gymn
Digest
Sun, 1 Jan 95 Volume 3 :
Issue 55
Today's
Topics:
Gymnasts and Smiles
Jan. Ziert Alert
January Calendar
Li Ning in a TV series (2 msgs)
Meet Info Needed
More GIFs
Neil Thomas MBE (2 msgs)
New user
Shannon Speculation
switch
to regular list
World's: Questions and comments (4 msgs)
This is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu
mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 07:37:21 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
Gymnasts and Smiles
On the topic of "why don't gymnasts
smile" and "aren't they having
fun",
I must agree that due to the intense concentration, a gymnast
"forgets" to smile.
I am always really impressed when a gymnast does
smile
-- when I took ballet (don't ask about it, grin), there was only
one of us who ever could remember to smile.
I think that gymnasts are
expected to smile because of the showy
nature of
the sport, very presentation oriented.
We think of it as a
performance, which it
is. However, it's easy to forget
that this is a
sport, particularly at the level
that we see on TV -- do we expect
divers, runners,
and soccer players to smile? We do
expect figure
skaters to smile -- because again,
it is a showy presentation sport.
More so than gymnastics, I'd say. But anyways, if a table tennis
player (what a frightening game) isn't smiling during a
match, it's
because the sport requires intense
concentration -- as does
gymnastics.
On a
ridiculous extreme -- I like work a lot, but it requires a lot of
concentration, and I'm *rarely* smiling. But yet I do have
fun at work.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 08:14:31 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject: Jan.
Ziert Alert
Regarding Paul Ziert's editorial this month in _IG_ titled
"Sleeping
or Cheating: American judge Sharon
Weber caught red-handed":
First off, to make it clear, I have no
facts on either side of the
situation and so am
not agreeing or disagreeing with Ziert's
accusations of Weber.
However, these thoughts came to mind when
reading
the editorial...
I was really surprised with the paragraph noting the
scores for
Miller's bars. Again, the scores were: 9.4-ROM,
9.6-BUL, 9.5-JPN,
9.6-USA, 9.6 FRA, 9.35-ESP. The first thing that occurred to me
was
that if I was given these scores, I'd say
"What's up with Spain and
Romania?," not
"What's up with the US score?"
So anyways, Ziert goes
on
to explain it by saying "OK, so the Bulgarian judge thought she had
been assigned the World Rhythmic CHampionships,
and the French are
just eclectic enouhg to see her mistake as a unique
interpretation."
Yeah right, Paul, those are ridiculous excuses to
discounting those
scores as flukes. If Paul holds Weber responsible for her
9.6 (as I
most *certainly* think that one should
do as I would naturally hold
all judges
responsible for all their scores), then why is Paul
discounting
the Bulgarian and French scores?
They should be just as
resposnible
for their 9.6's as Sharon Weber is for hers.
And then second, I
really question his selection of the second set of
scores. Those six scores prove nothing to
me. Why did he pick
*those* six? Are
they the scores that best illustrated his point?
When there are hundreds of
scores, a random sample of six doesn't
prove
anything. If he had made a
statement that "the average
deviation for
Weber's scores on all gymnasts was this.
The average
deviation for Weber's scores on
American gymnasts was this" -- and
then threw
in his examples -- *then* he'd have something worthwhile
(if they supported the averages, that is).
I'll
certainly grant him that from the *limited* sample he provided,
that the evidence appears incriminating. But looking at the scores,
you'll also notice that the ROM judge always gave her
gymnast the
highest score, as is true with the FRA
judge. Granted, the deviation
of Weber's score is more significant than that of the ROM
and FRA
judges. Also interesting to note is that the FRA
judge generally
scored the ROM gymnasts high and
the ROM judge scored Lussac well, and
both scored Dawes poorly. Does that mean that they were cheating?
