gymn
Digest
Sun, 3 Apr 94 Volume 2 :
Issue 97
Today's
Topics:
Campi Question (2 msgs)
campi update
Fwd: Re: Missing Out...
Goodwill Games/Worlds Team (2 msgs)
look-alikes
M. Campi's injury
M. Campi's injury (was PLEASE READ
IMPORTANT)
Marsden on probation (3 msgs)
Missing Out (2 msgs)
Missing Out... (4 msgs)
Missing Out/Long-lived FXs
Protests (2 msgs)
US Worlds team (2 msgs)
This is a
digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 31 Mar 94 10:06:21 EST
From: ***@eos.ncsu.edu
Subject: Campi Question
Hello fellow Gymn'ers
I
was wondering, since Michelle trains at Pozsar's
(which is in
Sacramento, right?) , could we not
send a get-well message through
them instead of
sending it through USA Gymnastics in Indy?
--Brent
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 31 Mar 1994 13:07:00 -0600 (CST)
From: <***@owlnet.rice.edu>
Subject:
Campi Question
Brent asks:
| I was
wondering, since Michelle trains at Pozsar's (which
is in
| Sacramento, right?) , could we not send a
get-well message through
| them instead of
sending it through USA Gymnastics in Indy?
Of course you can. It probably wouldn't be any quicker
though, as the
USGF is no doubt overnighting them.
The only reason
Lynn and I suggested USAG is because it's easier to
keep
track of one address for all gymnasts.
Any time you want to send
any mail to any
famous gymnast, even foreign, you can mail it to the
USGF. It's much more convenient than keeping
track of and updating
several different addresses
which often change. For instance,
I've
already seen three different addresses for Pozsar's, and I don't know
which
one is correct.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 29 Mar 94 21:02:49 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: campi update
just
heard.......she has come out of the intenseive care
and is recovering
.......she has all motion and
feeling in her arms and legs.....thank
god.......but
her future with gymnatics is not so bright
.........she was the
hardest working ,and the most
determined person i have ever known.......not
to mention great kid............lots of cards and good
wishes would make her
day..........send them in
care of the usa gymnastics and they will foward
them to
her........Lynn
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 02
Apr 94 18:57:23 PST
From: ***@eworld.com
Subject: Fwd:
Re: Missing Out...
---------------------
Forwarded
message:
Subj: Re: Missing Out...
Date: 94-04-02 18:48:56 pst
From: ChinaHand
I
think Mara's analysis was right on, especially (for obvious reasons) the
part about the Chinese.
One thing to say about the
Chinese, though, is that they have experienced an
unprecedented
flight of talented gymnasts and coaches from the sport.
Gymnastics is
becoming an unwitting victim of China's economic development,
which is drawing her talented and famous into the new
private sector.
Two trends may reverse this. First, there is a growing
flood of ex-Soviet
coaches coming down into China
for some outstanding opportunities. When I was
a
guest at the 7th China Games in Beijing last summer, I had a chance to
meet
several. Their proteges
are uniformly strong.
The other trend is the support of the new
gymnast-capitalists for the sport.
Led by Li Ning
and Tong Fei, the brightest stars in China's
gymnastic
firmament, these gymnasts who have left
the sport and made good are
reinvesting in the
sport that put them there. Li Ning has built a gym
here in
the U.S., and is building a 5-story,
100,000 square foot training facility in
southern
China. He is also now manufacturing the highest quality apparatus
and mats ever made in China, allowing even small, local gyms
to afford
excellent equipment. Tong Fei is also building a gym, and has started to
compete with Li Ning in the
equipment arena.
To watch the Chinese train is a beautiful sight. They
are strong, happy,
disciplined, and in some cases
(like that of Li Xiaoshuang and his older
brother Dashuang) are reaching
beyond their coaches and really pushing the
edge
of the envelope.
David
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 30 Mar 1994 22:18:54 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@delphi.com
Subject:
Goodwill Games/Worlds Team
Now that we know who will be comprising our Worlds team in Australia, does
anyone know how we will choose our women's Goodwill Games
Team?
Also, will we have a Worlds Team Trials for the comp in
November?
Tasha
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 31 Mar 94 00:59:10 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Goodwill
Games/Worlds Team
"will we have a Worlds
Team Trials for the comp in November?
