gymn
Digest
Fri, 29 Jul 94 Volume 2 :
Issue 154
Today's Topics:
a few notes
Aussie Commonwealth News
Best gymnast ever?
China to train in NC! (2 msgs)
Christy & Julissa
Christy Henrich (3 msgs)
Classic Info
Don't Forget!!!!
eating disorders (2 msgs)
Henrich (3 msgs)
Henrich/Gomez
Mike Jacki
More Details on Henrich
More
Henrich Info (from the Chicago Tribune) (2 msgs)
More Info on Henrich
more on Henrich
My friend makes Senior Elite
NCAA Changes (2 msgs)
neg publicity
Press Release on Henrich
profile
Sad News about Henrich
U.S. Sports Acro Nationals
Unfortunate Ad Coincidence
Very, Very Sad News about Henrich
This
is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 18:57:09 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
a few notes
I've sent email to the USGF to ask where condolences can
be directed
for Henrich's
family. They said they'd let me
know tomorrow morning,
so I'll post it tomorrow
night sometime (when I get home from work).
Also, re the negative
publicity, I would hope that most people
(including
the ones who work for Ted Turner, <g>) know that gymnastics
is most certainly not a CAUSE of eating disorders. How would we have
so
many healthy gymnasts?
Unfortunately, eating disorders and
gymnastics
have a significant correlation, so implying that one
*causes*
the other is all too easy unless the information is handled
carefully.
Personally, I like to think that
gymnastics usually educates an
athlete in how to
take care of their body. Seems to
me that an awful
lot of gymnasts that I know are
some of the healthiest people I've met
(sprains
and strains notwithstanding).
I'd like to hear, from some of the
current of former gymnasts on this
list (and
anyone else), how widespread of a problem they think eating
disorders are in gymnastics?
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 26 Jul 94 22:29:11 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Aussie
Commonwealth News
>The impression I get is that the trials are
being held soley to allow Hughes
another chance of making the team since the other 5 girls
are already
selected.
She seems
deserving of it. I just hope they
don't pull a 'Umeh' on
her.
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Thu,
28 Jul 94 15:33:04 CDT
From: ***@merle.acns.nwu.edu
Subject: Best
gymnast ever?
In addition to being a big gymnastics fan, I am also a
die-hard baseball
fan. I work for
a company that runs fantasy baseball leagues and as
part of that
they do projections and run simulated games.
After reading a recent message
that someone on gymn wrote about gymnastics
dream teams, I
thought that it might be fun to try and figure out the
teams
statistically and run a simulated event by predicting who would win.
To do
this, however, I need to get results from alot of
meets. I can get
the results for
most of the "big" meets that have occurred in the past
5-10 years, but in order to include
gymnasts from the 1970's and others,
I need the results from Worlds, Olympics and any other "big"
meets that
were
held. I also thought to maybe use
National Championships results if
anyone could get those results from countries
other then the USA.
If anyone has anything that they think might help, I
would really appreciate
it your assistance and any input you might have as far as what
to do or what
you might like to see.
Ellen
P.S. -
Depending on how all of this works out, I also thought
that I might try
and figure out a way of predicting how well junior gymnasts
will do at
the senior level based off of their results and comparison
to others.
So,
results from junior meets would be helpful too.
Thanks in advance for
your help!
:)
------------------------------
Date: Tue,
26 Jul 94 15:06:22 EDT
From: ***@eos.ncsu.edu
Subject: China to train
in NC!
Howdy folks!
There was an article in the Raleigh (NC)
_News & Observer_ last Saturday
saying that
the Chinese Gymnastics Team will be training in Monroe, NC,
a town near Charlotte.
They will train for a couple of months in 1995
and
then return just before the Atlanta Olympics.
Just thought you would want to
know.
--Brent
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 26 Jul 94 17:56:08 PDT
From: ***@eworld.com
Subject: China to
train in NC!
Yep. Looks like we'll be seein'
y'all in NC.
