GYMN-L Digest - 6 Mar 1995 to 7 Mar 1995 - Special issue
There
are 16 messages totalling 1037 lines in this
issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. Tarasevich
2. American Cup - Men's Finals
3. American Cup, women's press
conference
4. your mail
5. American Cup stuff (2)
6. American Cup - Men's Press Conference
7. NCAA Men's Rankings
8. moving to
USA!!!
9. misc ramblings...
10. Korbut
11. Congrats to Unv. Alabama
12. scAM
Cup
13. '95 French
Nationals
14. AC thoughts
15. Temple v. PSU v. Syracuse
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Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 01:04:42
-0500
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
Tarasevich
Brian mentioned that
Svetlana did not throw her double-front off beam.
I
have two guesses as to why. During training, I
NEVER saw her hit it. She looked
so frustrated and
sad; I felt really bad for her. During one training session I
watched as she tried it about 10 times in a row and fell every
time. Then her
coach along and started yelling at
her (she looked utterly expressionless). He
sat
down to watch, and she still kept missing it. So it could be that she
decided beforehand not to try it in the competition. When we
(NBC research)
interviewed her, she seemed a bit
frustrated and said "nothing is working right
for
me here." Could be she was affected by jet-lag.
That's what Irina Bulakhova
attributed
her poor performance to, and Sharipov added that it's
very hard to
travel such a long way just to be
here for a week. He said that once they've
adjusted
to the time change, it's time to go back to Ukraine. But back to
Tarasevich, the other reason I'm thinking she might not
thrown the double front
is, why bother after 2
falls? She obviously knew she'd been missing it in
could
land. I felt bad for them because I, too would have liked to hav seen
them
in finals, but both of them had a very rough time hitting things at every
practice. I was happy for Irina that she and Rustam finished 2nd in Mixed Pairs
(and
would have finished first if she hadn't fallen from bars). Hopefully
Svetlana
will have a better time at US-Belarus-China. :)
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 23:05:45
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
American Cup - Men's Finals
1995 McDonald's American Cup
Seattle
Center Arena, Seattle, WA
March 4, 1995 - Finals
Men's
competition
Well, many people said the women's meet was overscored, but let me
tell
you, the men's judging was just as inflated. Many gifts were
given,
but when it comes down to it, if everyone is getting gifts (and
everyone was), and the gymnasts were still ranked correctly
(which
they were, for the most part), the scoring
complaint begins to get
old. On to the gymnastics... but first my
standard disclaimer that I
cannot make notes on
men's gymnastics as easily as women's, so bear
with
me if my report is somewhat limited.
(IF a certain couple of
Gymn judges I met
recently might sit down with me at a meet sometime
and
explain the routines -- ahem -- then perhaps I'll improve in my
men's reporting skills.
grin)
1. John Roethlisberger
John
had a really good competition, and won the competition hands
down. He easily
completes a double double mount on floor. His
pommels
were clean. On rings, he threw
another double double
(dismount). For vault, he threw a clean Kasamatsu (according to the
announcer
-- I still can't distinguish a Kas vs a Tsuk) in the layout
position. It was
hard to judge height from my position, but I thought
it
was pretty. Parallel bars again
went well for John, including two
Stutz's (I think they were Stutz's) to
one bar, and an Arabian double
back dismount. Well, I'm not sure it should be called
an Arabian
double back, but it was initiated from
a front giant and consisted of
an immediate 1/2
twist into a double back dismount.
His high bar, as George has pointed
out, was real eye-catching, and
included that
release sequence that is a bit uncertain -- I still
think
it was a 1-arm Jaeger (even watched the tape of his routine from
Worlds to
double check, and Mayland and I both agree it's a
Jaeger).
At any rate, his routine was very different from everyone else's,
if
perhaps a bit easier too -- his dismount is a
1.5 twisting double
front over the high bar which
looks spectacular, but given the fact
that he can
complete a double double on floor, I would hazard to
guess
that this dismount is a piece of cake for
him. His score (9.737) was
too high, but like Kristy, it was his last event and he'd
already won,
so perhaps the judges just gave it to
him. The next highest high bar
score was 9.525 (Bill Roth - also too high).
Chalk
up another win for Johnny R.
2. Dmitri Vasilenko
Vasilenko had a strong set of routines, with the best
tumbling on
floor. He mounted with a double layout; had a
middle pass of front
layout, front layout, front
full layout (bent legs); and dismounted
with a
full-in. He caught my eye on pommel
horse by mounting directly
into flairs, but then
fell off mid-routine to score a 9.075.