--
I don't know, but I know I am not prepared to make any accusations
of
cheating just from the limited set of scores
that I have to look at
because, as I've said
before, six scores out of hundreds with no
statistics
whatsoever on the averages and/or means of the data is just
meaningless.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 1 Jan 1995 21:05:12 +0600
From: ***@scoter.cdev.com
Subject:
January Calendar
###################################################################
#
#
# ________ G y m n ________
\
|
___ #
#
o __o |o |o (o #
# An electronic forum !__ \! ! ! \. #
# for gymnastics. ======
====== ====== ====== ====== #
#
#
###################################################################
The
Gymn Calendar
Anyone that has any events to
add to this calendar, please mail them
to me.
All
events on this calendar are subject to change. -- John
---------------------------------------------------------------------
December 1994
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19
20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
1-4
T.O.P. Training Camp (W)/ Tulsa, OK
2-4
DTB Cup/ Stuttgart, Germany
10-11
Chunichi Cup/ Nagoya City, Japan
15-21
Pacific Alliance Championships/ Auckland, New Zealand
17
BROADCAST Dortmund World Champs/ NBC, 1:30-3:30 EST
24
BROADCAST Exhibition from Mexico City/ ESPN, 9:00-10:00 EST
27-30 Florida
Workout/ Naples, FL
31
BROADCAST USA World Team Trials (W)/ ESPN2, 3:30-5:00 EST
-----
January 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5 6
7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18
19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
2 (approx.)
University Presidents' vote on NCAA Proposal 1-87 / 2-124
5-7
First Elite Regional (W)/ various sites
7-8
Tim Daggett National Invitational/ Springfield, MA
13-15
Buckeye Classic/ Columbus, OH
21
Reese's World Gymnastics Cup/ Portland, OR
27-28
USAG Winter Cup Challenge (M)/ Colorado Springs, CO
27-29
Second Elite Regional (W)/ various sites
-----
February 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4
5 6 7
8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28
3-5
Peachtree Classic/ Atlanta, GA
10-11
Rhythmic Challenge (R)/ Colorado Springs, CO
16-18
American Classic/ Pan Am Trials (W)/ Oakland, CA
24-26
Gymcarolina Classic/ Raleigh, NC
24-26
Blackjack Invitational/ Las Vegas, NV
-----
March 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4
5 6 7
8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31
2, 4
McDonald's American Cup (M/W)/ Seattle, WA
4
BROADCAST McD's Am. Cup/ NBC 4-6:00PM EST
4-19
Pan American Games/ Mar Del Plata & Buenos Aires,
Argentina
5
International Mixed Pairs/ Seattle, WA
8-11
Messe Cup/ Hannover, Germany
11 BROADCAST
Reese's Gymn. Cup/ ABC, 4:30-6:00PM EST
TBA
BROADCAST U.S. Winter Cup Challenge (M)/ TBA
18
BROADCAST International Mixed Pairs/ NBC, 2:30-4:00PM EST
18-19
British Sports Acrobatics Championships/ King's Lynn
25-26
British Rhythmic Championships/ Bletchley
-----
April 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1
2 3 4
5 6 7
8
9 10 11 12 13 14
15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30
8
NCAA Regionals (W)/ (West) Oregon St. U./
(Midwest) U. of Nebraska/ (Central) U. of
Michigan/
(Southeast) Towson St. U./ (Northeast) Kent St.
U.
8
NCAA Regionals (M)/ (West) U. of Oklahoma/ (East) Penn St. U.
11-15
USAG Collegiate Championships/ Denton, TX
15
USAG National Inv. Tournament/ Cape Girardeau, MO
20-22
NCAA National Champs (W)/ Athens, GA
20-22
NCAA National Champs (M)/ Columbia, OH
27-28
VISA Challenge: USA vs. Romania (M/W)/ Fairfax, VA
TBA
NCAA Championships (M) (W)/ TBA
29
BROADCAST VISA Challenge (W)/ ABC, 4:30-6:00PM EST
-----
May 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19
20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
5-7
J.O. Championships (R)/ TBA
11-13
Boys' J.O. Nationals/ Oakland, CA
11-14
Junior J.O. Nationals (W)/ West Palm Beach, FL
13
BROADCAST VISA Challenge (M)/ ABC, 4:30-6:00PM EST
13-14
Western Rhythmic Open/
TBA
15-22
Junior World Sports Acrobatics Championships/ Germany
18-21
Senior J.O. Nationals (W)/ Lincoln, NE
20-21
Eastern Rhythmic Open/ TBA
29-7/2
National Gym Fest/ ?
