 6, Roxanne Pietrasik,
Glenview, Ill., (West), 7.750.
Ball
1, Tamara
Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., (East), 18.650. 2 (tie),
Tina Tharp,
Jacksonville, Fla., (South), 17.850 and Lauri Illy,
Virginia Beach, Va., (South),
17.850. 4, Lori Fredrickson, Sandwich,
Ill.,
(East), 17.650. 5, Natalie Lacuesta, Skokie,
Ill., (North),
17.600. 5, Caroline Hunt, Winnetka, Ill., (West), 17.600; 5,
Jennifer
Lim, Skokie, Ill., (West), 17.600. 8,
Jessica Davis, San Anselmo,
Calif.,
(North), 17.450. 9, Sara Sieber, Glenview,
Ill., (North),
17.050. 10, Kristin Lee, Mountlake
Terrace, Wash., (West), 16.900. 11,
Kelsi Kemper, Gia
Harbor, Wash., (East), 16.500. 12, Liriel Higa, Los
Angeles, (North), 16.150.
13, Johanna Shoemaker, North Potomac, Md.,
(South),
16.100. 14,
Christi Tucay, Burbank, Calif., (East), 15.850.
15, Vanessa Vander Pluym, Redondo Beach,
Calif., (South), 15.050. 16,
Roxanne Pietrasik,
Glenview, Ill., (West), 8.150 (injured, did not
compete).
Clubs
1, Tamara
Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., (East), 18.475. 2, Caroline
Hunt,
Winnetka, Ill., (West), 17.700. 3, Lauri Illy, Virginia Beach,
Va., (South),
17.675. 4, Jessica Davis, San Anselmo, Calif.,
(North),
17.550. 5, Natalie Lacuesta,
Skokie, Ill., (North), 17.400. 6, Christi
Tucay, Burban,
Calif., (East), 17.350. 7, Tina Tharp, Jacksonville,
Fla., (South), 17.250. 8, Jennifer Lim,
Skokie, Ill., (West), 17.000.
9, Kristin Lee,
Mountlake Terrace, Wash., (West), 17.000. 10, Lori
Fredrickson, Sandwich, Ill., (East), 16.900. 11, Kelsi Kemper, Gia
Harbor, Wash., (East), 16.750. 12, Sara Sieber,
Glenview, Ill.,
(North), 16.550. 13, Vanessa
Vander Pluym, Redondo Beach, Calif.,
(South), 15.975. 14, Johanna Shoemaker, North Potomac, Md.
(South),
14.950. 15, Liriel Higa, Los Angeles, (North), 14.650. 16, Roxanne
Pietrasik,
Glenview, Ill., (West), 7.975.
Ribbon
1, Jessica Davis, San Anselmo, Calif., (North), 18.100; 2, Tamara
Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., (East), 17.700. 3, Caroline
Hunt,
Winnetka, Ill., (West), 17.650. 4, Lori
Frederickson, Sandwich, Ill.,
(East), 17.550. 5, Lauri Illy,
Virginia Beach, Va., (South), 17.350.
6, Natalie Lacuesta, Skokie, Ill., (North), 16.900. 7, Jennifer
Lim,
Skokie, Ill., (West), 16.500. 8, Sara Sieber, Glenview, Ill., (North),
16.250.
9, Tina Tharp, Jacksonville, Fla., (South), 16.100. 10,
Vanessa
Vander Pluym, Redondo Beach, Calif. (South), 15.700.
10,
Johanna Shoemaker, North Potomac, Md., (South),
15.700. 12, Christi
Tucay, Burbank, Calif., (East), 15.550. 13, Kristin Lee,
Mountlake
Terrace, Wash., (West), 15.200. 13, Liriel Higa, Los Angeles,
(North),
15.200. 15, Kelsi
Kemper, Gia Harbor, Wash., (East), 14.750.
16,
Roxanne Pietrasik, Glenview, Ill., (West),
8.000, (injured, did not
compete).
Team Scores
1, East (Lori Frederickson,
Sandwich, Ill.; Kelsi Kemper, Gia
Harbor,
Wash.; Tamara Levinson, Silver Spring, Md., Christi Tuchay,
Burbank, Calif.), 271.374. 2, North (Liriel
Higa, Los Angeles;
Natalie Lacuesta,
Skokie, Ill.; Sara Sieber, Glenview, Ill.;
Jessica
Davis, San Anselmo, Calif.), 266.75; 3,
South (Lauri Illy,
Glenview,
Ill.; Tina Tharp, Jacksonville, Fla.; Johanna Shoemaker,
Rockville,
Md.; Vanessa Vander Pluym,
Rednodno Beach, Calif.), 263.150. 4, West
(Kristin
Lee, Mountlake Terrace, Wash.; Jennifer Lim (Skokie, Ill.;
Caroline Hunt,
Winnetka, Ill; Roxanne Pietrasik, Northbrook,
Ill.),
233.300.
------------------------------
Date: Wed,
6 Jul 1994 07:27:37 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
USOF '94: Women's roster
Another one, the
women's version:
June 14, 1994
Luan Peszek,
Director of Public Relations
Ramonna Robinson,
Manager of Public Relations
USA GYMNASTICS ANNOUNCES
WOMEN'S ARTISTIC
U.S. OLYMPIC FESTIVAL TEAM
Several top USA Gymnastics' athletes are
scheduled to compete at the
U.S.