Yes, there will be a regular and public trials for both the men's and womens'
team before the
November team worlds in Dortmond, Germany. As for the
Women's
Goodwill team (4 athletes), I haven't heard anything but know that
the men
were picked for that at the same time they were for
Brisbane (Winter Cup, 5
Feb. '94) so that may (??) be the case for the
women as well. Anybody else?
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 01 Apr 1994 16:43:13 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu
Subject:
look-alikes
Somebody
mentioned a while ago to start a look-alike list on here. In
April IG, p.
40, is a picture of Kim Young of the Colorado Ariels doin' the
best Omelianchik impression I've ever seen, down to the smile
and great leg
extension! Anyone else see it?
Cara
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 29 Mar 94 23:12:15 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: M. Campi's injury
How likely is this to be a career
ending injury? I mean, she has had SO MANY
serious
injuries. How many more can she
take?
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Tue,
29 Mar 94 17:00:09 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: M. Campi's injury (was PLEASE READ IMPORTANT)
>*sigh* Seems to
be a semi-rash of elite neck injuries
I've been told Michelle's injury
was a back injury (which also squares,
correct me
if I'm wrong, with the part about the wires for stabilizing the
vertebrae; I don't think those are used in neck
injuries).
-- Gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 29 Mar 1994 12:12:45 -0800 (PST)
From: <***@leland.Stanford.EDU>
Subject:
Marsden on probation
> I feel that a 1-year
probation placed on Marsden is way too harsh, if not
> downright wrong.
> ...
> Yes, maybe pulling his team
off the floor wasn't exactly a sportsman-like
> thing
to do, but sometimes you have to make a point, a point that you
> disagree with the handling of a situation.
> Placing Marsden on probation
for an entire year for what boils down to a
> minor
infraction and a coaching decision seems very, very wrong.
> What's next? Penalizing a
team because the crowd boos?
> ---Ron in Fla.
>
I
disagree with this opinion. What Marden did, in his usual childish
way,
was deprive the fans, BYU's athlete's and his own athletes of the
competition which was supposed to have taken place.
There
are acceptable ways of dealing with judging decisions with
which a coach disagrees, and pulling a team out of a
competition
is not one of them. If Marden felt
that his team was wrongly penalized,
he should
have filed an inquisition form and, as the strongest
acceptable
action, announced that he was continuing the competition
under
protest. As a coach and role-model
(you get one with the other),
he is setting a poor
example by his "take my ball and go home"
attitude.
Anything
more harsh than a year's probation might have been too
much,
but really, what does probation amount
to? He just has to think
about his actions for the next year and be sure that he
doesn't
make such a ridiculous coaching decision in
the future. (That's
assuming that it is Marsden who is on probation and not
Utah.)
<But that's just my opinion> :)
-Patrick
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 30 Mar 94 04:37:37 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Marsden on
probation
To: gymn@MIT.EDU
>Univ. of
Utah women's head coach Greg Marsden was reprimanded and
placed
on one year of probation yesterday by Chris Hill, University
Athletic
Director, for pulling his squad off the floor during the meet
with BYU.
Who will serve as head coach in the
meantime?
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 30 Mar 94
12:37:15 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Marsden on probation
Someone asked who serves as coach
while Utah Head Coach is on probation.
Being on probation does not mean
he leaves as head coach. He remains as
head coach,
but probation means he can be fired or fined if he screws up
again.
-- Ron
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 3 Apr
94 00:32:00 BST
From: ***@genie.geis.com
Subject: Missing Out
I
also admire the technical perfection of the Soviet gymnasts. There
were/are
very few gymnasts in the same class, and no one could compare when
it came to FX choreography and dance.
But I like a good debate, too. So, at the risk of pissing everyone
off,
I'll try the opposing side here:
>It's just very hard to deny the
amazing standards set by the Soviet system
>in their
heyday.
Actually, it can
be argued that the Japanese men were the leaders in the
sport
for nearly 2 decades. In
head-to-head Olympic competition, Japan won
5 *consecutive* team titles
('60-'76) to the Soviets' total of 4 ('52, '56,
'88,
'92). Japan also has the
edge on the USSR for individual medals won
from
1960 to 1976:
All-Around Medals:
Event Finals Medals:
JPN: 3G, 5S, 3B = 11 JPN: 14G, 16S, 18B = 48
URS:
4G, 2S, 3B =
9
URS: 24G, 12S, 9B = 45
The same is true of the World
Champs: another 5 consecutive team titles for
Japan
('62-'78), with silver for the Soviets during this period. Even with
Bilozerchev,
the USSR still lost the team title to China in 1983.
