gymn
Digest
Fri, 2 Sep 94 Volume 3 :
Issue 12
Today's
Topics:
'91 FX
'91 FX once and for all! (2 msgs)
Dynamo (2 msgs)
IMHO...etc.
Mosaic-old inquiry
NCAA Gymnastics may have Olympic Repercussions..
NCAA Program Cuts (this time it's women)
Responses to recent traffic
Tattoo?
This forum (3 msgs)
This is a digest
of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 1994 18:53:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject:
'91 FX
I'm tuning into this discussion a little late - I chose to go to bed
early
instead of writing my opinion. But then
today, I logged on and found out that a
lot of
people share my opinion! I have always believed Mitova
deserved the
floor gold in '91. I think she may
have had some low landings on some of her
tumbling
runs, but something tells me that if she had been wearing a US, USSR
or Romanian leo, no deductions
would have been taken. In any case, her tumbling
was
awesome, and she was the only gymnast to combine great tumbling with truly
original and artistic dance, not just silly
prancing around. She was in a class
by herself,
and as someone said, her 6th place finish was a "slap in the
face."
I truly hope she can recover successfully from her injury and
win a floor gold.
But I'm afraid she'll end up in the same situation as Chusovitina and Yang Bo -
best
in the world on vault and beam, respectively, but never a gold medal to
show for it...
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 02 Sep 1994 14:47:22 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@imap1.asu.edu
Subject:
'91 FX once and for all!
Re: this whole 91 FX thing, Mara writes:
>I
wasn't wildly impressed with Bogey's 91 FX routine...She seemed to
>just be posing between tumbling runs...I liked her 89 &
92 routines better.
Her routine, IMHO, was still gorgeous even if it
perhaps wasn't as
classic as her '89 winning
routine. Maybe it would have been
had
Boginskaya not been robbed of her second AA
title...But regarding
"posing", I don't
feel this was the case at all. Boginskaya simply has
her own
style of artistic impression...
>From Brian we hear:
>"I
thought Zmeskal had great dance, but mediocre
tumbling."
Yes,
her tumbling was quite mediocre, but GREAT DANCE????! Let's
just
say her tumbling was the strong point, shall we? (Insert retching
sounds here)
>"I thought Chussy deserved the title mainly for her
tumbling"
Chussy's tumbling should have
given her a medal considering the company
she was
in re: total artistry + tumbling, but, please, MITOVA had equally
spectacular tumbling but also showed the *complete* floor
routine with
dance (spell that D-A-N-C-E) that
all three medalists lacked...
Gurova
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 02 Sep 94 18:13:50 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: '91 FX once and
for all!
>I wasn't wildly impressed with Bogey's 91 FX
routine...She seemed to
just
be posing between tumbling
run<
To quote, I belive, Toursicheva's comments (though she was discussing
Oksana
O. at the time) "She already
re-invented the sport once ... how many times
does
she have to do it?" Like Svetlana or not she had dance ... real dance.
Maybe
not what *you* like (and everyone is certainly entitled to their own
opinions and preferances) but the
person that touted Zmeskal's dance over her
tumbling (I liked neither) needs a few trips to the ballet
(not that that's
the only type of dance mind you).
I mean most square dancers have more
natural
grace, elgance, and a better musical sense then did Kimbo. Just
because you can
clap along to the music does not make
it pleasing or good in
any way shape or
form. Kim's floor was geared to be cute (I didn't find it so
but that's just me). Nothing more. If you like cute great
but it's not a
"dance" program.
As
for Mitova ... her tumbling was amazing, her
choreography beyond original,
and the flag on her leo all wrong for a medal (7th place in '91 and in '92
Euros
she finished 4th behind Melaine Legros
- empthsis in the "gross" - it
couldn't possible have anything to do with the meet being in
France could it?
I thought not). In the '92 Europeans she tumbled whip to
double layout punch
front, double twist punch
front into double tuck punch front ending with a
whip
double tuck punch front with all the grace and elgance
in her dance that
she was known for (well to those
in the know anyway). She broke her neck
trying
double double's though I doubt that would have done any good. The
judges had already decided to ignore her.
Back to the original Bontas vs Chussy discussion. Chussy had no dance but she
pointed
her toes and flipped around with perfect form while Christina had
negative dance and form breaks on every single element
(right down to those
hideous flip flops).