Olympic Festival-'94, July 1-10, in St. Louis, Mo.
Leading
the roster is 1994 World Championships team member Larissa
Fontaine from
Deerfield, Ill. Fontaine has had a successful year,
placing
17th all-around at the 1994 World Gymnastics Championships in
Brisbane,
Australia. Prior to World
Championships, Larissa finished
third all-around
at the American Classic/World Championships trials
and
seventh all-around at the 1994 McDonald's American Cup.
Doni Thompson from Colorado Springs, Colo., is the
top-ranked junior
scheduled to compete at the
Festival. Thompson tied for first place in
the
junior division of the 1994 American Classic/World Championships
Trials,
improving her fifth-place ranking aft er the 1993
Coca-Cola
National Championships. In international competition,
Thompson
captured third place all-around and won
the uneven bars event at he
1993 Commonwealth Games.
At the 1992 Mexican Olympic Festival, she
took
gold medals in the all-around
and all four event finals.
Fourth-ranked Senior
National Team member Kellee Davis from Parkland,
Fla., is also scheduled to compete. Davis recently competed in
the
1994 Hungarian International Gymnastics Championships, placing
fourth
on floor exercise and fifth on balance
beam. Sh e finished ninth
all-around
with her partner Scott Keswick at the 1994 International
Mixed
Pairs competition. Davis is also scheduled to compete June 10-11
in the 1994 Budget Rent a Car Gymnastics Invitational, a
dual
competition between Romania and the United
States.
Returning for their fourth U.S. Olympic Festival will be
Heidi
Hornbeek from Phoenix, Ariz., and Summer Reid from Sparks, Nev.
Hornbeek's Festival career began in 1990 in Minneapolis,
Minn., where
she finished seventh all-around. The 1991 Festival in Los
Angeles, Calif., saw Hornbeek
finish 18th; however, due to injury,
she did not
finish the competition at the 1993 Festival in San
Antonio, Texas. Reid
finished 14th-AA in 1990 and 1993, and she tied
for
6th all-around in 1991. Other
athletes who compete d in former
Festivals include: Monica Flammer (Houston, Texas), Karin Lichey
(Cincinnati,
Ohio), Tanya Maiers (Atlanta, Ga.), Kristin
McDermott
(Allentown, Pa.) and Dominique Moceanu (Houston, Texas). McDermott was
a member of the first-place U.S. Tea m at the 1991 Pan
American Games
and finished eighth all-around,
fifth on balance team and tied for
sixth on floor
exercise.
1994 U.S. Olympic Festival
Women's (Artistic) Gymnastics
Team Roster
EAST
Heidi Hornbeek
Amy
Chow
Summer Reid
Doni Thompson
Kristy
Powell
Mary Beth Arnold
NORTH
Sarah Balogach
Kristin
McDermott
Sarah Cain
Martha Grubbs
Kristin Maloney
Tanya Maiers
SOUTH
Mary Ann Esposito
Larissa
Fontaine
Samantha Muhleman
Jaycie Phelps
Karin Lichey
Dominique
Moceanu
WEST
Raegan
Tomasek
Kellee
Davis
Katie Fitzpatrick
Jenni Beathard
Monica Flammer
Marissa
Medal
Tom Forester of Colorado Aerials will coach the East Team while
the
Parkettes' Donna Strauss will coach the North
Team. The South Team
will be coached by Mary Lee
Tracy of Cincinnati Gymnastics Academy,
and Tim
Rand of American Twisters will coach the West Team.
The U.S. Olympic
Festival is America's premiere event for the
country's
best athletes and is a primary developmental vehicle for
U.S.
Olympic teams. The U.S. Olympic Festival-'94 will feature 3,000
American
athletes competing in 37 different sports throu ghout the
Metropolitan Area of St.
Louis and Southwestern Illinois.
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 02 Jul 94 10:00:30 EDT
From: <***@MIT.EDU>
Subject: Women in
sports study...
>''Some gymnasts have shorter legs than swimmers
of the same age, and we
>wonder if they're
caused by repeated impacts with gymnastic mats,'' she said.
Gee,
doesn't anyone think about the fact that shorter girls are more likely
to choose gymnastics than swimming?
>By far the
most common health >concern for girl athletes is Korbut's
problem:
>delayed menarche (initiation of
menstruation, which usually occurs at age 13)
>and
missed menstrual periods.
Is this actually a problem? I had the impression that this had no
ill effects.
--Robyn
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 2 Jul 1994 11:07:34 -0400 (edt)
From: <***@dorsai.dorsai.org>
Subject:
Women in sports study...
>
> >''Some gymnasts have
shorter legs than swimmers of the same age, and we
> >wonder if they're caused by repeated impacts with gymnastic
mats,'' she said.
>
> Gee, doesn't anyone think about the fact
that shorter girls are more likely
> to choose
gymnastics than swimming?
>
> --Robyn
>
I thought it
was that buying pants with shorter inseams tends to mean
you will grow up to have shorter legs. I'm sure there is a very high
correlation there.
--Ken
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 01 Jul 94 22:08:52 EDT
From: @aol.com
Subject: Women in sports
study...
>''Some gymnasts have shorter legs than swimmers of the
same age, and we
wonder if they're caused by
repeated impacts with gymnastic >mats,'' she
said.
Yes,
and some doctors lose brain fluid from hitting their heads on their
medical books...
Mara
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
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