GYMN-L Digest - 3 May 1995 to 4 May 1995

There are 19 messages totalling 551 lines in this issue.

Topics of the day:

  1. One arm (2)
  2. One arm giants on unevens.
  3. Chinese Gymnast at Visa Cup: A Discussion. (3)
  4. Koleshnikova (2)
  5. DTB-Pokal RSG individuals (Timoshenko interview)
  6. introduction
  7. One arm moves and their risk factor (2)
  8. Introduction (2)
  9. Kolesnikova
 10. stanford girls coach fired (2)
 11. Negative Coaching
 12. I am not stupid :)

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Date:    Wed, 3 May 1995 23:55:43 -0400
From:    ***@AOL.COM
Subject: One arm

Hi everyone
 One arm giants are now worth "A" value but 2 in a row are  a "B"
 A gienger is a "C" and a 1 arm gienger is a "C"
  If you do a  1 arm giant  - 1 arm gienger  that is a  "D" .   The value
raise only comes because there is a full 1 arm giant before the one arm
release.  It must be imediate 1 arm 1arm release without any tap of the one
hand on the bar.  I only know this because I performed the skill.

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 00:32:08 -0400
From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject: Re: One arm giants on unevens.

> You know, the FIG could just do what they did with men's vault:
> Make no differences between one arm and two arm skills. That should
> discourage the 9 yr olds of the world from learning 1 arm Tkatchevs to
> immediate one arm deltchevs.

I don't think the discussion was about how they might discourage these
skills (what you're suggesting is actually exactly what the judges at the
meet did), but about whether they should be discouraged or not.

:)
Adriana

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 01:05:33 -0400
From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject: Re: Chinese Gymnast at Visa Cup: A Discussion.


> > Subject:      Re: Chinese Gymnast at Visa Cup: A Discussion.
> > I don't believe any of that tommyrot. But understand the following:
> >
> > 1. The determination of whether a move should be banned is made by the
> > technical committee of the FIG, not a camorra of judges at the meet where it
> > is introduced.
> >
> > 2. The determination of what constitutes an overly dangerous move, and
> > therefore subject to a penalty, is ALSO made, conincidentally, by that
> > selfsame technical committee.
> >
> > 3. No determination has been made (except by some of my fellow outspoken
> > gymners) that one-armed moves on bars is overly dangerous.
> >
> > 4. Therefore any new move involving virtuosity, originality, and risk should
> > be judged on those criteria ONLY until such time as the FIG technical
> > committee determines in either regular or extraordinary session that they
 are
> > in fact too dangerous.
> >
> > 5. We are all aware of the above.
> >
> > 6. None of this changes any of my previous arguments.
> >
> > 7. QED, Meng and her fellows got screwed.
> >
> > 8. IMHO, this is because the USAG was running the meet, and they had no
> > intention of allowing their charges to be upstaged on national TV by the
> > Chinese second string, many of whom are every bit the equal to America's
> > finest.
> I agree with most of this.  However, if the technical committee has not
> yet been asked to evaluate a new move, it cannot make a determination
> of level of danger or of scoring value.  Your argument would hold if
> every new move were required to be submitted to the technical committee
> for review and subsequently reviewed *before* being used in a meet.
> Judges would the have the scoring values on "approved" moves, and
> "unapproved" moves would be banned.  Somehow, I don't think this is
> what you meant.
>
> Your point number 8 may well be valid.  The Chinese gymnasts at VISA
> were great.  And yes, they got ripped.  But did they submit these
> moves for review?  If not, your #1 and #2 don't fly.

Skills don't get submitted to the FIG until a gymnast is going to perform
them at Worlds or Olympics.  At other meets, they just go to the meet
technical director and judges, who make their own provisional
determination.  The Chinese gymnasts did indeed submit the skills to
them (they have to if the skills are to have any value when they perform
them in the meet, and also, it was by submitting them that there was the
controversy of the ratings assigned).  If I understand David, he's saying
the judges at these meets should do provisional ratings based strictly
on the actual difficulty of the skill, rather than on policy considerations
that belong only at the FIG level.  There is no regular procedure that I
know of for getting FIG approval and ratings outside of Worlds or
Olympics.  I don't know if it would be possible to ask for ratings from
the FIG in some sort of extraordinary session.  One wrinkle:  was Jackie
Fie at this meet?  If she was involved with the rating of the skills,
whatever she said is likely to be what the FIG would ultimately determine
anyway.  This makes the argument that the judges exceeded their authority
a little less persuasive (as a practical matter; not necessarily in
principle).