David
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 94 9:53:00 CDT
From: ***@merle.acns.nwu.edu
Subject:
Christy & Julissa
I am responding to
Beth's question about Christy Henrich & Julissa Gomez
being from the
same gym. Both trained with Al Fong
at the Great American
Gymnastics Express in Blue Springs, MO, although Julissa had only moved
there a
few months before her accident. I
am originally from Kansas City (I
actually
competed in a few meets with E.T. before she turned elite),
and I know that the local citizens and the Kansas City press
have been very,
very supportive of both
families. You really have to feel
for the coaches
and teammates who have had to
deal so closely with both tragedies.
-- Allison
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 12:35:36 EDT
From: <***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
Subject:
Christy Henrich
Along with everyone
else, I was stunned and very saddened just now when I
got
onto gymn and learned of Christy's death. I hope that
IG or USA Gymnastics
will do a tribute article
about her, especially her fine performance at the
1989
Worlds where she performed so well on bars. But most importantly, I
think
any article should stress the dangers of
anorexia and the extreme difficulty of
overcoming
it. I know there have been many past US gymnasts who, after
retiring, admitted that when they were competing they were
bulimic and/or
anorexic. Fortunately they
survived. But who knows how many present competitors
are
anorexic? What happened to Christy is a real tragedy, and I just hope the
gymnastics media don't try to "hush it up" to
protect the sport's "image."
Rather let it be a lesson to
gymnasts AND coaches to put their priorities in
order.
The gymnast's health and well-being should be No. 1.
There is so much
pressure put on females of all
ages, athletes or not, to be slim at all costs.
It just isn't worth the
price.
In
response to someone's question about what anorexia and bulimia do to
the body, I'm not an expert, but I think I heard somewhere
that it weakens the
heart. I remember that the
singer Karen Carpenter died of a heart attack while
she
was recovering from bulimia. Although she was getting better as far as the
bulimia went, her heart had become too weakened
and damaged, so the actual
cause of her death was
heart failure. But she wouldn't have had heart failure
if
she had not previously been bulimic. But this is just a conjecture on my
part, since I'm no medical expert. I don't know if Christy's
death would have
been caused by heart failure. In
any case, it's a real tragedy.
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 20:00:48 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Christy Henrich
I too am very shocked by the death of
Christy. She was such a tough
and
strong athlete and really deserved a medal at
the 89 Worlds. There is a good
side to this though.
It shows everyone just how dangerous bulimia and
anorexia
both are and how they damage your system.
I've lost a person close
to me because of
anorexia so, I know the Henrich's pain. I suggest we all
say
a special prayer for Christy, for her soul to rest in peace and for her
family and thank God for giving us such a nice gymnast to
watch.---Brian
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 28 Jul
94 9:45:30 EDT
From: <***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
Subject:
Christy Henrich
I just thought I'd let
you know that today's (July 28's) NY Times has an
obituary
on Christy, with a photo of her on beam. It doesn't provide much more
info than what we've already heard, except there is an
unfortunate statement by
her mother that she
holds gymnastics 99% responsible for what happened to
Christy...
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 94 15:06:13 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Classic
Info
Excerpts From ...
OLYMPIC MEDALISTS TO COMPETE IN U.S.
NATIONAL GYMNASTICS EVENT IN PALM
SPRINGS PALM SPRINGS, Calif., July 28
/PRNewswire/ -- The Palm Springs
Convention Center will play host to the
U.S. Classic Nationals, a USA
Gymnastics sponsored event, on Aug. 5-7.
Two 1992 Olympic gymnastic medalists, Dominique Dawes and Michelle Campi
[huh?], will be joined
by 120 of the nation's top female gymnasts in
competition
for the national title. Other
world-ranked gymnasts from all
over the United
States, including Amanda Borden and Kerri Strug, will
also be
competing in this event, which is a
forerunner of the 1996 Olympic Games.
Tickets can be purchased at the
Palm Springs Convention Center box office by
phone
at 619-778-4100 or through TicketMaster at
213-480-3232.
Prices are $6.00 for adults and $4.50 for children
under 12 for each day
event.
posted by Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 94 17:17:15 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Don't
Forget!!!!