Rings
saw him get back on track with two
consecutive front giants to
inverted crosses, a
nice piked Yamawaki (double
front), and a piked
full-in
dismount. Vasilenko
continued to improve with the hardest
vault of the
competition -- a double front, which he landed! He
landed
in a low squat with his butt pretty close to the ground, but
nevertheless, it was cool. Pbars was his
best score (9.675) but did
not leave me with much
of an impression. I must be missing
the
subtleties. His high bar had a neat combo of a Xiao Ruzhi release
(hecht-front)
into an Endo swinging back and up over the bar -- except
that
he lost some of the swing and had to muscle his way on the
upswing.
3. Rustam Sharipov
Sharipov was
the only other gymnast to throw a double layout on floor,
although his legs were bent. He ended his floor with a double
twist
punch front. He 1/2 in 1/2 out dismount on rings was
nice, but his
inverts were too high. Pbars
represented his best event, with a nice
Diamidov
on the ends of the bars, a double front, two piked
front
tosses (not consecutive), and a piked double back with a small hop
(9.712). High bar was a disappointment because
although he caught his
Gaylord, he had to muscle himself back up, and he
did only one
Tkatchev (I hope that most of you
can remember his sequence of
Tkatchevs in the
past when each one was almost higher than the last.)
4. Valeri Belenki
Belenki (again wearing crushed velvet -- what's up with
that?) lost
the competition on pbars,
scoring only an 8.85. He had a nice
pair of
Diamidovs, but then lost his wheels on a
Healy, Healy, double front
sequence. The second Healy got him off center,
which resulted in him
being so off center that he
couldn't catch the bars on his way down --
I've never seen anyone fall
through like that. Belenki also botched
his
handstand dismount on pommel horse (legs apart and totally bent),
which was a very deflating end to an otherwise great
routine. Rings
was beautiful with a low invert, two Malteses,
and a 1/2 in 1/2 out
layout dismount -STUCK.
5.
Zoltan Supola
We
mentioned how Dolgopolova competed two identical
passes ending with
front fulls. Supola has her
beat however, competing two pairs of
identical
passes. He began with a double
twist, punch front. His
second pass was a front handspring, front full. His third pass was
the same as his second, and his fourth pass was the same as
his first!
Supi hit a great triple back dismount
off of rings, and also
dismounted high bar with a
triple.
6. Bill Roth
Bill, Bill, Bill. He wasn't even supposed to compete in
this meet,
replaced Scott Keswick to pull in a set
of good routines for third
place in prelims, and
then choked on pbars in finals to fall to 6th.
He
looked looser than usual, form-wise, but was his usual explosive
self on the floor, pretending to box with the cameraman and
so forth.
Floor was fine for Roth, who mounted with a layout Thomas, and
pommels
went all right, too. His weakest event is rings, where he
missed
strength moves and picked up a lot of
swing. On parallels, he missed
a back toss to one bar, and though he tried to cover by
turn- ing to
one bar and
then pirrouetting back in, it just wasn't there and
he
fell through the bars. On high bar, his best event, he missed
his
stoop through after his Gaylord II and fell
against the bar. He
covered this slip well -- but I was surprised that the
judges still
gave him a 9.525.
7. Hikaru Tanaka
Tanaka
started off on the wrong foot by sitting on the pommel horse.
Floor
immediately also went awry when he stepped out of bounds on the
first pass. He
did, however, hit a nice rings routine with a double
layout
dismount. He nearly ran over the camera man on his vault,
taking
huge steps to the left. He still
managed to score a 9.075 on
the vault however,
which was a bit of a surprise. Pbars was his best,
with two
secure double backs between the bars, and high bar also went
well with an immediate release (layout Voronin)
and a full-twisting
double layout dismount.
8.
Alexander Shostak
Shostak
had a disappointing meet, falling off of pommel horse and
almost-missing skills on other events. For example, his invert on
rings was too high, was low on his Healy-double front-
straddle cut on
pbars,
stumbled on floor, and so forth.
His best scores were on pbars
(9.45 --
must've been high in difficulty) and rings (9.375), and he
was actually one of the four gymnasts to have all 9.0+
scores (just
barely though, with a 9.0 and two
9.025's).
That's it for my notes on men's,
Yours in
gymnastics, Rachele
[side
note -- just spoke with Fred Turoff, Bill Roth's
coach, who
tells me that Roethlisberger's release
is a 1-arm straddled Jaegar
from
an elgrip.]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 23:07:57
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
American Cup, women's press conference
1995 McDonald's American
Cup
Seattle Center Arena, Seattle, WA
March 4, 1995 - Finals
Women's
Press Conference
Attendance: Kristy Powell, Tom and Lori Forster,
Amanda Borden, Mary
Lee Tracy, Ana Maria Bican
(her interpreter didn't show up so we were
not
able to ask her any questions)
(Most questions asked by the general
media.)
