gymn
Digest
Fri, 6 May 94 Volume 2 :
Issue 121
Today's Topics:
Beam Routines - Mo/Kochetkova (2 msgs)
bounces
comments on my comments
Dawes Theory
Hilton Challenge roster
L10 Nationals (Jr.)
landing tumbling passes
leftover questions (3 msgs)
Sitting on the bar
Steps
in tumbling passes
Stuck landings, Code suggestions (3 msgs)
Teams for Upcoming Meets
The Gymn Pub
Trivia Answers
Trivia Questions
USAG announces Goodwill Games teams
USOC Athletes of the Month
Vaulting distance and flairing out
White leos
suggestion
Women's NCAA items
This is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu
mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 05 May 1994 00:14:51 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@delphi.com
Subject:
Beam Routines - Mo/Kochetkova
For those of
you lucky enough to have seen Mo's and Kochetkova's
beam
routines, could you please decribe their exercise and your overall
impressions.
Thanks. Tasha
P.S. Does anyone know what Kochetkova performs for vault?
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 94 10:01:05 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Beam Routines -
Mo/Kochetkova
> For those of you lucky
enough to have seen Mo's and Kochetkova's beam
>
routines, could you please decribe
their exercise and your overall
> impressions. Thanks. Tasha
>
> P.S. Does anyone know what Kochetkova performs for vault?
I had a look again
the above mentioned routines and here are the
main
elements of them:
1. Kochetkova BB:
mount (don't
know since they didn't show that bit); 2 split leaps;
flick-layout-flick;
full twist backflip; full twist Korbut;
fish jump into full twist Korbut;
flick-flick-double back dismount.
Very clean with no major wobbles. I
like the full twist backflip since
no many people
do that skill. One small step on dismount. (In the
All-Around)
2. Mo BB:
side mount into one
arm straddle down to plange; flick into split
jump;
aerial walkover; flick 1/4 turn to
handstand; leap with head backwards;
arab
spring into layout; arab spring-flick-double back
dismount.
Difficult routine but with wobbles here and there. (She fell
off in the
1/4 turn to handstand during apparatus qualifying)
3. Kochetkova VT:
Handspring 1 and 1/2 forwards with 1/2
twist.
In AA, the two scores were 9.675 and 9.775. Good
landings.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 05 May 94 11:15:34 EDT
From: ***@MIT.EDU
Subject: bounces
Hi,
I
have been receiving a lot of mail recently pertaining to bounced
mail on the list.
If you have been posting a lot recently you are
probably
receiving a lot of bounced mail back.
I have tried to clean
up a lot of the
problems on the list -- I think things should be
getting
better in the next few days.
I have a few requests:
1) If you
know you are going to be losing your account, please unsubscribe.
2)
If you know your system is going to be down for a while, please let me
know so you don't get unsubscribed due to bounces (If it's
going to be
more than a few days, I'll probably
transfer you to digest though).
Conversely, if you seem not to be getting mail (or seem to have
been
switched into digest format involuntarily)
after a long period of system
problems at your
site, let me know and I can re-instate you.
3) If you receive bounce
messages, please wait until the problem has been
occurring
consistently for at least a week before informing me of it. Most
problems
end up being temporary and fix themselves within this time period.
If you
do send me a bounce, I'd appreciate it if you would just send the
bounce info and not the copy of your message which
bounced. Please only send
each bounce message to me once -- If I need to check with
you to see if it
stopped bouncing I'll contact you
directly. Finally, please be
patient.
Once you send me the
info, it may take me a day or two to get to it, a day
or
two to look into it (to avoid removing people whose mail is getting
through despite the apparent bounces, though I usually end
up moving these
people to digest eventually so
everyone doesn't need to get the bounces),
and
another day or two for changes I make to fully take effect. If a problem
appears
to me to be temporary, I may let it go on for a while longer to see
if it will fix itself.
Sorry to clutter everyone's
mailbox with this administrivia, and sorry about
the bounce messages, but that seems to be a fact of life on
a large mailing
list (which we are these
days).