Goodwill Games Gymnastics are on *every* day starting
Saturday. On Tuesday
there is RSG. Sat-Mon. is the women's comp. Tues-Fri. the
men take the stage.
Then next weekend (Sat and Sun) the men and women team
up (described as "two
men and two women from
each country competing on individual apparatus" in TV
Guide) for a two day "mixed team" event.
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 94 13:24:44 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Eating
Disorders
At my old gym there were 50 team members, Level
8-Elite. Not one of them had
an eating disorder.
It was occasionally disscussed that anorexia
and bulemia
were
unhealthy, and if you want to lose weight simply eat healthy foods, and
exercise. Also,
in the USA gymnastics magazines there are often articles
disscussing the importance of
eating healthy
Jessica
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 1994 17:22:10 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu
Subject:
eating disorders
RE
the Classic post from Susan, I say two things. I think it will cheer
Michelle
to know that the press thinks she is going to compete. I also wonder
why also Olympic medalist Kerri Strug
was relegated to the "other" category.
I'm happy to see her
competing again, that is, if she really is planning to
compete.
I did not know of
anyone on my class III team that had an eating
disorder
of any kind, nor did I know for sure of any class Is (which included
Lisa Strug and Stacy Connolly), although there was one very
skinny girl that
complained that she ate like a
horse but couldn't get up to a better weight.
She had problems tumbling and
vaulting because her body lacked proper strength.
Before I made the team, however, a
slew of girls had quit the team
because there was
some weird peer group involving 5 or so girls who had all
started eating really small amounts of food and all were
anorexic and/or
bulimic. It was a very strange
situation that I didn't hear many details about.
They all left gymnastics
and went into counseling for their problems. I mention
this
because in my long involvement in women's sports, it is the only time I
heard of a group situation on a team involving an eating
disorder.
I
would also hope that everyone refrains from making nasty comments
about weight gain in former gymnasts. Some mention is nice,
just so we all have
a mental picture of what the
person looks like. As a person who gained plenty
of
weight after leaving gymnastics, I don't think it's very positive or good
for younger competitors to hear degrading comments about Kim
Z. or any others
who have gained weight. I'm sure
if they need to, in time they will loose
whatever
weight they need. Just a reminder in light of recent events and the
fact that we do have some current gymnasts and coaches on Gymn.
Okay
y'all - *smile*! Goodwill starts in a couple of days, and they
left diving, figure skating and gymnastics all for the
second week. Hey, does
anyone know if Phoebe was
good enough to make the diving team?
Cara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 08:05:14 -0700
From: <***@pollux.usc.edu>
Subject:
Henrich
Indeed, its very sad that Christy Henrich passed away. I was following
the
story from Rachele's posts and its all so tragic.
I've forgotten some of the medical details that someone posted
but
what does sustained deprivation of food
actually do to the body that
cannot be undone
later? Is it some organ that is damaged beyond repair
or
some chemical imbalance thats hard to reverse? And
all this in a
body of a gymnast, quite the perfect
athelete - all appears so
contridictory.
Anil.
PS:
My work requires me to travel a bit. If there have been delays in
responding to requests for the intro file or publication
info
maintained by Gymn,
I apologise.
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 16:02:25 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu
Subject:
Henrich
My condolences to Christy Henrich's
family and friends. For a woman
with so
much success so early in her life, her death is so tragic.
Someone asked
about whether anorexia and bulimia damages the heart. The
answer is a definite yes. While it damages many other organs
as well, many
anorexia deaths, like Karen
Carpenter's, are heart-related.
I
know of a case where a 20 year-old college swimmer with a history of
eating disorders had a simple surgical proceedure
and died on the table of a
herat
attack because her heart couldn't take the ongoing stress of the
condition and the surgery.
Cara
P.S.
Where can we write to send condolences?
P.P.S. Brace yourselves for the
wave of negative publicity during the Goodwill
Games coverage. While it is
important to inform, this may get downright cruel.
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 15:42:22 +0600
From: ***@scoter.cdev.com
Subject: Henrich
> P.P.S. Brace yourselves for the wave
of negative publicity during the Goodwill
> Games coverage. While it is
important to inform, this may get downright cruel.