-----
June 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19
20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30
9-11
Elite Regionals (W)/ TBA
16-18
USAG Rhythmic National Championships/ TBA
17-18
Budget Rent-A-Car Invitational/ San Jose, CA
24
BROADCAST European Cup (M)/ ABC, 4:30-6:00PM EST
24-25
Rhythmic European Cup/ Telford, Great Britain
25
BROADCAST/Budget Rent-A-Car Invit./ NBC, 3:00-5:00PM EST
16-18
USAG Rhythmic National Championships/ TBA
TBA
BROADCAST/USAG Rhythmic National Champ./ CBS,
TBA
-----
July
1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1
2 3 4
5 6 7
8
9 10 11 12 13 14
15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
1-9 Special
Olympics Summer Games/ New Haven, CT
1
BROADCAST European Cup (W)/ ABC, 4:30-6:00PM EST
9-12
YMCA Nationals/ Savannah, GA
9-15
10th World Gymnaestrada/ Berlin, Germany
21-30
U.S. Olympic Festival (M/W/R)/ Denver, CO
TBA
BROADCAST U.S. Olympic Fest. (M/W/R)/ TBA
-----
August 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5
6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28
29 30 31
12
Gymn's Third Anniversary
16-19
Coca-Cola USA Championships (M/W)/ New Orleans, LA
19
BROADCAST Coca-Cola USA Champ. (M/W)/NBC, 8:00PM EST
20
BROADCAST Coca-Cola USA Champ. (M/W)/NBC, 7:00PM EST
17-20
USA Gymnastics National Congress/ New Orleans, LA
24-9/8
World University Games (M/W/R)/ Fukuoka, Japan
-----
September 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2
3 4 5
6 7 8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28
29 30
19-24
Rhythmic World Championships/ Vienna, Austria
-----
October 1995
S M Tu W Th F
S
1 2 3
4 5 6
7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18
19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
1-10
Artistic World Championships/ Sabae,
Japan
4-7
Olympic Congress of the USA/ Atlanta, GA
8
BROADCAST World Champs/ ABC, TBD
15
BROADCAST World Champs/ ABC, TBD
-----
July 1996
19-8/4
Games of the XVIth Olympiad/ Atlanta, GA
-----
August
1996
12
Gymn's Fourth Anniversary
-----
Summer
1997
TBD
World University Games, Sicily, ITA
-----
July 1998
25-8/9
Goodwill Games, New York, N.Y.
-----
Summer 1999
TBD
World University Games, Palma de Mallorca, ESP
-----
September
2000
16-10/1
Games of the XXVIIth Olympiad, Sydney,
AUS
-----
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 31
Dec 94 01:20:12 GMT
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Li Ning
in a TV series
Just saw an advert on "The Chinese Channel"
here in UK saying there'll
soon be a "Kung
Fu" type TV series starring Li Ning. It was
produced by
a Hong Kong TV company, I think.
Don't know whether this series was old
or new
though, David might know something more...?
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 94 22:50:54 PST
From: ***@eworld.com
Subject: Li Ning in a TV series
The mini-series, called
"Heroes of the Shaolin" in English, was shot in June
and July 1993 and originally aired on HK-TVB's Chinese
channel in August and
September of 1993. It is a
series of independent stories about different
Shaolin priests who set forth
to right wrongs throughout history. Li Ning
plays one of those heroes, and his episode is close to the
beginning of the
show.
It's worth the watch,
if nothing else just to laugh. There's some obligitory
gymnastics stuff, but not much of interest to gymn'ers, even if it wasn't in
Cantonese. Li Ning loved making it--said he had a great time.
David
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 18:05:05 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Meet Info
Needed
Our club (Bama Bounders) is looking
for a meet in mid-February to take our
Level 8 and 9 optionals to compete in. Because the Buckeye Classic moved
to
early January this year, we have a big hole in
our schedule.