--Robyn
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 05 May 94 01:01:02 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: comments on my
comments
>One more annoying thing to include - the stupid
over-arching flair in
women's Yurchenko-fulls.
Laschenova and a couple others they did the
flair
w/o
the bad
compromise in bodyline, but the thing Zmeskal used to
do? She was
good,
but
not 10 worthy.
I must disagree.
I think the open-up extension really helps the Yurchenko
full, as Kim did it as well as Laschenova
(awaiting your flame, Susan).
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 04 May 94 21:26:39 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Dawes
Theory
>The Code, and
therefore Judges
and the sport itself, judge you on how you do. Everything
else is static and has no place on the competition
floor.
It would be nice if that was true, but to anyone who thinks it
is, have I got
a bridge for you!
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 02:59:13 -0500 (CDT)
From: ***@owlnet.rice.edu
Subject:
Hilton Challenge roster
Again, from USAG, however this time via the
USOC BBS:
1994 Hilton Challenge
WHO: Top gymnasts from
Belarus (former Soviet Republic), China and the
USA will compete in this
team and all-around competition. USA athletes
include
1992 Olympian and two-time World Championships silver medalist
Dominique
Dawes, 1994 World Championships team members Mihai Bagiu,
Amanda Borden, Scott Keswick, John
Roethlisberger and Chainey Umphrey,
1994
National Team Members Kellee Davis and Katie Teft. In addition,
Belarus' 1994 World Champion Ivan Ivankov is expected to compete along
with
1992 Olympic and 1993 World Champion Vitaly Scherbo.
WHAT: The Hilton Challenge gymnastics
competition is scheduled for May
21 and 22 at America
West Arena. The Hilton Challenge is a triangular
gymnastics
competition between Belarus, China and the United
States--all superpowers
in the world of gymnastics. Men's competition
is
Saturday, May 21 at 7:30 p.m. Women's competition is Sunday, May 22
at 1:30 p.m.
WHERE: America West Arena, 201 E.
Jefferson Street, Phoenix, Arizona
85001. (602) 379-2030.
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 5 May 94 16:56:10 EDT
From: ***@aluxpo.att.com
Subject: L10
Nationals (Jr.)
We have a beautiful day to start the week-end. Today was registration, with
each region having a 2-hour work-out. I was there for region
6/7 and 3/4
work-outs - there's going to be some
really great gymnastics to see.
Rachele, when
Cypress was registering, the coach starts saying his name - when
I pop up
with - You must be Terry Walker (if that's not his name - at least
I got it
right when I was talking to him). He seemed surprised until I went
into your interviewing the gym, zones etc. He remembers you
as a reporter.
One of his kids is doing 3 layouts on the beam already.
Peggy Liddick was there
with
the Dynamo kids - Michi Ishikawa is a favorite for
the children's division
as she took second last
year.
We parents have done a lot of work to try and make this a great
meet for the
kids. We all have lots of pre-meet
work to do - like I made something for
the judges
food, the coaches food and the general concession stand; put
together the program; helped set up the gym (this means
moving lots of equipment
and putting up
decorations and skirting lots of tables). Now comes working
the meet - today I registered 2 sessions while Sara was
practicing - and during
the meet I'll be sitting
with the vault head judge filling out (and computing)
score
sheets.
There's a beach party planned for the kids tonight, complete
with DJ, lots of
games, food, lots of gifts etc.
They should have lots of fun. They'll be
getting
lots more in their goody bags after they compete also.
Sounds like most
people will be pleased to hear that the leos
they got
from Alpha Factor are NOT white. (they're actually pretty nice) The bust and
sleeves are the regional colors (region VII is teal, others
are watermelon,
rose, etc. - nice new colors) The
warm-ups, however, are a different story -
bright
red pants and white & red jacket.
Sara's doing pretty well,
considering. She and her coach have been counting
off
the days, hoping she could make it till Nationals. Well, they're here
and she did. She's just hoping to make it one more day and
is looking forward
to having as much healing time
as she needs. Her goals for the meet are
making
four-for-four and anything more would be icing on the cake. She doesn't
even think about what could have been any more, so that's
great! She and her
teammates were interviewed on TV and had their pictures in
the paper, so she
feels like quite a celebrity.