I surely hope that
Ted Turner can help tone that down, and that he'd be
so
inclined. After all it's his show.
--John
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 1994 11:57:58 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu
Subject:
Henrich/Gomez
Julissa made
elite at Karolyi's, then transferred to GAGE in '87.
She
and Christy were very good friends. I think
they were best friends. They were
the top two
gymnasts out of GAGE and both were on the national team together.
As far as
I know, she was training at GAGE when her accident occurred in April
of '88, warming up a vault in the Tokyo Cup.
Cara
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 26 Jul 94 22:28:34 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Mike Jacki
USA Today lists Mike Jacki
among a list of candidates to be the new Executive
Director of the US
Olympic Committee, to replace Harvey Schiller who will
move
to TBS.
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 18:21:20 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
More Details on Henrich
Again, this news is
obtained via the AP wire
-She died on Tuesday, July 26, 1994
(yesterday) or "multiple organ
system
failure" after being hospitalized for two and a half week.
Research
Medical Center (the hospital where she was in ICU) wouldn't
release how much she weighed at her death [thank
goodness].
-Henrich's nickname was
"E.T.", which stood for "Extra Tough".
-She was 4'
10"
-She stopped competing in the fall of 1990 because she was so
weak
from her eating disorders. She retired from gymnastics in
January
1991.
-Henrich's schedule was to
train from 6:30 to 9:30 in the morning, do
her
school work with a tutor, and then practice again at night lasting
until 10pm.
-Henrich had
a fiance'.
-Calls to the Henrich
home on Wednesday were unanswered.
Al Fong, head coach at Great
American Gymnastics Express (GAGE): "She
was
an extremely strong person. She was a bull, just a tank... I
kicked
her out of the gym for her own good.
I said, `You're going to
kill
yourself.' She was throwing herself into the equipment because
she couldn't do the routines. I set up all these
appointments with the
nutritionists, and then I
found out she wasn't attending those
sessions."
Coach
Fong became estranged from the Henrich family after
confronting
Christy in 1989 about her eating disorders.
Henrich, when she withdrew from gymnastics: "My life
is a horrifying
nightmare. It feels like there's a
beast inside of me, like a monster.
It feels evil."
Apparently,
Henrich's dieting "frenzy" began in 1988
after a judge at
a competition in Budapest,
Hungary, mentioned that she needed to watch
her
weight. Fong described the judge as
a "nice, old lady" who made
an offhand
remark. He said, however, that "It was perceived
by her as
`You're too fat to be an Olympic gymnast.'"
Henrich's former psychiatirst,
Dr. Gail Vaughn: "I worked with her for
about
three months and she seemed to be doing pretty good when she let
me go. She was getting better there for a while."
Henrich's mom, in a 1989 interview: "She was always
hopping around,
hanging onto things... She
couldn't get enough of it."
Henrich, at
age 15: "I want it so bad. I
know I have a chance for the
Olympics, and that gets
me fired up."
Fong: "She was a tremendous young
athlete. She was a role model.
She
was a likable kid. She was the kind of person
who could not see an
obstacle that she could not
get over. She would see an obstacle and
say, `I
can do that.'"
------------------------------
Date: Thu,
28 Jul 94 15:06:41 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: More Henrich Info (from the Chicago Tribune)
>From
The Chicago Tribune (by Julie Deadorff)...
-During
life's blackest moments for 22-year-old gymnast Christy Henrich,
she
was training nine hours a day and eating one
apple. Then it was an apple
slice. Soon nothing
could bring her back.
-Henrich, who missed
the 1988 Olympic team by 0.118 of a point and placed
fourth on the uneven parallel bars in the 1989 World
Championships, is the
first U.S. gymnast to die of
an eating disorder.
-U.S. Olympian Cathy Rigby twice went into
cardiac arrest. Christy Phillips
slit her wrists
in a failed suicide attempt. Olympians Cathy Johnson, Nadia
Comaneci and
former Bela Karolyi student
Erica Stokes have all battled the
disease.