The Soviet women's team was a more
dominant force (never losing the Olympic
team gold
- excluding '84 - and finishing second in the Worlds only 3
times). However,
they were unable to contend with the likes of Caslavska,
Janz, Comaneci, Gnauck, Silivas, Dobre, and Zmeskal. The
last Soviet woman
to win both an Olympic AA and EF
gold medal was Larissa Latynina (1960).
Olympic
champs. Turischeva ('72), Davydova
('80), Shushunova ('88), and
Gutsu
('92) were unable to win any event finals.
But as a team, the USSR
women were
unbeatable.
>Triples
off UB in '89, 6 or 7 girls throwing fulls on (and
onto) beam in a
>single meet before it was common,
One triple back off UB does not a
great gymnast make. Kozlova (the triple
back kid)
had some amazing elements, but her technique left much to be
desired and she was seriously lacking in dance
training. As for throwing
fulls on B, both Szabo (ROM) and Shishova (URS)
performed a tucked full at
the '83 Europeans, and
Garrison (USA) performed a RO, tucked full as her B
mount
at the '85 Worlds.
>Without
the Soviets to chase (and chase them the world did - they did the
>hard stuff
first....
If the Soviets
did the "hard stuff" first, then why are there so many
"non-
Soviet" inventions? For example:
Tsukahara,
Yamashita, Kasamatsu, Kovacs, Gaylord releases, Cuervo, Yamawaki,
Guczoghy, Thomas flair, Magyar travel, Endo, Gienger, Xiao Ruizhi, Deltchev,
Def, Jaeger,
Comaneci salto and dismount, Rulfova,
Stalder, Popa, Radochla,
Yang Bo jump, Li Li
turn, Garrison, Pak salto, Talavera flair,
McNamara
mount...
>Several teams are good but no
one is GREAT.
Compare the
size and population of the USSR to a much smaller country such
as Romania, East and West Germany, Czechoslovakia,
Yugoslavia, Hungary,
Bulgaria, Italy, Spain -- all
of which have won European titles.
When you
consider that these countries were
able to hold their own in the sport
against the
largest country in the world, THAT is great.
Happy Easter to all!
Debbie
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 02 Apr 94 23:47:20 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing Out
>Turischeva
('72), Davydova ('80), Shushunova
('88), and
Gutsu ('92) were unable to win any
event finals. But as a team, the
>USSR
women were unbeatable
Did
you/could you double-check? I
thought Turischeva won a gold on floor,
but I don't have my book to check.
-- Gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 02 Apr 94 04:25:15 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing
Out...
Mail seems to have dried up a bit again so I'll attempt to
start a lively
disscussion,
arguement, vast praise for my wisdom and clverness...whatever
comes to
mind.
Does anyone out there miss the Soviet gymansts
as much as I (and those I
cavort with) do? I'm not
talking about a specific gymnast but the precise
technical
style, the amazing diffculty, and the downright compelteness of the
Sovs of old. You used to be
able to look at a kid you've never seen before
and
know they were going ot be great before you ever saw
them perform just by
the "CCCP"
("SSSR for those of that are cryillacly
impaired) on their back.
I'm not saying that there's never been a good
gymnast from another country,
etc., etc. so don't
freak out on me or anything. It's just very hard to deny
(though there are,I'm sure, those
that will try) the amazing standards set by
the
Soviet system in their heyday. How many outstanding gymnsts
did we see -
those
of us who scam meets from everywhere in the world blinking at fuzzy
home video, trying to recognize people by the way they stick
a dismount or
enter the RO since the tape your
watching was shot from the 23nd row
without
zoom, in soft focus...sound familer to anyone but me? Anyway, I digress...