Q: (to Kristy) Can you comment on your routines tonight?
A:
I was pleased with all of them. I
was very happy with beam. I've
been trying to hit beam and make it the best routine, make
it more
like floor -- and I think I did a better
job of that, but I have a lot
of work to do
still.
Q: question about her Rulfova, asking
if her hand slapped the beam or
what it was to
cause such a loud noise...
A: (Kristy laughs) Well, my hand hits the
beam but there was also a
microphone
underneath. So... yeah, we were
trying to figure that out
too, and I think that's
it. I know, it sounded loud.
Q:
Can you describe that move?
A: You stand on the beam, and you do a
backflip with a full twist in
the laid out
position and then you (hesitates) straddle the beam
(Kristy and her coaches
laugh).
Q: How are you supposed to land?
A: You're supposed
to pretty much get your hands on first, and then
roll
down. It doesn't hurt that much,
because you have a lot of
adrenalin.
Q:
Do you always get that kind of reaction from the crowd on that
particular move?
A: I think so, but I don't really
hear the crowd that much when I'm
focusing.
Q:
Is that a scary thing to practice?
I mean, you must miss it a few
times (everyone laughs) before you actually hit it...
A:
Yeah, sometimes it is. If I'm
crooked, it kinda like sends
a shock
to my outer leg and it hurts, but...
Lori:
We practice it with a pad all the time...
Kristy: Yeah, we put a pad
over the beam.
Q: (mumbled question, same topic)
A: It just
sounded like I just slapped the beam, but I guess it was a
little louder than I thought. I didn't hear a thing. (Her coaches
laugh.)
Q: You came into this meet as the
alternate. From the time you were
going to compete until now, did you have a strategy?
A:
Well, I tried to come into this meet not being nervous at all, and
with a lot of confidence knowing that I can hit all my
routines. And
I think I did a
pretty good job of that. I think
it's kinda neat
because Mary Lou was also the alternate to the American Cup
and she
won that and went on to win the
Olympics.
Q: Was there any performance today that you were nervous
about?
A: Umm, I kinda got a sick feeling
before bars (everyone laughs), but
other than
that, nope!
Q: Amanda, you did a good job today, what are your
feelings like?
A: Well, I didn't have the best meet I've ever
had. I was a little
disappointed with the way my routines turned out, but I
didn't have a
horrible meet. It's great to be able to go out and hit
four events
but also still feel like I have a lot
of room to improve. So I just
wasn't on the way I
wanted to be today, but hopefully for Pan American
Games, I'll pull it all
together.
Q: Does it help to know that the
two events, vault and bars, that
aren't known as
your best events, those were your good events today?
A: Yesterday, I
had beam and floor, they were my better events, and
then
today, vault and bars were strong but I had room to improve on
all of them, and so hopefully I can do that.
Q:
Kristy and Amanda, the Atlanta is only 16 months away, what kind of
team do you think the American women's team will have, after
this
weekend?
Kristy: I think we're going
to be the strongest team the US has ever
had, and
I hope that (pause) we can put it all together and hit.
Amanda: I feel
the same. I think we have a lot of,
like Kristy, we
have a lot of new gymnasts coming
up so, I think for '96 we'll have a
really strong
team.
Q: Tom and Lori, do you feel that Kristy's victory is going to
be
sending a message to some of the established
gymnasts in the US?
Tom: You know, I, our attitude coming in was
really that we had two
good competitors, Doni Thompson and Kristy Powell. We knew it was
just
an honor to be invited, because you don't qualify to this meet,
you have to be invited. So people have to think that you're
contenders
to begin with to be here. We really kinda
felt that our attitude
coming in was we had
nothing to lose, we're the new kids on the block,
we
really pretty much felt that Shannon and Amanda would be leading
the way, and our job is to hit all of our events, and be in
a support
role in case one of them messed up so
that the American Cup could stay
in America. And it turned out that's what happened,
and we're just
really glad that it gets to stay
here.
[end]
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 22:16:00
PST
From: ***@POWERGRID.ELECTRICITI.COM
Subject:
Re: your mail
>>Someone named Rulfova
(CZE, I'm pretty sure) was the first to do it, but
>Shushunova
(URS) popularized it
>
>Jana Rulfova
(CZE)
>
>Mara
I'll belabor this one:
Rulfova did the skill along about '81 (Worlds, probably),
but we saw a
Soviet do it in '79 on the TV coverage of the Spartakiad/pre-Olympics. Her
name
was Valeria Schidunova (Zhidunova?)
and she wore glasses on beam. (For
a move like
that, I think I'd rather stay blind.)