-"We
have no idea how many athletes die of this problem, but we've had
endless concerns about it--in all levels and all
sports," said Christopher
Athas, vice
president of the Highland Park-based National Association of
Anorexia
Nervosa and Associated Disorders (ANAD).
-"I'm not sure the death
of (singer) Karen Carpenter (from anorexia) 11 years
ago
was understood. Coaches play to win and feel thinness
is a significant
issue, and it will take an awful
lot for America to wake up."
-ANAD is surveying coaches on the topic
and points to a 1992 study by Randall
Dick, the NCAA's assistant director
of sports science, to emphasize the
severity of
the problem.
-Dick surveyed college athletic administrators across
the country and found
that at least 40 percent of
NCAA programs had had an athlete with an eating
disorder
over the previous two years.
-While gymnastics had the highest
reported percentage of eating disorders (48
percent
of 108 sponsoring schools reported a case), Dick noted that "while
athletes in certain sports appear to be at greater risk, the
wide variety of
programs reporting eating
disorders indicated that no sport should be
exempt."
-Gymnastics,
though, has had most of the unwanted attention, primarily
because of the increasingly young age of competitors, the
emphasis on
appearance and the subjective
evaluation. [NCAA study results ] While
gymnastics had
the highest reported percentage of eating disorders (48
percent
of 108 sponsoring schools reported a case), Dick noted that "while
athletes in certain sports appear to be at greater risk, the
wide variety of
programs reporting eating
disorders indicated that no sport should be
exempt."
-In
1956, the top two Olympic all-around finishers were 35 and 21 years old.
In
1992, the U.S. women's team averages were 16 years, a height of 4-9 1/2
and a weight of 83 pounds.
-Henrich's
mother, Sandy, has said the problems began when her daughter
overheard a gymnastics judge saying she needed to watch her
weight, which was
93 pounds at the time.
-"Christy's
a perfectionist," Sandy told the Washington Post in 1993. "She
was going to do whatever it took, not matter what the price.
She could endure
any pain. And she was hearing
this from a judge, an official of the sport.
Why wouldn't you
listen?"
- [Coach Fong on te help he
hired for Christy] "But she would 'fire' her
professional
people who offered their services free of charge," said Fong
from the gym where Henrich used to
train in Blue Springs, Mo. "I've been
accused
many times by the family and other people of being the instigator,
and I'm sorry, but I refuse to take that.
"I got
her as much help as I could. She didn't live with me. I can only be so
much of an influence, and I can't watch everything she does,
including eating
and not eating. I'm angry and
saddened at the same time. It didn't need to
happen."
-The
USGF has taken several proactive steps to address the problem, including
employing national team nutritionist Dr. Dan Benardot and national team sport
psychology
consultant Dr. Joan Duda. They perform
body testing, speak at
annual
national congress sessions and attend training camps.
-A nutritional
video, utilizing 1984 Olmpic gold medalist Mary Lou Retton, is
provided to all
national team members.
-In addition, articles appear in several
magazines like "Technique" and "USA
Gymnastics."
-But
Mike Jacki, who was executive director of the USGF
for the last 10 years
before moving to the same
position at U.S. Skiing last year, said the
federation
could only do so much.
- [Jacki]
"There's no question Christy's tragedy highlights how critical it
is, but all the organization can do is education, It does
come down to the
athlete, coach, parents and
program for it to be carried forward. Constant
education
is needed."
-If there is anything positive to glean from Henrich's death, it's that it's
not
too late for those suffering from eating disorders to get help. And if
parents, coaches and friends can't provide enough support,
there's always the
Penny Lane record store in Kansas
City.
As of Wednesday, there were still copies left of a tape of a
song written and
performed by Henrich's
fiance, Bo Moreno. The title, "I Believe in You,"
could be an
important start on the road to recovery.
-posted
by Susan
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 28 Jul
1994 15:19:16 -0400
From: <***@world.std.com>
Subject: More Henrich Info (from the Chicago Tribune)
I was
talking about this last night to a friend whose daughter is a
gymnast training here in MA. I was happy to hear about her daughter's
gym: not only do they encourage sportsmanship (the entire
team was
suspended for one week due to badly
teasing one girl), but they
emphasize good
diet. The coaches met with the
girls and the parents
recently to make sure
everyone knew that the intense training schedule
would
be burning a lot of muscle, and that each girl should have so
much protein every day along with other good foods.