:)
Adriana

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 18:31:39 EST-11
From:    ***@DISINFORMATION.BF.RMIT.EDU.AU
Subject: Koleshnikova

Re one arm moves ---
I was flicking through a 1986 issue of International Gymnast, the one
with the Goodwill Games in it (October or November), and there was a
picture of Vera Koleshnikova, the AA champion of the 86 Goodwill
Games, catching the bar with one hand.  It looked like she just
completed a one arm Tkatchev.

Anyone know if she actually competed this move?  Vera competed in the
Australia Games in early 1985 but I don't think I have her AB routine
on tape.

------------------------------

Date:    Wed, 3 May 1995 18:11:56 +0100
From:    ***@VNET.ATEA.BE
Subject: DTB-Pokal RSG individuals (Timoshenko interview)

Hello GYMNers,
I am staying in Vienna this week (work, no pleasure). One of the
TV-channels at the hotel is the German sports channel DSF (Deutsches
Sport Fernsehn), so I was able to watch the two-hour coverage they
gave about the DTB-Pokal RSG in Karlsruhe (Germany).
A report and the results were already posted to the list. Therefor I
won't repeat them here. I'm sure some of you are still interested in
what Timoshenko had to say in her interview, so I took some notes.
The interview went something like this (originaly in German):

(Q) What do you think about your successors ?
(A) I do quite like them.
(Q) Today we saw some new styles in the routines. These new styles,
    are they the future of RSG ?
(A) Yes. Every gymnast has her own style. I find it interesting to see
    those different styles.
(Q) You are now coaching the German RSG gymnasts. Will they be able to
    reach a high level ?
(A) They sure will, but it will probably still take some time before
    they are able to beat, say, the Bulgarians or the Russians.
(Q) And you are putting your time into it.
(A) That's right.

On Sun, 30 Apr 1995 (21:16:39 BST) Sherwin Ho <s.s.ho@IC.AC.UK> wrote:
>  ...  Alexandra
>  Timoshenko was there again for an interview, she speaks very good
>  German (or at least it sounded like very good German!)

BTW, it didn't only sound like good German, it was good German.

CU on GYMN,
Erik.

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 07:24:39 -0400
From:    ***@AMANDA.DORSAI.ORG
Subject: Re: One arm

Sorry, two one arm giants (backward, in overgrip) are two A parts.

Ken

>Hi everyone
> One arm giants are now worth "A" value but 2 in a row are  a "B"
> A gienger is a "C" and a 1 arm gienger is a "C"
>  If you do a  1 arm giant  - 1 arm gienger  that is a  "D" .   The value
>raise only comes because there is a full 1 arm giant before the one arm
>release.  It must be imediate 1 arm 1arm release without any tap of the one
>hand on the bar.  I only know this because I performed the skill.
>
>

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 05:42:21 -0600
From:    ***@RMII.COM
Subject: Re: Chinese Gymnast at Visa Cup: A Discussion.

Adriana asked:
| the FIG in some sort of extraordinary session.  One wrinkle:  was Jackie
| Fie at this meet?  If she was involved with the rating of the skills,

I am about 90% sure that she was at the meet, officially as a
representative of the FIG.  (I'm not completely sure since I've been
to a number of meets lately, so I might have that memory mixed up from
another meet.)  The Technical Director of the meet was Audrey Schweyer
(USA).  I don't know which of the following judges might have been on
the technical committee, but other judges at the meet were: Esbela
Miyake, Marilyn Cross, Wen Guoyn, Nellie Kim, Helena Lario, Chery
Hamilton, Weij Jing, Antonina Koshel.

Rachele

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 09:00:27 -0400
From:    ***@FREENET.SCRI.FSU.EDU
Subject: introduction

Hi, I just joined the list.  I'm Angela, and I'm twenty years
old.  I'll be starting college in the fall.  I've been interested in
gymnastics since the 88 olympics.  My favorite gymnasts are KIM ZMESKAL,
Dominique Dawes, Jenny Thompson, Dominique Moceanu, Lylia Podkopayeva,
Lavinia Milosovich, Dina Kotcheckova, Ana Maria Bican, Tatiana Gutsu, and
I guess that's about it.  I'm mostly interested in elite women's gymnastics.

A member of the race that knows Joseph
Angela

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 09:16:11 -0400
From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject: Re: Koleshnikova

> Re one arm moves ---
> I was flicking through a 1986 issue of International Gymnast, the one
> with the Goodwill Games in it (October or November), and there was a
> picture of Vera Koleshnikova, the AA champion of the 86 Goodwill
> Games, catching the bar with one hand.  It looked like she just
> completed a one arm Tkatchev.
>
> Anyone know if she actually competed this move?  Vera competed in the
> Australia Games in early 1985 but I don't think I have her AB routine
> on tape.