The Korbut,
obviously, was done by Olga, and it's more than just a
flip-flop
swing-down: Hers was HUGE. And over a wood beam, too.
The Chen (Chen Cuiting/CHN, '86 and '90 Asian Games champ) came along
in
'89. And again, few match the original - maybe Lisenko.
See ya,
Nancy
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 22:16:00
PST
From: ***@POWERGRID.ELECTRICITI.COM
Subject:
American Cup stuff
Hi,
Just got back from a verrry cold Seattle (unusual for there) and read 100+
posts.
Comments I can't resist:
Women's coulda gone either way. Kristy had a gift or two, but not a
big
joke like in the past. I'm sorry, patriots,
but Kristie Phillips over Olga
Strazheva, a
gymnast of an entirely different class in every way (and Brian
Ginsberg
over Vladimir Gogoladze the same year, '87), sums up
this meet for
me. Last year Dominique Dawes had no
competition, to be sure. But Betty
Okino in '91 ... over anybody in a leotard? Oh-kay.
When we asked Rustam
Sharipov (UKR) and his coach about John
Roethlisberger,
they said nice things, but when we told them his high bar
score, they just laughed. Rustam
was also pleased to hear I had named my
new cat
after him. (Both have amazing upper bodies and goofy runs.)
The
personable Bican was asked after Mixed Pairs if she
thought she should
have won Saturday, she just
grinned, then said she hadn't seen all of
Kristy's
routines.
By the way, it's Aerials teammate Theresa Kullikowski who does the Jaeger-half.
I was happy
for Kristy, having her first really good meet in a long while.
Add a little
maturity (and better form on her beam tumbling) and you've got
a class gymnast. And her twists (V and UB) were
ultra-cool.
Bican, like Rachele
said, was pretty typically Romanian, except for not
throwing
the cheap vault (sad to see Bican's double outscored
by a
Hristakieva in Mixed Pairs, though Canqueteau has a fine one). Her tumbling
was awesome, dance and expression - well, Romanian. As in not really there.
Powell's choreography
wasn't exactly goosebump time, but she was
present
and accounted for.
Of course we
were watching all those '80 videos of people like
Shaposhnikova
(her beam compulsory should be in the Smithsonian) and
Mukhina.
'95 just don't compare.
Tom Forster impresses me in general, but one
bit stands out: After the
press conference
Saturday, Glenn Sundby and I passed him in the hall.
He
recognized Glenn, stopped to shake his hand and
said, "It is an honor to
meet you, Mr. Sundby," and obviously meant it. (Glenn usually has to
go
overseas for that kind of respect.)
How
can Nyeste remind one of Onodi?
She can move! And she has amplitude on
bars. At
Mixed Pairs, she caught her original release debuted at Worlds,
which I assume will bear her name: She goes for a straddled
flyway, then
does a half turn to catch. Way cool.
Okay, so her leaps weren't great, but
remember
we're comparing her with Onodi.
Incidentally,
Nyeste, a well-proportioned 5-2 or better, did all
this
without benefit of grips. (If we bought her a
pair, would she use the low
bar?)
Look
for sequences in the May IG, presuming airport security didn't
misplace my film the way they did my keys ...
I also
"did" Dolgopolova's fab Def
(like Pae Gil Su of North Korea, she
catches without a form break, I'm pretty sure) and Doni's hop 1-1/2
(impossible
at Classic due to poor light).
One last bars note: Mina Kim's double
layout made Podkopayeva (see 10/93
IG) look
arched. Her body was straight as a ruler and head totally neutral.
Awesome.
(Nope, only saw that one across the gym, sorry.) She also had a
nice save of an "oak tree" on beam (you know, the
cheesy flip-flop quarter
turn thingie).
She does the skill to dead handstand, then pikes through to
v-sit to layback, but she was leaning back a bit and nearly
fell, hanging
vertically next to the beam. (Very
impressive from the end-of-the-beam
view.) Through
sheer determination, she pulled herself back up to her butt
and went on with the set with no further wobbles. The judges
were suitably
kind, and NBC loves her. No doubt
it'll make air.
Later,
Nancy
P.S. Our calendars in IG
always go from the latest USAG calendar, at press
time.
(There's the rub.) USAG seems a
little confused about the two
internationals as
far as who goes where... (George is pulling for BLR/CHN
to
be in San Jose, right?) So which one is it this week?