I'll
post more when I have the time.
Toby
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 5 May 94 10:34:31 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: landing tumbling
passes
> Alright here is a pet peeve of
mine regarding women's floor: how come
> they
can take as many steps as they want before a tumbling pass? The men
> are limited to 3 steps - any more and it is a deduction. I
want to watch
> a floor routine not a track
meet! It is much harder to do a double back
> from
3 steps than it is to do it from 5 or 6 or more!!! It also looks bad!!
I
guess the women are not as powerful as men and have to take more steps
to gain speed before they can do their tricks. Don't forget
those men are
muscular beings whereas the women
are mere little girls (although they are
incredibly
powerful for their age, of course)! And there is a significant
age difference between the two.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 11:10:59 -0400
From: ***@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu
Subject:
leftover questions
OK all:
I'm not a big gymnastics fan
(figure skating is my favorite),
but I have been a
TV gymn fan since like the '88 Olympics.
I only
know the big, current names (in fact, I didn't even watch
the Worlds this year because I was too busy with school :(
).
Mo Hui-who? Where's Kerri Strug? These are the questions running
through my head.
Anyhow, I had some other leftover
questions that I have dug
up from the dark
crevices of my finals-induced-stressed-out-brain:
I remember when
Sandy Woolsey finished 2nd at Nationals in '91.
Why was she not in
Indianapolis, then? Did she retire
before
that fall or was she shafted a la Kim Kelly
in '92?
Why are the teams for the Goodwill Games only made up of
four gymnasts?
Also, who competed for the U.S. (men's and women's)
in '86 and '90?
How did they do in the AA?
That's about it. Oooh, I have a
final in less than three hours.
Better hit the books.
Bye Bye
Toho
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 11:20:15 +0600
From: ***@scoter.cdev.com
Subject:
leftover questions
> I remember when Sandy Woolsey finished 2nd at
Nationals in '91.
> Why was she not in Indianapolis, then? Did she retire before
> that fall or was she shafted a la Kim Kelly in '92?
She
did not retire before Worlds.
I remember hearing Sandy and Stormy
Eaton talking about this
over the
intra-Hoosier-Dome radio broadcast during Worlds.
(Weak FM signal,
play-by-play, interviews, well done I thought)
They were Not Amused by the
final selection process for the
Worlds team.
--John
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 13:11:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@gateway.us.sidwell.edu
Subject:
leftover questions
> I remember when Sandy Woolsey finished 2nd at
Nationals in '91.
> Why was she not in Indianapolis, then? Did she retire before
> that fall or was she shafted a la Kim Kelly in '92?
She
was in Indianapolis, but she was an alternate, along with Elisabeth
Crandall. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think
what happened is she made
the team (or else was
first alternate). During the
workouts before the
event, Michelle Campi had the look Bela wanted,
so he put her on the team,
even though she was the
second alternate and left Crandall and Woolsey to
be
the two alternates.
I have another question about Indianapolis. Wasn't part of the uproar
over Kim Gwang-Suk's changing age
that she was too young to compete in the
'89 Worlds if she was born on the
date they gave at the Olympics because
she would
have been 13? Wasn't Kerri Strug (Toho, she pulled her stomach
muscle
and moved back home, which is why you didn't see her at Worlds) 13
at Indianapolis if she turned 15 in Nov. '92?
Lisa
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 04 May 94 17:49:53 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Sitting on the
bar
>2. On unevens,
whenever performing (on the low bar, facing the high bar)
> a glide shoot-through (or straddle) to catch the high bar,
most
gymnasts
> bounce from their butts in order to catch the high bar. That should
be
> a deduction.
Julianne MacNamara was the only gymnast that
I
remember
> seeing recently (?) performing this move correctly.
I
see nothing whatever incorrect about sitting on or bouncing off the low
bar
before reaching up to the high bar (as long as
she doesn't bend her legs,
another one of those
things that never gets deducted).