If anyone out there has info on any optional meets,
please E-Mail me at
MikeyHo@aol.com.
Thanks
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 15:56:08 -0800 (PST)
From: ***@netcom.com
Subject:
More GIFs
Another 40+ gymnastic photos have been uploaded to Netcom. European residents and insomniacs will
have the
easiest time getting through to Netcom's
overloaded server. :)
Happy New Year!
Debbie
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 31 Dec 94 12:21:05 GMT
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Neil Thomas
MBE
British gymnast Neil Thomas was awarded an MBE in the Queen's New
Year Honour
List announced on 30th December, to
celebrate his achievement in his Worlds
Floor Silver medal and his
All-Around title in the Commonwealth Games.
Excellent!
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 31 Dec 94 15:44:01 GMT
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Neil Thomas
MBE
Rachele asked what the MBE stands for,
sorry I didn't mention it last time,
it actually
means: "Member for the Order of the British Empire". It's a
title that our Queen awards to people who obtained
achievement during the
course of the year. She
gave this award to quite a number of people, not
only
Sports persons but also normal people who had done something significant
for Britain in the past year. It's quite a prestitious award, especially for
recognition
for "minor" sports such as gymnastics.
Sherwin
PS I
know "British Empire" doesn't exist anymore, it's just an old
title...
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 29 Dec
1994 11:04:16 -0500
From: ***@isscad.com
Subject: New user
Note : I was going to send this message to just to Chris,
but I kind of liked
the content, and thought it might generate a few
responses.
Chris,
Welcome
aboard to the Gymn mailing list. If you're really
interested
in
learning more about gymnastics, then this is a good place to be. There are
some
some really active posters here.
Where about in
North Carolina are you? I'm in Wake
Forest, and joined the
gymn mailing list about 3 months
ago. I have two daughters who are both active in
gymnastics. I am
also in the process of starting up a small gymnastics center.
In regards to
your comment about the serious looks on the girls faces, I
understand what
you are saying, as I have always noted it myself. However I also
know from
experience that the reason for it is the intense concentration that is
required to
succeed in this sport. With few exceptions (ie figure
skating, platform
diving) most other sports are not set up to expose flaws in
an athletes performance
to the same degree as in gymnastics. The girls really are
enjoying themselves even
if they do not show it. Another factor is simply due to the
age of the participants.
At the
top levels most of the female gymnasts are younger then 19, with probably an
average age of
15-16. (top level male gymnast are generally in their
low to mid 20's).
Emotional
maturity speaks volumes.
Aside
from above, (IMHO) if you want to see a female gymnast whose performance
absolutely
lights up an audience, then keep an eye out for Amanda Borden. I had the
opportunity to
see her at the world trials in Richmond, Va. this past October (as well
as several
previous times on TV). She has what they refer to as a `stage presence`.
(This from my wife who
is a dance choreographer).
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Dec 1994 08:09:49 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
Shannon Speculation
I have been told that the attached post has been
perceived as
condescending. I truly regret this as
I made a point of trying not to
"attack"
any one.
I'm somewhat surprised with all the things that have been
said on Gymn
that my
statement was condescending. I
thought that the stuff that
everyone was saying
about Shannon was more condescending than my post.
I am biased in my judgement of the following post, however, obviously,
because I wrote it.
I just wanted to say publicly that if anyone on
Gymn
also felt that the post was condescending, then I am
truly sorry
and apologize.
Rachele
| I think we owe Shannon a lot more
respect than we're giving her.
All
| these questions about when will she
stand up to Steve, why is she
| being pulled
around on a leash, etc... these
criticisms are all made
| on assumptions. Sure, there is a good chance that they
are true
| assumptions, but that's why they are
assumptions, because we don't
| know.
"According to several reports?"