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 23:12:18
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
American Cup - Men's Press Conference
1995 McDonald's American
Cup
Seattle Center Arena, Seattle, WA
March 4, 1995 - Finals
Men's
Press Conference
Attendance: John Roethlisberger, Bill Roth, Dmitri Vasilenko, Rustam
Sharipov, Fred Roethlisberger
Q: (to John) You
pretty much breezed through the competition. Did you
have
a game plan going in?
A: Yeah.
My game plan is to hit. And you know, I was hoping for some
success, that I'd be first, but I didn't know for sure. That's my
game
plan from here on out, it's been my game plan for a long time. I
can
guarantee you I wouldn't have been up there if I didn't hit, so
you gotta start with yourself, and
get your sets as good as you can.
You can't really worry about what the rest
of the guys do.
Q: In terms of today's victory, how does it compare to
other
victories, what does it mean?
A: At
this moment it feels like it's the greatest thing ever, you
know, but you look back and in a lot of ways it is. American
Cup is
pretty prestigious, and it means a lot to
me in that respect, but
winning Nationals is a
pretty big deal for me and I hope that down the
road
I have some other accomplishments that'll eclipse this one. But
right now it feels pretty special.
Q: I'd like to
ask Rustam and Dmitri about their performances
today...?
Translator for Dmitri: It was easier
today than yesterday. He said he
felt it took a
few days to get used to things. The first day he felt
out
of it, today he had had time to adjust and he felt much calmer,
more relaxed.
Translator for Rustam:
He doesn't like his work today, he
did not
enjoy it. He played with some new
elements and he didn't make it. He
doesn't feel so
good about today. When he make
horse, (vault,
pommel?), he feels like he is real
tired. Today morning when he come
here, he just
wanted to sleep.
Translator for Dmitri: Different time. It's morning, it's night.
When we come to gym, we go to sleep.
Translator
for Rustam: He says he wants to sleep ALL the time.
[Bill
Roth laughs.]
Q: (to John) What kind of team do you think
the US is going to have in
1996?
A: I think it's going to be a
good team. I think we have a lot
of
guys that have been around since '92 and
there's no substitute for
experience. We've got a
lot of experience and we have a really solid
team. I'm real excited; I think in a lot of
ways we compare to the
team in '84, where a lot of
guys carried over from the '80 Olympics.
I think we're going to have a
great team, a really good shot at a
medal, and I'm
looking forward to that and hope I can contribute and
be
a part of that experience.
Q: mumbled question about him being the
team leader
A: Sometimes I like to be that leader, but if you watch
how I compete,
a lot of times I get really wrapped
up in what I'm doing, and I think
for that reason
I not that kind of charismatic leader.
Like Bill here
could be that, Bill is very
energetic, outspoken and stuff. I
think
as far as being a leader, I lead by
example. In practice, in
competition. I
consider myself a very hard worker, and even in that
respect,
I think I'm a leader.
Q: At the end of the competition, at the end of
your routine, you
pumped your fist. [These questions, I swear... -RH]. Is that what
you
ordinarily do, was that out of the ordinary...
A: (John smiles) Well, throughout
the competition, I try to keep my
cool. You know, after each event, I try to
keep a level head, get
ready for the next
apparatus... (he smiles) I was REALLY nervous
before high bar.
I knew it was the last event and that's just what I
felt. I was just
like, "yes!", you know, I was really nervous and I
was really excited, so I just had to let off a little
steam.
Q: John, on parallel bars, the door kind of opened for you on
that
particular event....
A: I didn't
really know that at the time, but yeah, I guess it did.
Last
year at the American Cup, I pretty much choked, major,
on
parallel bars. And that cost me the competition. Needless to say,
that
was running through my head again.
It was the same rotation too,
I went first on vault last year and I
went first on vault this year.
So I had a *long* wait before parallel bars,
and I'm going "uh-oh,
here we go again, you
know this is the same situation as last year,
I'm right in there, got this
long wait on parallel bars, got to keep
my head on
and get ready," and I was just really thankful that it
worked out. Both
on parallel bars and high bar, I was just... re Q:
You listen to music on
your Walkman?
A: Yes.
Q: What is it?
A: It's kind of
a mix. The tape that I listened to
today was actually
a tape that I made at a '89
training camp along with the guys we were
staying
with in this little apartment. I
just kind of kept it with
me.
Q: Is it
rock?
A: It's *everything*.
Rock, and rap, and everything. All kinds of
stuff. If you want a copy, you know [everyone
laughs] just ask...
Q: Bill, can you talk about your performance, how
you feel...?
A: I was actually very pleased,
I'm probably the happiest one here
besides
John. I came out here a week and a
half ago, and I wasn't
supposed to compete. And at pretty much the last minute, they
put me
in it.