But even there were
something wrong with
it, consider the alternative. Some
girls might do
hechts to
go from low to high, but almost everybody would stand on the low
bar instead, because hechts are
risky and it would be impossible for 99% of
girls
to catch the high bar if forced not to sit. Or, the bars would have to
be set much closer, compromising the ability to perform all
the things that
make up the modern routine --
releases, giant-pirouettes, uprises, front
giants, full-ins, double layouts, etc. We'd all have to go back to beating
on the bar.
Also, everyone would have to do legs-together jams, since it's
virtually impossible to do a straddle jam and hop from low
to high w/o
sitting, even with the bars close
together.
To illustrate my first point, I used to do a double-leg jam
without sitting
on the low bar in the '85-'88
compulsory. At my first major meet,
I missed
the high bar and fell (it still hurts to
think about it, 8 yrs later). I
never did
it again. Not worth the risk.
--
gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 04 May 94 17:49:06 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Steps in
tumbling passes
>Alright here is a pet
peeve of mine regarding women's floor: how come
>they
can take as many steps as they want before a tumbling pass? The men
>are limited to 3 steps - any more and it is a deduction. I
want to watch
>a floor routine not a track
meet! It is much harder to do a double back
>from
3 steps than it is to do it from 5 or 6 or more!!! It also looks bad!!
As
it happens, it is probably as hard for most women to do a double back from
5
or 6 steps as it is for men to do it from 3. To state the obvious, men
tend to be stronger.
If women were limited to 3 steps, their ability to do
anything harder than a double back would be compromised (in
most cases; this
is only a generalization). Also, because women are not as strong
and also
much shorter, if they were limited to 3
steps, they'd finish the tumbling
pass mid-mat
(hey -- maybe not such a bad idea to get a little more
integration
of dance and tumbling. Tumbling
could be done in more directions
than just the
usual diagonal). In any case, I
don't think it looks that bad
(usually).
--
gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 04 May 94 21:27:02 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Stuck landings,
Code suggestions
>"superior" (even
if I do spell it wrong).
Actually, this time you got it! (eek) <g>
>...and
has anyone ever
seen Laura Cutina?
Yes,
and ironically enough, she was considered superior in compulsories to
optionals!
> This is
why we MUST not get rid of compos since that is where the
best are truly seperated from the
rest
For all practical purpose, the FIG *has* started down the path to
eliminating
compos. Both of the last two Worlds were decided
without them (both AA and
Events).
Granted, team worlds and 1995 will have them, but who really knows
after 96? They
have got to find a way to keep them, or form is going to take
a serious back seat to little tricksters (as if it didn't
already). Look
what happened when they eliminated compulsories from singles
figure skating.
>and all we care about is
winning a medal now and again not becoming
truly
"good". You watch an NCAA meet and you see so much unexploited
talent
it makes you cry
I think that
Miles Avery knows what he has with Drew Durbin and Blaine
Wilson, IMHO. It's a shame he's only the assistant
coach.
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 5 May 1994 08:13:43 +1000
From: ***@pharm.med.upenn.edu
Subject:
Stuck landings, Code suggestions
>>and
all we care about is winning a medal now and again not becoming
>truly "good". You watch an NCAA meet and you see
so much unexploited talent
>it makes you
cry
>
>I think that Miles Avery knows what he has with Drew
Durbin and Blaine
>Wilson, IMHO.
It's a shame he's only the assistant coach.
And you don't
think that Peter does? That is a
really ignorant thing to
say - Peter recruited
them, and I believe (since I know Miles - pretty
well!)
that Miles considers himself to be working WITH Peter
to create a
good team and not against him.
If you followed the men's season you
would see that this team peaked
early and managed
to hang in there through Big Tens.
For some reason at
Regionals and at NCAA's they couldn't pull it
off. It was one of the
hardest things for me to sit there and score that meet
watching them not
pull in the scores I saw at Penn
State and Big Tens. Kip missing his
PB
routine was the biggest disappointment for me -
it is beautiful! But you
certainly can't blame that on the fact that Miles is only
the assistant
coach. Ohio has an excellent staff - Peter,
Miles and Mike - and those
guys know that they
have a good coaching staff, not just a good assistant
coach.