Not to my knowledge, and certainly not at Goodwills, or at least I think
they'd have pointed it out in the coverage.  Are you sure that picture
doesn't show her just regrasping in a cross grip? (my IG's are at home)

1-arm regrasps by mistake have been known to occur.  One I remember
hearing about was Tony Pineda (MEX/UCLA) catching his "Pineda" (Gaylord
II with 1/2 twist) with one arm at the Emerald Cup in Oregon.  The only
intentional one-arm regrasp I've seen is Csaba "One-Arm Czar" Fajkusz's
(1-arm Gienger with 1-arm regrasp), although I would guess it's been
tried by others.

A teammate of mine once let go of the bar with one arm while she was
swinging for a straddle back -- to pull down a wedgie.

:)
Adriana

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 09:04:42 -0500
From:    ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject: One arm moves and their risk factor

Date sent:  4-MAY-1995 08:58:21
Okie, after watching this topic spam my mailbox for the past
five days, I felt compelled to post something, too. (this topic
is taking on the proportions of the "What's in the briefcase
Pulp Fiction argument on bbs's):

This is a simple statement, and I sincerely hope I do not get anyone
mad or angry at me. Gymnastics is an inherently dangerous sport.
After watching people question the "danger value" of this move for
the past week, I think people have forgotten that so-called 'Simple'
moves can cause injuires to.

Examples? Kerri Strug lost her grip during a COMPULSORY bar routine last
August and badly sprained her back. Julissa Ann Gomex broke her neck
and died on what now is considered a commonplace move in women's gym-
nastics, a Yourchenko vault. And...a Puerto Rican gymnast broke her neck
at the 1989 Worlds doing a hanspring front vault, after she simply missed
her hands on the horse.

I'm sorry, but accidents will happen in this sport, no matter how safe
we are. If this move is correctly spotted, I do not see why it would
be any more or less dangerous than the men doing the same move.

Jennifer

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 09:16:55 CDT
From:    ***@UNANOV.UNA.EDU
Subject: Introduction

Hi -

My name is Charlotte and I'm the mother of a gymnast.  My
daughter is 11 yrs.old and competes as a level 5 gymnast in the
state of Alabama.  We belong to a gym called Shoals School of
Gymnastics in Florence, AL.  Our group has traveled to several
competitions out of state in the last two years and plan to
continue to do so.

Our family enjoys gymnastics very much (you have to enjoy it if
you have a competitor in the family - it takes up all your time).


Looking forward to the discussions presented on this list.

Charlotte

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 10:44:18 -0400
From:    ***@PHARM.MED.UPENN.EDU
Subject: Re: Chinese Gymnast at Visa Cup: A Discussion.

>Adriana asked:
>| the FIG in some sort of extraordinary session.  One wrinkle:  was Jackie
>| Fie at this meet?  If she was involved with the rating of the skills,
>
>I am about 90% sure that she was at the meet, officially as a
>representative of the FIG.  (I'm not completely sure since I've been
>to a number of meets lately, so I might have that memory mixed up from
>another meet.)  The Technical Director of the meet was Audrey Schweyer
>(USA).  I don't know which of the following judges might have been on
>the technical committee, but other judges at the meet were: Esbela
>Miyake, Marilyn Cross, Wen Guoyn, Nellie Kim, Helena Lario, Chery
>Hamilton, Weij Jing, Antonina Koshel.
>
>Rachele


Jackie Fie was at the meet - that is a 100% for sure.

Mayland

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 11:31:20 -0400
From:    ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject: Kolesnikova

     I think Adriana is right about Vera's Tkachev. She caught the bar with her
hands crossed, and if someone took a picture at the right moment, it could look
like she was catching it 1-handed. But I'm nearly 100% sure she never did a
1-arm Tkachev.

Beth

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 09:36:31 -0700
From:    ***@LELAND.STANFORD.EDU
Subject: Re: stanford girls coach fired

Texx posted:
>
> I dont know if anyone has posted this yet, but Stanford Univ this week fired
> their girls gymn coach, their mens wrestling coach and i forgot who the 3rd
 one
> was they canned.
>
> -texx
>

I just called the Stanford Sports Information Department, and they
confirmed that the women's (they are women, texx) gymnastics coach
has been "relieved of his duties" and that the wrestling coach had
originally been slated for dismissal but was "granted a reprieve."

This was after there had been rumors floating around earlier this week
that four coaches were going to be fired.  I don't know who the other
two coaches might be (not that it would matter to anyone else on this
list), but I can confirm that Breck Greenwood is no longer the Stanford
head coach.

-Patrick

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 15:49:45 -0500
From:    ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject: Re: One arm moves and their risk factor

Jennifer,

>This is a simple statement, and I sincerely hope I do not get anyone
>mad or angry at me.