...eliz
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 1994 18:22:16 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
More Info on Henrich
The
AP story that I am excerpting from was written by Jim Litke. I am
quoting
a lot of his writing because he seems to have a really good
perspective on how many issues in gymnastics are really a
mirror or a
function of society.
"If we
demand age limits on competition, we'll get them. It's
not
enough simply to blame an athlete's parents or coaches or agents,
or even a sport's administrators for allowing kids to get
hurt -- or
worse -- providing entertainment for a
grownup audience. After all,
they are only taking
their cues from the rest of us.
Whatever
else it has done, Henrich's death has thrown
into
stark relief once more the paradox we have
allowed women's sports like
gymnastics and figure
skating to become: pressure-packed enterprises
driven
by huge dollars and an insatiable appetite for younger,
smaller,
cuter competitors to chew up and spit out."
Bela
Karolyi: "My immediate reaction is that it's a
personal tragedy,
a social tragedy, a tragedy for
our sport, but not the first one.
...
Who is to blame? I
do not want to point my finger specifically,
because
in this case there is a victim. Instead I will ask: Who is it
drives these girls so, that turns them into tools in order
to collect
such rewards? What kind of society
tells girls they must be skinny to
the point of
craziness, then pushes these weight-loss programs... Who
is
it that creates the Jennifer Capriatis and the others
who run away
from sport and turn into monsters
while they are still young girls?"
Jim Litke
again: "Too conveniently, perhaps, Karolyi
appears to have
excluded himself from the long
list of suspects in this instance.
Certainly, he and his peers are not
blameless. Stories abound about
how Karolyi would taunt pupils about being fat, about how some
of the
girls at his academy sensed their
usefulness ended at about the same
time their
figures began to ripen."
JL: "But it's not just the coaches,
judges and other officials that
athletes are under
pressure to please. It is the rest of us who demand
to
be dazzled by ever-tighter, ever-more reckless circles,
somersaults,
jumps and spins. The rest of us who prize precociousness
and
femininity in increasingly smaller packages that can be neatly
tied off with ribbons and smiles spanned by
braces."
Karolyi: "I have believed
for a long time that there is an optimal age
for
these girls, but it is not the same for all of them. Of course, a
small body performs some maneuvers easier than a taller
one. But it's
a natural phenomenon that strength and grace should increase
with age,
also. In my own experience, two of the
best students I ever had, Mary
Lou Retton and
Nadia Comaneci, had to go through puberty and it made a
very
specific mark of time on their bodies.
But they kept their
weight
and their temperament steady. That shows me it is not always a
problem to be in top form. And so, myself, I would not
discourage
anybody, no matter what is involved,
from seeking their opportunity."
[Ever seen the pictures of Nadia
from the 79 Worlds? "kept their
weight"??]
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 1994 07:30:59 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
more on Henrich
Yet a couple more tidbits
gleaned from an AP story...
Al Fong: "She was driven from an
early age, to the point that she had
blinders on.
She worked five times as hard as anybody... She didn't
become
good because she was talented. She became good because she
worked so hard and she had this kind of focus. She could
only see one
thing."
Henrich gave Fong a call right after the 1992
Olympics. Fong: "She
says, `Al, I'm really jazzed. I want to train for '96 (the
Atlanta
Olympics). I know I can do it. I'd like to start
training.'" Fong
said he told her she had to beat the eating disorders first.
She never
called back, he said Wednesday.
Gwen
Spidle, former teammate of Henrich,
still training at GAGE (and a
very good gymnast,
btw): "Everybody can blame themselves and say, `I
didn't
help her enough.' ... We did. But it had to come from her, to
heal herself. She'd say she had it under control. And then
she'd just
go back down."
Henrich's parents said they preferred not to talk to reporters.
Her
survivors include her parents, her brother Paul, her paternal
grandmother, her maternal grandparents, and her fiance.