Mayland
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 05 May 94 16:03:38 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Stuck landings,
Code suggestions
>And you don't think that Peter does? That is a really ignorant thing to
say - Peter recruited them, and I believe (since I know
Miles - pretty
well!) that
Miles considers himself to be working WITH Peter to create a
good team and not against him.
My point was that
Miles would make an excellent Head Coach, not that Peter
isn't
one!
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Wed,
04 May 94 21:27:30 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Teams for Upcoming
Meets
I was speaking with someone at the USAG today in relation to the
US-Romania
meet, and she gave me some idea who
will be competing there and at the
Tri-Meet
(US-Belarus-China). Because
there are so many hi-profile
competitions coming
up, the US team is being split for various meets, in
particular,
one group will compete at the Tri-Meet, a different group at
US-Romania.
This list is not written in
concrete, but accurate as of today (5/4):
US vs. Romania
US
Women-Miller, Fontaine, Sarah Cain, Amy Chow, Doni
Thompson, Kristi
Powell, Dominique Moceanu (this
is the group that has been invited but no one
is
confirmed).
Romanian Women-Milosovici, Gogean, Hatagan, Cacovean, Simona Amanar, Ana
Maria Bican (sp?), Daniela Morindua (sp?)
US Men - Mihai Bagiu (ironic, huh), Chainey Umphrey, Blaine Wilson, Drew
Durbin, Bill Roth
Tri-Meet
US
Women - Dawes, Borden, Kellee Davis, Katie Teft
This is all I was able to get (I didn't want
to try the patience of the woman
at USAG).
A brief opinion.
The diluted US women's team is going to have trouble with
Romania (a
win seems VERY unlikely)!
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 03:54:21 -0500 (CDT)
From: ***@owlnet.rice.edu
Subject:
The Gymn Pub
The purpose of the Gymn Pub is to provide a place for Gymn
members to
keep up on each other's lives without
cluttering up the alias with
random little
non-gymnastics notes. If you have
something to
contribute to the next Gymn Pub posting, mail me (rachele@rice.edu),
at any time, with any pertinent info. (Marriage, graduation, new
baby, new job, travelling, new hobby, met a Gymn member in person,
just
saw a cool meet, etc... these
are just some examples of good Gymn
pub material.)
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 1994 16:21:40
-0500 (EST)
From: Bob
Hi I'm Anna, and I just subscribed to Gymn. I'm 12,
going on 13. I
really love gymnastics, but I don't really have the
discipline to be
an Olympian. My favorite gymnast is Dominique Dawes.
My favorite
event is floor. But unfortunately I'm
better at UB!
-----
From:
Randy
Date: Sun, 1 May 1994 16:28:10 -0700 (PDT)
I graduated from
the University of Georgia about a year ago which
eventually
necessitated the migration of my account to a pay service.
(Small plug:)
CRL is $20/month flat, no time limits, no tiered
rate
based on connect speed, 5M disk space
free. Disadvantage: no 800
number, but access numbers in GA, TX, and CA (that I know
of). I
searched
for a job for nine months before getting hired on as a
Systems Analyst with
the local city-county unified government.
I help
babysit two AS/400s, two i486 Unix
boxes, and a plethora of PCs.
Eight hundred-plus users
and a dozen analysts.
Haven't made it to 40
yet, but turned 30 at
the beginning of the year.
-----
Date:
Wed, 4 May 1994 21:50:06 -0400
From: ***@cykick.jvnc.net
1. As a
follow-up to October's brain surgery, I had some "minor"
cosmetic-type stuff done on St. Patrick's Day (Mar. 17), so
I now look
less like a Conehead
when I'm not wearing my wig. I tell
folks the
doctors "tried to straighten out my
head" - but spending 5+ hours on a
conference
call for work probably led many to question how
"successful"
this operation really was. ;-)
Actually, the surgery was
successful (I even got
to go home only a few hours later), hair
continues
to grow in, and I hope to be able to retire the wig by the
end of June.