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 94 13:02:16 PDT
From: ***@sol.metaware.com
Subject:
Dynamo
> >Nunno v. Shannon's mother,
even Zmeskal's attempt to return...
>
>
> Can someone tell me what Nunno v.
Shannon's mother exactly refer to?
and,
what's going on with Zmeskal's attempt to
return? (haven't
heard
anything lately on this....)
--Robin
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 1994 15:51:38 -0500
From: ***@cornell.edu
Subject:
Dynamo
>Beth's post among others on the same topic of
"possessed" coaching leaves me
>with
a sickening feeling. I don't want
to wonder afterwards when I see
>gymnasts going
through routines whether they are being mistreated
>psychologically. *It is just not worth it*. Strug's going
from coach to
>coach,
>Nunno v. Shannon's mother, even Zmeskal's
attempt to return...
>
Can someone tell me what Nunno
v. Shannon's mother exactly refer to?
Thanks,
Steve
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 02 Sep 94 13:34:54 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: IMHO...etc.
I've
heard IMHO meand in my honest opinion, and in my
humble opinion. Which
one is correct?
Thanx,
Jessica :)
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 1994 20:06:21 -0400
From: ***@wam.umd.edu
Subject:
Mosaic-old inquiry
I hate to do this but I need some info....on July 21 someone posted the
following
about using Mosaic with a Unix dialup access:
One solution to
this, if you have dialup unix access, is to use Lynx,which
is
a vt100 text equivilant of Mosaic or Cello. It dosn't do
images
(obviously), but handles all the hypertext
features fine. You can also
have it download the images so you can look at them. I use lynx whenever
I'm on a dumb
term, and Mosaic every time I'm in Windows or XWindows,
and
I get along fine. Lynx runs
pretty quickly - a lot of the slowness of
Mosaic is that it automatically
grabs all the images, and while they are
pretty,
you can get by by just getting images on demand
(there is a toggle
in Mosaic to do this
also).
I don't have the persons
name or e-mail adrres who wrote that reply
to a mosaic question. Could that person please contact me privatly
on e-mail....or if
anyone else has any info to pass on about the
specifics
of this info I'd appreciate it!
Thanks!
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 1994 17:50:16 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@gateway.us.sidwell.edu
Subject:
NCAA Gymnastics may have Olympic Repercussions..
Was
reading my AP wire, picked up an article about Men's Gymastics. A few
small
quotes shold fit in "reasonable" use, so
here goes..
"It would have a negative impact [in reference to
NCAA championship
removal] on the future of men's
gymnastics when no college programs exist
for them
to advance their skills for International competition," said
Richard
Aronson, executive director of the National Association of College
Gymastics Coaches (copyright, Associated Press 1994).
.. References to
the "40" rule for NCAA sports, and thje
fact that men's
is at 31... Scott Keswick is quoted as saying
"For years and years, [the
championship's]
been the base of our national team, and [college] is the
hope
and inspiration of kids... If there's no scholarships,
you're taking
away a dream".
The genreal
gyst of the article is that it's all going downhill,
the basic
problem being Money. The article stats that USA Gymnastics is
funding a
lobby to keep it allive
for 2 more years in NCAA to try and get it back
above
40 sites, and to increase support for the sport. The title of the
article
was something to the effect that the lack of support at upper
levels for Men's gymnastics in the US would lead to termendous loss of
high level
gymnasts, and there would not be enough to fuel an Olympic
team, etc. I
think they may be right, unfortunately.
I think, however,
that the trend can be reveresed. And
I think some of the reversal needs
to come with
the assistance of the press, of which David is in a great
position to help the cause. I'd like to see, if possible, a speical "info
snippet"
in one of the next meets about the loss of support of the sport
for men, and what kinds of things people can do to
help. Make it a cause
or such..
In other news, the manager of some
baseball team was suspended and fined
for
"mooning" the umpire of the game (AP article). Mike Goff pulled the
top of his pantsx down on home
plate while protesting a fair-ball call on
a hit..
;). It was shown on ESPN nationally
;). I have
yet to see that
happen in Gymnastics ;).