How many
Soviets doing things that blew our minds dissappeared
never to be
heard from again. For those of you
that have been blessed (or cursed?) with
home
video of the Soviet nationals/Moscow News meets you may
remember...Triples
off UB in '89, 6 or 7 girls throwing fulls on (and
onto)
beam in a single meet before it was common,
Kovacs-Tkatchev-Tkatchev-Tkatchev-Geinger (all in combo) with a stuck triple
off in '91 (okay so that was Kharkov and he's not exactly an
unkown, just an
unhealthy,
gymnast but damn that's SO cool!),
a team of six where 4 could
throw triples on
floor, and on and on, all (or at least most) coming from
complete
unknowns whom we never saw in the Western World. I think Trevor Low
(BAGA
"The Gymnast" ed.) said
it best with this "...the days of Bilozerchev
(shameless personal plug for my fav)
& Gogoladaze...Kolyvanov
and Karlsche
(speaking
of people that vanished) now those were the days of TOTAL RESPECT
for the Red onslaught. They are still good, still the best,
BUT...the gap is
closing." He was talking
about the '93 Men's Jr. Euros but it truly applies
to
the gym world as a whole. (Low's
way cool; read his stuff if you can get
your hands
on it - smart, funny, and
technical)
Almost as sad as the Soviet demise (they haven't moved
Lenin yet so I still
hold out hope & was
anyone elses's first thought when they heard about
the
coup "Ohmygod
what if they don't send their team to Indy?") is
the fact that
there is no clear successor to their
greatness. Several teams are
good but
no one is GREAT. Without the Soviets to
chase (and chase them the world did -
they did the
hard stuff first and best [read P-E-F-E-C-T-L-Y] and by the time
the world caught up they were warming up with what they
considered old hat)
... what's the point?
Consider,
if you will, the list of gone with out a trace "nobodys" (and a
few
that were "somebodys" for 5 seconds) that
stunned us with difficulty and
beauty only to fall
of the face of the Earth (they gotta' be
somewhere...
maybe with that lone sock you always
pull out of the dryer)...Chudina,
Dudnik, Vorobiev (not Voropaev though he's been missing a while too),
Schepotskin, Ivanova, Abrashitova (had to say that Nance), Abdeeva,
Tumilovich, Lebedenskayia (beauty
incarnate), Kut, Kolyvanov
(the 11 year old
Euro Jr. champ who wowed them all
and then never got farther than alternate
to an
Olympic team), and on and on into virutal
infinity...
Susan
PS-Yes, I am aware that I can't spell; it
is some sort of genetic defect
please forgive
me
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 02 Apr 94
15:02:19 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing Out...
I, too, miss the Soviets. Even
though their training methods were
questionable, they pushed the rest of the world to be
better.
It is my
sincerest belief that women's gymnastics would be more advanced
right now if the Soviet team was still around. Look at the
U.S., for example.
Take away Dominique and Shannon and what do you have?
Yes, you still have a
good team, but you have a
team that probably would have lost to any Soviet
team
(or Romanian team, for that matter) from1988 onward. Losing Bela
Karoyli
was a big loss,
too. Like the Soviets, his training methods were
questionable,
but he, too, pushed everyone.
Of course, he and the
Soviets raise the ethical questions of whether
their
ends justified their means. Perhaps not.
--- Ron
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 02 Apr 94 17:13:40 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing
Out...
>there is no clear successor to
their greatness. Several
teams are good but
no one is GREAT.
I
have a feeling that the Chinese will be the eventual successors (not right
away, but maybe in 5 or 10 years)
>Without the
Soviets to chase (and chase them the world did -
they
did the hard stuff first and best [read P-E-F-E-C-T-L-Y] and by the time
the world caught up they were warming up with what they
considered old hat)
My strongest impressions still are of the Sov women at 85 Worlds seeming to
dominate
everything (with the exception of baby Silivas on
beam and not
making bar finals) and the Sov men at 88 Olympics wiping the floor with
everyone else
>You used to be able to look at a
kid you've never seen before
and know they were
going ot be great before you ever saw them perform
just by
the "CCCP" ("SSSR for those
of that are cryillacly impaired) on their back.
Can't
agree with that 100% of the time (99% of the time yes). Ironically
enough, the one I was unimpressed by was your namesake, Stobi, at 90/91
AmCup/Mixed
Pairs. She had incredible
difficulty, but looked like she was
swallowing a
hamster attempting it. Also, be sure to send me a telegram
when she gets a new floor set.
>How many Soviets
doing things that blew our minds dissappeared never
to be
heard from again.
I know what
you're saying, but how much of that was through forced
attrition/career-ending
injury?
-Even if Ukraine wanted to try to develop a program to match
the old Rodina,
I don't think they could, simply
because of raw population loss. One
reason
for the depth was the amount of kids
funneled into the sport (one reason why
I think the long-term future is
bright for China).
Please don't send nasty notes...
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 02 Apr 94 23:24:51 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing
Out...
I cried at the medal ceremony for the team competition at
Barcelona because
it was the end of Soviet
gymnastics. I try to keep in mind
that the world
can otherwise do without the Soviet
Union.