(For those daring to count, this makes
5 operations in just over two
years - 3 lung
surgeries, one brain, one cosmetic on the head. When
we
joined Gymn, during the '92 Olympics, I was
recuperating from my
2nd lung operation.)
2. We're getting ready
for summer travels, centered around square
dance conventions as usual. We begin with one event in Va.
Beach,
where we expect to see fellow Gymn member Kathy Godfrey; then after a
quick (!) trip home to retool and repack, we're off to
Portland, OR
for another one. Can't wait...
-----
>From
me (Rachele):
I graduate this Saturday! Whoopee! I will be hitting four meets this
summer: L10 Sr. Nat'ls in Seattle
(next weekend); tri-meet in Phoenix
(5/21) [will
meet up with George, Susan, and other Gymners]; dual
meet
in Worcester (6/11) [will meet up with Robyn,
Mayland, and get to meet
Robyn's Gymn baby, Ryan]; and USA Champs (8/20) [don't know yet,
let
me know if you'll be there!]
-----
Although
she didn't submit this for a Gymn pub posting, I
feel
compelled to tell people that our lovely
Susan will turn 21 this
month. If you want to contribute to the Gymn-Gets-Susan-Sloshed-in-
Phoenix-Phund
(sorry, had to), then let me know. ;)
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 06 May 94 00:29:13 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Trivia
Answers
The topic is "Unlucky Gymnasts"
1-What
world class "Soviet" gymnast suffered foot injuries during two of
the
three world championships he competed in?
Valeri Liukin
(89, 91, 93)
2-What two world champions served as alternates to the
'88 Olympic team?
Oksana Omeliantchik and Valentin Mogilny
3-In
1988, the US women's Olympic team did not contain any of the previous
three years' National AA Champions. Who were these National Champions?
Sabrina
Mar (85), Jennifer Sey (86), Kristie Phillips
(87)
4-What two time world AA champion was
never part of an Olympic team?
Yuri Korolev
(81 & 85 World Champ)
5-Which team has had three Olympic AA silver
medalists in a row? Who were
they and when?
Romania - Nadia Comaneci (1980), Ecaterina Szabo (1984), Daniela Silivas
(1988)
6-What gymnast lead qualifying in two world beam finals only to lose in
EF
due to poor landings?
Yang Bo (89
& 91)
7-Twice, the NCAA Women's Championship has
been won by a host team by .05.
Name the years,
the home teams that won, and the visitors that lost.
1987 - Georgia
defeated UCLA
1994 - Utah defeated Alabama
8-What gymnast missed
out on a world title due to a miscalculation by the
judges
in '91?
Vitali Scherbo
on vault where he scored what was later deemed an "impossible"
score by the FIG who said that he should have tied You Ok Youl
9-Which gymnast won optionals
and placed second overall at his/her national
championships,
but then was cut from competing at the World Championships?
What
year?
Sandy Woolsey, 1991 - she retired from elite shortly after
10-What
two gymnasts were heavily favored to win at the 1984 Olympics and
1985
Worlds, but did not get to compete AA in either?
Dimitri
Bilozerchev, Olga Mostepanova
Hope
you had fun!
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 06 May
94 00:29:00 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Trivia Questions
The
topic is "Unlucky Gymnasts"
1-What world class Soviet
gymnast suffered foot injuries during two of the
three
world championships he competed in?
2-What two world champions served
as alternates to the '88 Olympic team?
3-In 1988, the US women's
Olympic team did not contain any of the previous
three
years' National AA Champions. Who
were these National Champions?
4-What two time
world AA champion was never part of an Olympic team?
5-Which team has
had three Olympic AA silver medalists in a row? Who were
they
and when?
6-What gymnast lead qualifying in
two world beam finals only to lose in EF
due to
poor landings?
7-Twice, the NCAA Women's
Championship has been won by a host team by .05.