Robert
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 02 Sep 94 15:04:46
EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: NCAA Program Cuts (this time it's
women)
This is from a story on Reuter's (all direct quotes from the
article noted)
and seemed applicable to the NCAA
program cutting discussion.
9 women have sued the University of
Bridgeport (Conn.) for sex discrimination
after
the gymnastics program was canceled. They're seeking to either
reinstate their program or cancel all other school
sports.
The lawsuit
contends that "the decision to end the programme
violated the
plaintiffs' rights to equal athletic
participation."
Men's
volleyball was dropped along with women's gym for finacial
reasons. The
nine women are on scholarship (for
gymnastics) and choose Bridgeport so that
they
could compete. Now it's too late for them to go to another school and
they claim that they were mislead. The scholarships will be honored but
the
girl's say that's not the point.
"'Gymnastics is my life, but now I
can't compete' Kelli Mugglin, 18, told
the Hartford Courant newspaper."
It's the same
old story with men getting the majority of funding (athletic)
even though half the students are women (in this case
54%).
"Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a national law firm with
a reputation for
helping reinstate women's
collegiate teams, is guiding the lawsuit, the
Courant said."
[end of article ... the following comments are mine]
This
contrasts with all the recent hype over the cutting of men's programs
nationwide. In fact what the girls are claiming is exactly
what the disputed
prop. that
sounded the death knell for many men's programs hoped to rectify;
the $ equality between men and women. Women's
"small" sports have been cut
for
"financial reasons" for years and little fuss has been made. The
men's
depletion (far more widespread and far
faster) has been a major issue (it's
all the
reporters wanted to talk to the guys about at Nationals). I'm not
really sure if that's sexist or not (I don't really buy into
all that kind of
excuses junk) but it seems
true.
On a totally different note, I've noticed for years that while
gymnastics is
a sport of little girls most of it's
successful and well respected (not to
mention well
hyped) coaches are old men. When you do see a women's coach she
tends to be physically fit - unlike most of the male coaches - and
attractive.
Kind of glamourous ... unlike the frumpy sweats the
guys get away
with. It all could be a coincidence
I guess. I've talked to Rita Brown about
this and
see doesn't really think it's an issue even though she was the "gym
person" so to speak and Kevin (when they were together
that is) got all the
glory as a coach. She also owns the largest gymnastics
business in the
nation and no-one (or few people) at
home know what she looks like. You can
hardly say
the same for Bela or Steve. Oh well maybe I'm just
rambling as
usual.
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 02 Sep 1994 14:01:55 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@OCVAXA.CC.OBERLIN.EDU
Subject:
Responses to recent traffic
Just a few quick comments:
Gimnasta: wasn't Bogie's air guitar '89 and not '88? The
'88 routine
(by the way, she performed it the best
at '89 Europeans where her FINAL pass
was a tucked
full-in) was a masterpiece, and I think it was hard without her
longtime coach to create one just as masterful.
As far as
televised sports, I wouldn't harsh on tennis too much. It
translates well to television, just like women's gymnastics
does. Men's pommel
horse and p-bars usually does
not for those of us outside of our circle of
fanatics.
Believe me, I LOVE watching those events, but that's in large part
due to the fact that I know most of the stuff they're doing.
Crane shots of
pommel horse just emphasize the desparation of television producers to force it
to be more MTV-ish (Just look at
the ABC coverage of the Hilton Tri-Meet a
couple
of weeks ago - but we've already determined that ABC's gymn
coverage is
really poor at the moment.)
I refuse to
defend televised golf except for the fact that a missed put
is easier to see than poor Yurchenko
form (except in the case of Silivas....),
more people who are camped out in front of their TV sets can
play golf than
have ever thought about doing
gymnastics, and the Ryder Cup coverage this year
was
one of the most dramatic team events I have ever seen outside of
gymnastics
and non-pro sports.
Chussy has her weak points, Henni
had her weak points (Hello, what
leap?) but both hav contributed their own
style to their gymnastics. Kerri, on
the other
hand, doesn't really have any weak events. I would blame her
underachievements (if one can
really call being the youngest ever senior U.S.
champion
and World and Olympic medalist underachieving....) on some of the
coaching from Nunno and Karolyi. I believe that she could've medaled in the AA
in the Olympics if Bela had put
her differently in the order, and not had
stupid
choreography on floor. And Nunno brought out some
different aspects in
her gymnastics but didn't
back it up with confidence in herself, and yes, a
certain
comfort level that she needed.