I.e.: "I heard it from someone
| else
(who probably heard it from someone else who probably heard it
| from someone else)." In my mind, the only way in which one
would be
| qualified to make the judgements of Shannon that have been made would
| be to actually speak to her on a direct and personal level (ie press
| conferences and
that three minute chat in the hotel lobby don't
| count).
|
| What's more, I would hope that if you were able to speak to Shannon
on
| a direct level, where one could truly claim
to know what she's all
| about, that you certainly
wouldn't come running to Gymn to blab your
|
"inside secret."
|
| Assumptions at
this point are that (1) she was unhappy to leave
| [fairly
good assumption -- but did she ever say this?] and (2)
Steve
| was the one who made her leave [she
definitely hasn't said this].
| Assuming that #1 is true, there are so many
many other possibilities
| as
to why she did leave that we certainly can't start criticizing her
| (assumed) lack of independence.
|
| Here are just
some sample possibilities (ranging from absurd to possible):
| 1- Maybe she
was injured and didn't want to tell anyone.
| 2- Maybe she really is
tired.
| 3- Maybe her parents wanted her to come home -- maybe they made
that
| decision with Steve.
| 4- Maybe she had a hot date.
|
5- Maybe she wants time to train new tricks so that she wins worlds again.
|
6- Maybe she trusts Steve's judgement as he has
gotten her where she
| is today, and she's investing her future by trusting he
can
| also get her where she wants to be tomorrow.
|
|
Now, I made all of these up, obviously.
I'm just trying to make the
| point that we
don't KNOW about the situation, and so we shouldn't be
| making
posts to hundreds of people about her perceived lack of
| independence. It
just looks foolish to the people who do know Shannon
| and
unfairly builds up an image of her with the people who don't.
|
| Rachele
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Dec 94 03:09:02 CST
From: ***@prairienet.org
Subject: switch
to regular list
I am currently receiving the digest version of Gymn. I would like to
switch
to the regular mailing list.
--
Allen
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 18:33:21 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: World's:
Questions and comments
To Greg et al,
While I know this is
"old news" I've been out of town so here goes ...
>>Is
there a general trend among the Russians and Romanians to "hone"
down
their
beam tumbling down to flip flop-layouts and front tucks? Or were the
examples
shown on TV just isolated examples?
Has the new code caused
three/four skill
series to be trimmed out?<<
Actually more (as in "a greater
number of") skills on beam are well rewarded
by
the code but they don't have to be the most difficult skills in combo with
ea. other. For example a pass of FF
to 3 consecutive LO's is worth the same
(provided
the sets are equal in other respects of course) as a "simpler"
pass
of FF LO FF LO. It's the number of
skills - 4 vs
the traditional 3 -
that
are rewarded more so then the
actual skills that are done in combination.
The front flip on BB is a
*very* popular element and an "easy" C (I'm 99%
sure it's a "C" but I don't have a code at my
fingertips so go ahead and
correct me if I'm
wrong). Since elements may be repeated once and many girls
mount with a front it's a popular "side pass" to
rack up some easy credit.
You also see a lot of very *very* cheesey "mixed series" just so that they
make damn sure that they fufill
that combination. The most popular, and to my
mind
most annoying, is the split or switch to back handspring. Ooohhhhh
the
excitement and daring! <g>
>>During
the men's competition, did the US hit "72 for 72" (comp/opt) or
were
there
major errors?<<
There were errors and some of them were quite
silly (eg. Billy and Scott's
compo
HB falls , Scott's FX flair fiasco in finals, etc.) but
for the most
part the skills they missed are
skills they can't really do anyway (eg. Steve
McCain's
Makuts into all his bonus stuff on PB which even *he*
says he hits
less then 50% of the time).
Overall
this was a better team effort then we've seen from the US guys in a
long *long* while and I was impressed.
Having said
that ... Scott's (and others) whiney comments take away from the
fact that quite frankly they finished exactly where they
should have in the
world order (to my mind
anyhow). The teams above them contain better gymnasts
and
the teams below them have worse gymnasts. On a great day if they all hit
and had a fab draw they could reasonabley
be 8th but that's about it. 9th in
the entire
world is an Olympic qualifying berth and *nothing* to be ashamed
of. Of the many countires in the
FIG most would kill to be 19th let along
9th!