Making it to finals, I was happy so, pretty much whatever
happened today was pretty much icing on the cake. So, I was very
pleased
with what I did today. I had a
little problem on pbars, but
I'm not going to
complain. To go from not competing
to competing in
finals, I'm pretty happy.
Q:
Coming back from vault, you said something like "I NEED the
kahoonis!" [Bill laughs] What
does that mean?
A: [John laughs at Bill as he tries to answer] I
should be sticking
more landings, I mean, I'm
giving tenths away here and there, and I
just--
like on vault, for example. My feet
were on the ground. I
wasn't moving, but I took a step. And I just need to, when I land,
have confidence in my landing. On high bar, I shoulda
stuck that.
And I shoulda stuck floor. I stuck pommels though! [John laughs
at
Bill.] That's what it breaks
down to, I mean, I think I was just, as
I landed, I didn't wanna -- I felt a little bit off,
so I didn't wanna
fall,
so I took that step. But, deep down
I know I didn't have to.
Q: Did you feel any pressure knowing you were
leading after two
events?
A: No. After two events, rings -- I knew I was
going to drop after
that. No, really, I was just very happy to be
competing. Right now,
I don't
even know if my parents know, well, they hopefully know now,
but before, they didn't know that I even competed, in
prelims. So,
the
last they heard, I wasn't going to compete. So it's probably going
to be a shock to them.
So I was real happy to get to finals. I think
it
shows that with men's gymnastics, they can pull someboday
who's not
supposed to be in the competition, put
them in a meet, and they can
compete with anybody
else.
Q: Fred (Roethlisberger), why don't you give us your impressions
of
John's performance?
A: Well, I just,
he never ceases to amaze me when so much pressure is
on,
I've seen him do it so many times.
He's like a steel trap, the
way he
competes, and he's teaching me. He's been the steadiest of the
US gymnasts
over the last 4, 5 years, and he continues to show
leadership
in hitting routines and just being as solid as a rock. I
was real
impressed with him today again. As
far as him being prepared
to compete, and
competing like that, and again, this is to John's
credit,
but he amazes me in the gym, because there's not one day out
of a week, a month, a year, that he doesn't make use out of
every
minute of every workout. He never says
"well, I'll do this tomorrow."
He never skips anything. He never takes a practice turn in the
gym
without making it meaningful, every single
time. And I don't know how
he can keep that much focus and that much intensity every
practice the
entire year. But when it comes to a meet, it
shows. That's the way
he practices.
Q: Does that come from your
father?
A: (everyone laughs) No, actually, [John laughs.] we don't get
along.
No, actually, it's in my family; my sister is my idol. If
anybody
knows anything about my sister, it's that
she is hard-core. She works
SO hard, she really does, and you know my dad,
it's the same
thing. When he was young, he used to
tell me how he used to be pretty
lousy on pommel
horse. and -- sorry Dad (everyone laughs)-- and
he
would just go and during practice, you know,
five, six, eight sets
every day. He'd just go, and do them. It'd be him and the pommel
horse, you know, and that's what I've learned from my dad,
and my
sister, and my dad's dad was the same
way. And I've been brought up
that there's no substitute for hard work. Emotion and excitement,
that type of stuff is great, but that type of stuff will get
you
through maybe one practice, and the next day,
but when it comes right
down to it, you're going
to be tired half the time you go into
practice and
you just gotta work, and grind, and it ain't glamorous,
and a lot of
times it isn't fun, but you've got a job to do, and so
quit
whining and do it. You've gotta work your butt off.
[end]
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 23:46:20
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
American Cup stuff
| By the way, it's Aerials teammate Theresa Kullikowski who does the
Jaeger-half.
Dohh! (I did get it right in my Classic notes,
do I get points for
that?) While we're at it, the second time I
described Nyeste's stand
on
low bar, I said the previous release was a Gienger,
when it was a
Jaeger, as I originally stated.
|
Tom Forster impresses me in general, but one bit stands out: After the
What
strikes me is that he is the first recent male coach that I am
aware of that doesn't project a disciplinarian-ish (that's a nice way
of
putting it) image. He seems to be
"just a nice guy", which is an
unusual
image for a male coach in women's gymnastics, at the very top
level.
| which I assume
will bear her name: She goes for a straddled flyway, then
| does a half turn to catch. Way cool. Okay, so her leaps
weren't great, but
At what point is the half turn? I'm imagining some sort of
helicopter
type move at the moment which seems
more or less impossible. ;)
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 00:36:51
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
NCAA Men's Rankings
Since the season has finished two months, I
thought that Gymn at large
might
be interested in how the teams and individuals are doing. Below
are
the top 20 of each. Tomorrow night
I will post on the women.