-- Gimnasta
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 03 Apr 94 00:43:57 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Missing
Out/Long-lived FXs
Just a quickie re Stovbchataya's
floor routine ...
I have a horrible video, as Susan described, of the Drushba '87 meet. But you
can
hear the music and recognize hurdles.
Guess who has the same routine
she competed through at least '93?
Yup, our
old pal Stovbchataya.
By contrast, Kalinina's only dates from '90 or so. Wonder how she
ever
remembers it?!
They don't even keep
compulsories around that long, except for those of us
who
remember what was the USGF Class III compulsory ca. 1974-5 through 1979,
which became the Class IV compulsory in 1980 through '83 or
'84. At age 11, I
had to teach it to 13- and
14-year-olds who did not know their right from
their
left.
Amazingly, I don't have nightmares. But I can still do the
routine. Wanna
see?
Have
a happy handstand,
Nancy
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 27 Mar 94 22:24:00 BST
From: ***@genie.geis.com
Subject:
Protests
Gimnasta asked:
>What do people think about
athletes protesting results in this and other
>ways?
Bonaly's
actions during the award ceremony were in very poor taste and
judgment (in my opinion) and almost certainly cost her any
sympathy she may
have received otherwise.
Offhand, I can think of two protests
in gymnastics:
1. Ma Yanhong refused to attend the UB award ceremony at the '81
Moscow
Worlds, where she won the silver behind Gnauck.
2. The walk-out
by the ROM women's team at the '77 European Champs. during
B finals to protest the
"underscoring" of Comaneci in the V and UB
finals. Comaneci had already performed on B and had
the highest
combined score (with Ungureanu
still to perform). The Romanians
left,
Comaneci was
disqualified, and Mukhina won the B gold.
I can understand Bonaly's
disappointment -- or anyone's for that matter --
of
losing a gold medal by the slimmest of margins, but isn't a silver or
bronze medal better than no medal at all?
Just my 2 cents'
worth.
Debbie
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 30 Mar 1994 00:20:45 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@dorsai.dorsai.org>
Subject:
Protests
Debbie asked:
> Gimnasta
asked:
>
>
>What do people think about athletes protesting results in this and
other
> >ways?
>
> Bonaly's
actions during the award ceremony were in very poor taste and
> judgment (in my opinion) and almost certainly cost her any
sympathy she may
> have received
otherwise.
>
> Offhand, I can think of two protests in
gymnastics:
>
>
> Debbie
>
>
Let's put all
this in perspective:
Kerry Huston had a serious
accident at Winter Cup, Michele Campi
does it
practicing Olympic Compulsories,
and we concern ourselves with protests?
Any sport should be for
enjoyment and good health. If we
lose site of
that we lose everything, and the
medals will not really be appreciated
later in
life.
As a coach and judge, I can't really get into a discussion of
the myriad
protests when our best and brightest
are getting seriously and (most
likely)
permanently hurt.
The only advice I can give my gymnasts about the
scores is that you have
to be so good the judges
can't take it away from you, and even then
mistakes
happen. That's the nature of
sports. You've got to have an
appreciation of that in this sport or you won't last
long. If you can't
enjoy it, there's not much other reason to be out there -
you won't get
rich, and you risk your life everytime you go up. That doesn't mean I
don't get upset when scores are off, but we need to keep it
in
perspective. Having seen (on the high school) the
pain caused to a group
of athletes when another group
did not go up on the podium to get their
second
place medals, I fully recognize the unspostsmanlike
attitude that
behavior radiates. It has no place in our sport. One of the great
strengths
of our sport is that our athletes support each other regardless
of the teams they are on. even if the
outside world doesn't understand
what's involved,
the gymnasts know what it took to do that winning exercise.
Let's hope
our kids stay healthy.
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 30 Mar 94 04:37:32 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: US Worlds
team
Now that Classic is over, what does eveyone
think the prospects are for
Shannon, Dom, Amanda, and Larissa come
Aussie?
Also, will Larissa get to compete AA prelims (not that it'll
probably make
much of a difference)?
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 30 Mar 94 09:36:55 EST
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: US Worlds
team
" will Larissa get to compete AA
prelims
>From what I understand there will be no qualifying comp. for the AA. Each
country can
put in any three gymnasts it likes. The EF will have a qualifying
that will be held prior to the AA finals. The EF will be the
last part of the
comp. as
usual.
Susan
------------------------------
End of gymn Digest
******************************