I doubt that anyone here will get mad at you for stating the obvious.
Gymnastics _is_ dangerous.  The same is true for most sports.

I agree with all those who have said that the Chinese gymnasts got robbed.
It should not be the policy of judges at comparatively minor meets to try
to encourage or discourage particular tricks.  But...

>I'm sorry, but accidents will happen in this sport, no matter how safe
>we are. If this move is correctly spotted, I do not see why it would
>be any more or less dangerous than the men doing the same move.

The reason it is more dangerous is that uneven bars are thicker than the
high bar, and therefore more difficult to grip.  The chances for peeling
off are much higher.

On the other hand, if I have to fall in such a way that I crash into the
rail, I'd much rather be on UB than HB.

As for me, I do support the FIG devaluing moves that are too dangerous, but
I don't think one-armed UB work falls into that category.

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 17:41:00 CDT
From:    ***@AIS.NET
Subject: Introduction

Hello, my name is Joe, and I have just started subscribing to this
digest.  I am a high-school gymnast that loves the sport!!!  I would like to
introduce myself and thank everyone who made this digest!!  Before I go, I
would like to add that my favorite vault is a Tsukahara.  Oh yeah, my coach
is Coach Esposito and he is awesome!!!  He coached Chris Waller in
high-school!

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 18:43:16 -0400
From:    ***@ORL.MMC.COM
Subject: Negative Coaching

|------------------------------------------------------------------------------|

Last night after I picked my daughter (Level 6 - Rec Opt, age 12) up from the
gym, she said that she was upset with one of her coaches. I wasn't too concerned
at first, since she has come home annoyed at some of her other coaches before
for "normal" reasons ("She told me I need to do FIVE more ..."), but after she
explained the reason I became a little concerned.

It seems that she had been doing giants on the pit bar, and her coach wanted
her to do them on the regular bars. Mandy told him that she didn't feel
ready, but he told her that if she did, she would be ahead of the rest of her
group. When she finally (hesitantly) went to the bar, he told her that she had
five seconds to get started, and looked at his watch. When she didn't start
in time he told her to get off of the bars.

Now comes the part that really bothers me. After she got off of the bars, he
got angry with her for "not trying" and told her "If you're not going to try,
quit wasting my time and the gym's time and just go home and play with your
dolls."

This same coach had done something very similar at an easter meet that we
had attended. After the meet (before awards) he called the whole team together
and proceeded to chew them out for lack of effort, and used the same
"If you're not going to put out the effort, quit wasting my time and the
gym's time". This was an invitational (read FUN) meet, and our team (Rec Opt
 ages 8 and up) ended up winning the first place team trophy by around 8 points!

Before I sit down and talk with this coach, I wanted to bounce this off this
list to see if I might be over-reacting, or if anyone else has come across
this. (after the recently posted article about the paralized gymnast, I am
probably a little over-sensitive about pushing a gymnast in tricks she's not
comfortable with.

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 16:59:55 -0700
From:    ***@NETCOM.COM
Subject: Re: stanford girls coach fired

>
> Texx posted:
> >
> > I dont know if anyone has posted this yet, but Stanford Univ this week fired
> > their girls gymn coach, their mens wrestling coach and i forgot who the 3rd
>  one
> > was they canned.
> >
> > -texx
> >
>
> I just called the Stanford Sports Information Department, and they
> confirmed that the women's (they are women, texx) gymnastics coach

My nomenclature is in accordance with my objections to the way the sport
is handled.
Refer to previous fights aboutpermissible minimun ages for major competitions.

Nice to see you delurking Pat !
Havent seen you since that one meet !

-texx

------------------------------

Date:    Thu, 4 May 1995 20:15:19 -0500
From:    ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject: I am not stupid :)

Date sent:  4-MAY-1995 20:10:42
Okie, in the past 24 hours I have gotten at least 10 e-mails from
people telling me that the Puerto Rican gymnast I pointed out in my
argument was, in fact, our resident expert, Adriana Duffy.

I am not stupid. :) I knew it was Adriana to begin with. I know more
facts about gymnastics than I could possibly have a use for. Among them,
the fact that Adriana was 16th at the Pan American games in 1987, and was a
member of the Stanford women's gymnastics team before her accident. I left
out her name because I wasn't sure if everyone knew, and if she did or
did not want everyone to know.

I have since been emailed by her (thanks, Adriana, you really are a
sweetheart) and been assured she did not mind the example, so...

I just wanted to point out I am not a dummy :) Beginning to feel like
one, though.

Jennifer

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End of GYMN-L Digest - 3 May 1995 to 4 May 1995
***********************************************