It's simply a shame
that the US guys seem to feel that anything less then a
medal
is failure and feel compelled to make lame excuses and/or outrageous &
sadly bitter comments to compensate for what was really a
decent meet. A
world medal, or even a top 6
finish, is just not a realistic goal at this
point.
So what's the big deal?
>>What is holding Kerri's bars score
down? Is she missing bonus or are
we
missing execution errors due to the camera
angle shown on TV<<
Well Kerri's bars are not as good as they
could be and don't contain the
difficulty that the
Chinese, Russian, and even some of the Romanian girls
have.
The set is passable and contains execution errors here and there (the
Jaggaer could be higher, her legs straighter, toes pointed,
handstands
cleaner, swing less labored,
etc.). It's an overall
"average" set amongst
the top
teams.
I think that if you watch Kerri's bars from
either '93 Nationals (or
that
year's tri-meet in LA, the Mixed Pairs ...
wherever '93 was a good bars year
for Strug) you'll
see that they were *much* better then. Fairly wonderful in
fact. She was, IMHO, one of the best bar workers in the
world at the time
though she was never recognized
for it (piked Jaggear, 1
1/2 pir. clean
swing,
totally crisp open half-in half-out). More difficulty, better swing,
superior amplitude, and just a better rhythm and flow to the
set as a whole
made a world of difference.
>>Khorkina's floor does not remind me of Boginskaya<<
I
would say that Khorkina, unlike Bogie, doesn't dance,
per say. She simply
emotes attitude to music ...
which is something else all together. Khorky's
flair lies in her amazing originality and difficulty ...
while Bogie's lay in
her mature presentation,
impeccable execution, and extraordinary ballet
skills
(which carried over into every event not just floor). Bogie was
"classical" and Khorky is
"outrageous" ... except for the language they
happen
to speak, their first names, and their extra height they have little
in common gymnastically speaking.
-Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 94 16:34:29 PST
From: ***@geoworks.com
Subject: World's:
Questions and comments
> It's simply a shame that the US guys seem
to feel that anything less then a
> medal is
failure and feel compelled to make lame excuses and/or outrageous &
>
sadly bitter comments to compensate for what was
really a decent meet.
I
didn't get the impression (from that interview, stunted as it
was) the US men felt they failed because they didn't get a
medal. In fact
I got the
impression Scott was saying they felt good about how they were
doing and felt they are doing a good job (the comment about
"better than
the women" I didn't understand). I think they are annoyed (and rightly
so)
that *other* people in the US think that not
getting a medal is a failure.
>From the heat they get on gymn I get the impression many people don't have
respect for the team's accomplishments.
> 9th in
the entire world is an Olympic qualifying berth and *nothing* to
> be ashamed of.
I
agree. And yet many on gymn continue to post that the men's team
(or individual members) "suck". Go figure.
Dave
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 17:56:45 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
World's: Questions and comments
Susan noted (re the USA men):
| world medal, or even a top 6 finish, is just not a realistic
goal at this
| point. So what's the big deal?
I
think that the guys feel a lot of pressure to win medals because the
women are doing so well. Whether or not it's stated or
"understood"
(and I think it's stated),
there is a goal in USA Gymnastics (both the
federation
and American gymnasts as a whole) to win medals. I think
there
is a common perception that the men are inferior to the girls
because they don't win as much. Regardless of whether they just
perceive that on their own, or whether that perception has
been drawn
by other people, I think that they see
international success as their
way out of the
shadow.
Also, of course, a lot of things come with winning medals --
bigger
audiences, more TV time (at the Olympics,
we saw only Trent really --
because of course he
won the medal), more coverage in papers and mags,
more respect, more esteem, more recognition, etc etc. I think the men
are
feeling distinctly UNpopular right now and so really
want things
to start swinging in the other
direction -- the sooner, the better.
Rachele
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Date:
Fri, 30 Dec 1994 23:55:36 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: World's:
Questions and comments
>The most popular, and to my
mind most annoying, is the split or switch to back
handspring. Ooohhhhh the
excitement
and daring! <g>
It's better than the ro, split leap (or the ro, tuck
jump for that matter).
<g>
Mara
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End
of gymn Digest
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