Name the years, the home teams that won, and the visitors that
lost.
8-What gymnast missed out on a world title due to a
miscalculation by the
judges in '91?
9-Which
gymnast won optionals and placed second overall at
his/her national
championships, but then was cut
from competing at the World Championships?
What year?
10-What two
gymnasts were heavily favored to win at the 1984 Olympics and
1985 Worlds,
but did not get to compete AA in either?
Answers are in a separate
message...
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 6 May 1994 02:53:58 -0500 (CDT)
From: ***@owlnet.rice.edu
Subject:
USAG announces Goodwill Games teams
Direct from the Delphi BBS:
Two
time World Champion Shannon Miller tops the list of gymnasts who
will compete at the 1994 Goodwill Games in St. Petersburg,
Russia,
July 23 to August 7.
Dynamo Gymnastics teammates Jennie
Thompson (Wichita Falls, TX),
Marianna Webster (Joplin, MO) and Soni Meduna (Colon, NE) complete
the
womens team. Mina Kim (Oklahoma City, OK) will serve
as the
alternate. Steve Nunno
and Peggy Liddick of Dynamo Gymnastics will
coach the women.
"Winning the World
Championships all-around title gave Shannon a lot
of
confidence," said coach Nunno. "She knows she's back on track
and
looks forward to leading the USA team to some
good results at the
Goodwill Games.
The other team members are young and less experienced
internatinally so I think it's a
good combination--the young kids led
by veteran
Miller."
1994 World Championships event finalist Chainey Umphrey from
Albuquerque,
n.m., will be joined by UCLAA teammate Scott Keswick from
Las Vegas, Nev.,
and Ohio State Team members Blaine Wilson and Drew
Durbin
from Columbus, Ohio. Ohio State's Kip Simons from Bloomsburg,
PA., is the mens's alternate. USA men's coaches include UCLA's
Art
Shurlock and Ohio State's Peter Kormann.
Shurlock
commented, "I visited the city years ago when it was
Leningrad. It was an incredible experience then,
and I'm looking
forward to going back. We are taking an outstanding
team!"
Since their inception in 1986, the Goodwill Games have
alternated
sites between the U.S. and Russia. The first Goodwill Games were in
1986
in Moscow, with the 1990 games held in Seattle. In 1998, the
Games return to the
U.S. to New York City, July 25-August9.
The
Goodwill Games are hosted through a bilateral effort of the
participating sports federations in the United States and
Russia, in
cooperation with their respective
National Olympic Committees, local
organizing
committees and television entities.
The 1994 Games are expected to
feature approximately 2,000 of the
world's best
athletes from more that 50 countries competing in 24
sports. Sponsors for the '94 Games are
Anheuser-Busch, Delta Air
Lines, Foot Locker, the Gillette Company, Jiffy
Lube International,
Inc., in cooperation with Pennzoil Products Co.,
Member's Only, the
National Federation of Coffee
Growers of Colombia, Pepsi-Cola, The
Prudential Insurance Company, Reader's
Digest, Reebok International,
Ltd., SmithKline Beecham and Sony Electronics
Inc. The 1994 Games are
jointly presented by the participating Russian and U.S.
Sports
federations, the Russian Olympic Committee,
the St. Petersburg
Organizing Committee and Goodwill Games, Inc.
For
the 16-day event, TBS Superstation will air 64 hours of original
programming during prime time, as well as a 64-hour
encore
presentation during West Coast prime
time. ABC will air 17 hours of
weekend and afternoon coverage, one-third of which will
appear on
"Wide World of Sports." The Games are also
expected to be broadcast
in 100 countries
worldwide.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 5 May
1994 23:03:27 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@sosi.com
Subject: USOC Athletes of
the Month
>From the USOC...Miller does it again.
Andy
--------------------------------------------------------------
May 4, 1994
MILLER, DOLAN NAMED USOC APRIL ATHLETES OF THE MONTH
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- Gymnast Shannon Miller
won her second consecutive all-around title at
the World
Championships and swimmer Tom Dolan captured four
individual
titles to earn the USOC's April Athlete of the
Month honors.