If you're new to Gymn
-- every week I send out the most current
ranking
(Monday-men and Tuesday - women) -- the top 20 all around
(both team and ind.) and also the top 20 on each event. If you want
to
be on my distribution list, just send me a short note saying which
rankings you are intersted in
receiving.
NATIONAL Ranking - All Around - By NCAA Average
1 Blaine Wilson
58.3167 Ohio
State
E
2 Grace
57.9667 Nebraska, U.
of W
3 DARREN ELG
57.9333 Brigham
Young W
4 Brian Yee
57.7333 Minnesota, U.of E
5 Puljic,
Blaz
57.6000 New Mexico,U.of W
6 TONY
PANSY
57.3333 Penn
State
E
7 Danny Akerman
57.2500 Temple
Univ. E
8 MARSHALL STEVE 57.2000 Army
E
9 Jay Thornton
56.9250 Iowa, U.
of E
10 PORAT, OFRI
56.8333 Syracuse, U.
of E
11 Kieffer
56.8167 Nebraska, U.
of W
12 Dave Frank
56.5167 Temple
Univ. E
13 Evangelist, Sha 56.4917 New Mexico,U.of
W
14 JOSH STEIN
56.4667 Stanford
Univ. W
15 Goncalo Macedo 56.3167 Illinois, U. of E
16 ROY MALKA
56.0000 Penn
State
E
17 Christie
55.9333 Nebraska, U.
of W
18 Rodney Gendron 55.9167 Ohio State E
-- Gary Thagard
55.9167 New Mexico,U.of W
20 Brian Franson
55.8000 W.
Michigan E
NATIONAL
Ranking - TEAM TOTALS - By NCAA Average
1 Nebraska, U. of 228.6167 W
2 Penn State
228.5500 E
3 Iowa, U.
of
228.5083 E
4 New Mexico,U.of 228.0333 W
5 Ohio State 227.8667 E
6 Temple Univ.
227.5333 E
7 Minnesota, U.of
226.6583 E
8 Berkeley,
UC
226.6333 W
9 Stanford
Univ.
225.3167 W
10 Illinois, U.
of 225.3000
E
11 Michigan, U. of 224.6750 E
12 Syracuse, U. of 224.5667 E
13 Brigham Young 224.4500
W
14 Mass., U. of
223.2417 E
15 Illinois-Chic. 223.1833 E
16 Oklahoma, U. of 222.4000 W
17 Army
222.1000 E
18 Navy
220.8833 E
19 W.
Michigan
220.5833 E
20 Air Force
Acad. 219.5000
W
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 13:59:14
+0100
From: ***@LTHMALMO.MALMO.LTH.SE
Subject:
moving to USA!!!
HI everybody
I have been a member of the Gymn
for about 2 weeks now , and I already
love to read every mail I'm getting .
I'm 20 year
old and I'm living in Sweden . If you have read
my
intro.-letter you know that I love gymnasitics . A big dream I have
is to move to USA and study and train on a University .
If
anyone have any contacs at any University please , please write
to me
!!!!!
If anyone have information about what I shall do ,
please , please
write to me!!!!
In Sweden
I'm studing Mecanical engineering .
I score between 48 and 51. (I'm a member
of the Swedish national team)
Write to me as soon as possible !!
Henrik
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 10:49:56
-0500
From: ***@PERFIT.ZKO.DEC.COM
Subject:
misc ramblings...
Went to the New England
Championships this weekend at MIT.
Overall it was a
good meet with UMass
winning with ~225, Springfield with ~205, and I can't
remember
the other team scores. I really
have been pretty bad about watching
gymnastics
lately, either getting out to Amherst to see UMass, or catching it
on TV. Half of
the gymnasts discussed on this forum I've never seen on TV.
Anyways, this
weekend was no exception. I had to
leave the meet on Saturday
after the fourth round
or so since we were having friends over for dinner. Get
home to
flip on the TV, catch Bill Roth's disaster on p-bars and half of Amanda
Borden's
beam set when the company arrives.
TV off. Jeez.
At
the meet, I did catch some nice sets, like UMass' Kevin Schwartz ring set.
Although
it didn't deserve the 9.95 it scored, it was pretty nice. I did catch
a
few of MIT's (and gymn's) Chris Ellefson's
routines (once I looked in the
program and matched
name to face). Good high bar and
floor sets!
As I'm watching floor, a number of the guys are finishing
with a round off,
whip, layout, and getting scores
of 9.4, etc. As I was about to
leave, I
stopped by the UMass bench to talk with
my old coach Roy Johnson and he tells
me that this
combination is a C. So it makes no
difference if you dismount with
this or a double
tuck. Give me a break!!