I
cannot wait to see her back in action with the more personalized
coaching that she was used to and the influence of those
great coaches.Sounds
like
Larissa can improve in that situation as well. What happened to Leonard
Issacs, anyway?
One more question
- for traffic purposes, I would've thought that one
long
post one or two times a week would be more coherent, easier, and less
"noisy" than two or three a day, every time I have a
response to something. Can
one of the board people
tell us which is preferred? Others seem to get
overwhelmed
with 20 10-line posts every day. Thanks.
Cara
Apologies
for the longer-than-I-had-planned post
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 94 10:16:42 PDT
From: ***@geoworks.com
Subject:
Tattoo?
Texx writes:
> Hair must be
worn just so, wrong tshirt worn upon arrival at the
meet,
> never mind that you changed befoer the meet started, if they remember
> seeing you in the parking lot in the shirt they dont like, you are
> LUNCHMEAT !
I
believe you are exaggerating a bit here Texx. There were (are?)
some
requlations with regard to unkempt facial hair, but
it was at the
level of the judge who could take of
one or two tenths for unkempt
appearance (or so my
coach informed us). I have no idea
where you got the
idea that the clothes you came
to the meet in were scrutinized, it never
mattered
in any of the meets I went to (at the time heavy metal t-shirts
were worn by most of my peers at the time). Our coach wouldn't have let us
wear anything excessive, but that was purely for the image
of our gym, not
set by anyone running a
competition (other gyms were much less concerned
about
these things).
Dave
Litwin
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 1994 13:22:48 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@tiger.hsc.edu
Subject:
This forum
Hi, again everyone!
I recently spoke with some
individuals at the University of Chicago
conerning the possiblity of
developing an internet gymnastics forum.
Unlike Gymn
as it is now, my friends were also interested in a forum where
coaches could discuss techniques (new and old) and the
current _technical_
aspects of the sport. They were hoping to establish a network
through
which coaches, gymnasts, judges, and
spectators could develop closer ties and
build
support groups.
Does anyone here have any comments? I would certainly appreciate any
anyone
could give.
Thanks,
Julius
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 02 Sep 94 14:55:01 -0400
From: ***@a1.csoc.umc.dupont.com
Subject:
This forum
[This message is converted from WPS-PLUS to ASCII]
Julius wrote:
I recently spoke with some
individuals at the University of Chicago
conerning the possiblity of
developing an internet gymnastics forum.
Unlike Gymn
as it is now, my friends were also interested in a forum
where
coaches could discuss techniques (new and old) and the current
_technical_
aspects of the sport. They were
hoping to establish a
network through which coaches, gymnasts, judges, and
spectators could
develop closer ties and build support groups.
Does anyone here have any
comments? I would certainly appreciate
any
anyone
could give.
When I first
read this I thought "Hey, what a great idea". But the
more I thought
about it, the more I think that Gymn is the perfect
forum
for this already. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but
nothing says that
we can't discuss technical
topics here on Gymn. From my point of view,
since I receive this forum through my email, it wouldn't
matter to me if
messages came to me from one list
or two, I would still read the same
messages.
The
only drawback that I could see to this would be that some people on
Gymn might not be interested in technical talk about
coaching or judging,
and might find the
additional traffic unbearable. So,
I would add to
Julius' question my own request for input on the pros and
cons of technical
and hopefully marketing
discussions here in this forum.
Does it belong
here
or somewhere else?
-Jim
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 2 Sep 94 13:32:53 PDT
From: ***@geoworks.com
Subject: This
forum
> The only drawback that I could see to this would be that
some people on
> Gymn might not be interested
in technical talk about coaching or judging,
> and
might find the additional traffic unbearable.
I would love to
have more technical talk on gymn (there is
precious
little right now), and as for traffic it
seems most of it comes from
personal disagreements
that really don't need to be CC'd to gymn, and can
be resolved (or
not) between the two interested parties.
For instance "I
think Bela sucks", "I think he's OK" shouldn't
have to generate more than
two pieces of mail
before continuing without being posted for everyone in
gymn to read.
Merely my oppinion
(with no flames intended),
Dave
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************