After bouncing back from a pulled abdominal muscle,
five-time Olympic medalist Miller won her
second straight
women's all-around competition, with an overall
point
total of 39.274 at the 1994 World
Gymnastics
Championships in Brisbane, Australia. Miller, who also
won a gold medal on the balance beam (9.875),
became the
most decorated American gymnast in history,
winning more
Olympic and World Championship medals than any other U.S.
gymnast, male or female. She also became the first
American in history to win back-to-back all-around titles
and only the fourth female gymnast in the world to
accomplish this feat.
Dolan won a total of four individual titles at the
1994 Phillips 66 National Swimming Championships in
Federal Way, Wash. His four
titles placed him among the
elite, becoming the first male swimmer since
Mark Spitz
to win four titles in one national
championship. Dolan
broke the American record in the 400 individual
medley
with a time of 4:13.52, which was the second
fastest time
in history. He also won the 400m freestyle, 800m
free
(eighth-fastest time in history and
third-fastest
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 04
May 94 17:48:42 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Vaulting distance and flairing out
>Hey, is there anything in the women's
rules where they have to land
>past the third
mat line on vault or get a deduction like the men have now?
What
The
guideline in women's is that the gymnast should travel at least as far as
her body is long.
The judges just have to estimate.
I've thought about the
tape on the mat
thing. I'm ambivalent. On the one
hand, it's a lot more
clear cut, but on the other,
it seems unfair to require Boginskaya and Kim
Gwang-Suk to travel the same distance without taking into
account something
like a foot of height difference
(of course, I realize the men aren't all the
same
height either).
>One
more annoying thing to include - the stupid over-arching flair in
>women's Yurchenko-fulls. Laschenova and a couple others they did t
Personally,
I think the flair looks fine.
-- gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 04 May 94 22:00:04 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: White leos suggestion
>White
leo's, however, are out of
the question
because you can see bras through
them.
One thing that can be done about that is to wear a tank leo underneath.
You'd still
wear a bra, but it won't show more than on any other leo.
(The
tank would be instead of trunks,
though. Well, it wouldn't have to
be, but
that's a lot of layers). I personally never did it (it seems to
me like it
would be kind of uncomfortable), but I
know girls who have. The
problem
might be having the tank show at the top,it depends how the leo is
cut. But
with all the high-neck leos these
days, it might be ok.
Another observation on leos: At
Indianapolis, some of us remarked on how
nice the
yellow Australian leo looked. Then in Barcelona, they looked
lousy.
The difference seemed to
be that the mats at Indy were blue and the ones at
Barcelona were this drab
(reddish?) brown. The yellow which looked good
against
the blue background looked gross against brown. So equipment is
another
consideration in leo selection ;)
-- gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 06 May 94 00:00:59 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Women's NCAA
items
I know this is a little behind the times, but I had a sked a friend in
Atlanta to send me
any NCAA stories that appeared down there. They just came
today,
and I thought some people might be interested in a few assorted items.
Needless
to say, the focus in on Georgia:
-After team preliminaries, Suzanne Yoculan ripped her team publicly.
Apparently the scores
on vault for Georgia were not as high as they are used
to,
and Yoculan claimed certain individuals were more
concerned with making
vault finals than helping
the team win.
-During team finals, Georgia had a strong lead going
into their last event,
beamover
.6 ahead of Utah. Leah Brown was up
first, and fell twice (8.675),
Angeles and Simpkins also fell.
-Talk
abot deja vu for Kim
Kelly. Her fall on floor (9.375)
essentially was
the difference in Utah winning by
.05. Very reminiscent of US vs.
Romania
1991, where Kelly's fall on a double-twist counted and the US lost
by .2.
-From a postmortem
article, "Yoculan was so sure of a Georgia
victory she had
pestered reporters repeatedly in
recent weeks about her concerns that a
picure of the Lady Bulldogs toting the 94 NCAA
Championship trophy appear in
the next day's
paper." (pride goeth
before a fall).
FYI
Mara
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************