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 26 Jul 94 15:12:18 EDT
From: ***@eos.ncsu.edu
Subject: My friend
makes Senior Elite
Howdy again folks!
I just thought I would
tell y'all that a young friend of mine named
Emily Chell
made Senior Elite at Zone Testing in Atlanta. I am still
grinning
about this, even though I heard the news a week ago. She timed
it
perfectly. (Emily turns 14 on 29
August.) A teammate of hers at
Gymcarolina, Erika Linnersten,
made Junior Elite. A third Gymcarolina
gymnast, Cassie
Cosgrove, SHOULD have made Junior Elite, but she bumped
into
another gymnast and broke her nose.
I was told she barely missed
making
it.
Just thought I'd tell ya!
--Brent
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 26 Jul 94 22:28:40 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: NCAA
Changes
> The
only thing I didn't see in the recommendations that I was hoping
would be required is banning untrained children (or adults,
for that matter)
from flashing scores
Agreed. But I also hope they'll allow RO-vaults
(costs and risks already
noted).
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 01:03:58 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: NCAA
Changes
To Mara and All:
Nope, they voted to keep banning round-off vaults in college.
----
Ronald
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 27 Jul 94
18:01:00 EDT
From: <***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
Subject: neg publicity
I agree with Cara that
there's a good chance there'll be some negative
publicity
during the Goodwill Games gymnastics coverage, but I'd like to hope
that the commentators have enough sense and knowledge to
know that gymnastics
does not CAUSE anorexia or
bulimia. Plenty of girls who are not involved in
sports
AT ALL suffer from it. I personally have a 32-year-old friend who is
both anorexic and bulimic and it has absolutely nothing
whatsoever to do with
sports; in her case it was
a result of childhood abuse. In fact, every girl
I've ever met with an
eating disorder was NOT an athlete. I hope Ted Turner's
people
have enough information about the disorder not to make wild statements
implying that gymnastics CAUSES it. (Maybe someone should
call or fax TBS and
let them know. Anyone have
the number?) At the same time, as I said in my other
post,
I DO think it's important for gymnasts and coaches to have a proper
perspective of the weight issue. A girl does not have to be
a stick to be a
successful gymnast. There have
been many successful international gymnasts with
stockier
body types - Ecaterina Szabo,
Elena Shushunova, Mary Lou Retton
and
Kim Zmeskal, to name a few. I think gymnasts
may need to be more cautious than
other people to
avoid developing the disorder, but gymnastics doesn't cause it.
I honestly
think it might be worth a call to TBS to see how they plan on
handling the issue. I hope they can find the proper balance
between warning
people
of the dangers of the disorder without slamming gymnastics and singling
it out as THE CAUSE of it, because that's just not
true.
Like
Cara, I'd also like to know where we can send notes of
condolence to
the Henrich
family. Also, am I remembering right that Julissa
Gomez and Christy
were originally from the same
gym? (I know Julissa moved to Karolyi's
at some
point, but I don't remember if she was
still there when she suffered her
accident). I
think I recall reading that when Julissa was in the
coma, Christy
would visit her all the time, read
to her and play tapes for her. I find it
really
sad and ironic that these two good friends both died so young...
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 1994 18:08:48 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
Press Release on Henrich
1 HENRICH SUCCUMBS TO DISEASE
Date:
July 27, 1994
Luan Peszek, Director of Public
Relations
Ramonna Robinson, Manager of Public
Relations
Henrich Succumbs to Disease
After
a long struggle with anorexia nervosa and bulimia, former
national team gymnast Christy Henrich,
22, died last night in a
hospital in Independence,
Mo.
Henrich was a member of the 1989 World
Championships Team and finished
fourth on bars. A
four-time USA National Team member from 1987-1990,
Henrich
missed qualifying for the 1988 Olympic Team by 0.118 points.
USA
Gymnastics Chairman of the Board Sandy Knapp said, "Our deepest
sympathy goes to those who knew and loved Christy."
Women's Program
Director Kathy Kelly said, "Christy was a dedicated
athlete and
respected team member. The gymnastics
community will remember and
appreciate everything
that Christy gave to the sport. She will be
sadly
missed." USA Gymnastics is
painfully aware of the eating
disorder problem in
society and are committed to assist, educate and
protect
the athletes involved in the sport. According to ANAD
(National Association
of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders in
Highl
and Park, Ill.), "An estimated 8,000,000 people in this country
suffer from eating disorders. Among these, an estimated 3-6
percent of
the serious cases will die a far higher
death rate than for any other
mental
illness."
USA Gymnastics has taken several measures to educate
and screen USA
athletes and coaches in many areas
with programs specifically designed
to address the
area of nutrition. USA Gymnastics
has developed a
nutrition video featuring 1984
Olympic Gold Medalist Mary Lou Retton,
the USA National Team Nutritionist Dr. Dan Benardot, and the USA
Gymnastics National Team Sport
Psychology Consultant Dr. Joan Duda.
The video is
designed to educate athletes, parents and coaches about
proper
nutrition and explain the hazards of eating dissorders.
The
video discusses how parents and coaches can
create an environment that
fosters high self
esteem and positive body image among young gymnasts.
Both Benardot and Duda are members of
the USA Gymnastics National Team
Coaching Staff and attend training camps
and events throughout the
year in order to work
with the athletes.
Benardot performs body
composition testing on all female National Team
members.
If areas of concern are raised, then meetings are held with
the athletes, parents and/or coaches to review the
situation.
USA Gymnastics publishes a column entitled, "Body
Balance," in each
issue of its bimonthly
magazine USA Gymnastics. The column, typically
written
by Benardot, provides nutritional advice.
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 28 Jul 94 15:22:25 CDT
From: ***@merle.acns.nwu.edu
Subject:
profile
Hello!
My name is Ellen and I am a fourth year journalism
student at
Northwestern
University.
I first became
interested in gymnastics when I began to follow the career
of Phoebe Mills
in 1985.
I am presently a Level 5,6,7 women's gymnastics judge (hopefully
Level 8 in
a
few months) and I teach recreational gymnastics from pre-school to
advanced to
children ranging in ages from 3 to 13.
My favorite gymnasts are Phoebe
Mills and Lance Ringnald although I am a fan
of all USA
Gymnasts. My favorite event to
watch and teach is the beam but
I like judging floor and bars the best.
I
hope to pursue a career in sports writing upon graduation from college and
hopefully get a
chance to cover many gymnastics events and show the sport
in a positive
light rather then the very negative treatment that it
currently gets
from the press.
Ellen
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 10:57:51 EST
From: ***@email.cfr.org
Subject: Sad News
about Henrich
I was terribly saddened to
hear the news about Christy.
Her
struggles both inner and physical
against anorexia and bulimia should always
be a
reminder of the importance of the individual and "spiritual" life of
any
competitor. My whole hearted
condolences to her family and friends.
Connie
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 14:28:06 +0200
From: ***@cheeta.inesc.pt
Subject: U.S.
Sports Acro Nationals
Hi Gymners,
>26-29
U.S. Sports Acro Nationals/ Cedar City,
UT
Can anyone made a
report of this event?
Thanks in advice
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 94 23:46:26 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Unfortunate Ad
Coincidence
In an unfortunate coincidence, USA Today (page 11C) today runds a 1/3 page ad
for
Women's gym at Goodwill. The
picture is Kristie Phillips doing her front
limber
BB mount, with each and every rib prominently protruding from her
chest. The line
read "High School Kids."
Great timing.
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 27 Jul 1994 07:04:54 -0500 (CDT)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
Very, Very Sad News about Henrich
This
morning, when I checked the AP wire, I was very saddened to learn
that Christy Henrich has passed
away. She was 22. A local TV
affiliate
which had been covering her fight with anorexia nervosa and
bulimia reported her death on Tuesday.
Dr. Gail
Vaughn, who treated Henrich at one time: "I
worked with her
for about three months and she
seemed to be doing pretty good when she
let me
go... (But) she didn't want to go any further from what she had
done, and she was getting better there for a
while."
A very sad day in US gymnastics...
Rachele
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************