I've
*never* seen so much front tumbling in my life. I saw routines where
guys didn't even do round offs! Not to mention the gymnast whose floor
set
consisted of forward rolls, cartwheels, turns,
and a planche.
Huh? (I know
I shouldn't
say anything bad about this, and the guy was just doing his best,
but it took me by surprise).
One thing that struck
me while watching floor was that when someone crashed big
time (which I saw *alot* of), they
seemed to crash softly and lightly.
No big
thuds and thumps. They'd just get up, adjust their spinal
column and continue.
Truly amazing.
Found
out I still have a phobia of watching high bar dismounts from anyone who
isn't Olympic caliber.
Judges. What do they do for a *real* job? Obviously you can't make a living
out of judging college men's gymnastics, but what about
meets that take place
during the week? Meet official and judge Peter Bacon
looks the same as he did
15 years ago (good for him). I also knew two of the other judges,
Dale
Johnston with whom I went to UMass, and Rich Ellis who I competed
against
in high school and college (he went to
Southern Connecticut).
Excellent
gymnast.
One other thing.
While sitting in the stands, I realized I looked more like the
parents of these kids instead of one of the gymnasts. Pretty sad
realization.
Steve
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 09:23:03
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Korbut
> The Korbut,
obviously, was done by Olga, and it's more than just a
> flip-flop swing-down: Hers was HUGE. And over a wood beam,
too.
A Korbut is definitely more than just a
ff swing down -- originally, in the
latest Code, the Korbut was a C
and the ff swing down a B, but they
decided to make them both B's. I'd say probably because it would
invite
too much hair-splitting and abuse in
deciding what (and whose) counts as a B
and what
counts as a C.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 15:36:40
EST5EDT
From: ***@MERC.RX.UGA.EDU
Subject:
Congrats to Unv. Alabama
Hello!!
My congratulation to the
University of Alabama Gymnastics Team
and Amanda
for their win over the Univ. of Georgia.
I was there and
Alabama was clearly better than Georgia that
night. The crow noise
did not bother me as much as some of the scores given to
Alabama
gymnasts. Although, let me make clear that there
was no way for the
Georgia team to win with the poor performance the
Georgia gymnasts
had.
There were over 12,000 fans
in Alabama. It was very exciting
to
see that size of a crow. Stephanie Woods, beam routines is
gorgeous.
She has one of the best routine in
college gymnastics today.
Although, as a level 10 judge, I will have to say
that she needs to
do a harder dismount if she
wants to be NCAA beam champion. A
double
full will be ok with me.
Raul
University
of Georgia
Go Bulldogs!!!!!
#1 Women Gymnastic Team in the USA
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 15:07:00
PST
From: ***@MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU
Subject:
scAM Cup
In 1987 Kristie Phillips beat Olga Strazheva... who hit
In 1990 Zmeskal
beat Kalinina
In 1991 Betty Okino got a 10 on vault, Kim a 10 on floor
Is that
enough evidence for the scAM cup? Thats just the womens
scores.
The mens are just as bad.
1987
might have been the worst year, scAm cup wise... Olga deserved
to
win by about .8
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 23:27:00
UTC
From: ***@GENIE.GEIS.COM
Subject:
'95 French Nationals
From the March 6th issue of _l'Equipe_,
here are results from the French
Nationals. There is no article accompanying the
results, so I can only
guess that Karbanenko is in the process of becoming a French
citizen...
Men's AA:
1. Dmitri Karbanenko
(RUS) 110.100
2. Patrice Casimir
(Antibes)
108.850
3. Eric Poujade (Orleans) 106.900
4. Sebastien Tayac (Antibes) 106.800
5. Bernard Pellard
(Epinay...) 105.400
Women's AA:
1. Laetitia Begue (Monaco) 76.225
2. Elvire Teza (Reunion)
75.613
3. Furnon (Nimes)
74.163
4. Gely (Marseille)
73.313
5. Popa (Nimes)
72.688
Men's EF:
FX:
1. Karbanenko 9.70 2. Aymes
9.50 3.
Laurent 9.10
PH: 1. Poujade
& Casimir 9.60 3. Tayac
9.10
R: 1. Casimir
9.10 2. Aymes 9.05 3. Tayac
8.70
V: 1. Coponat
9.20 2. Geria 9.075 3. Aymes
9.072
PB: 1. Karbanenko 9.40 2. Casimir 9.40 3. Astashov
9.25
HB: 1. Tayac 9.45 2. Laurent 9.35 3. Bonvallet 9.00
Women's EF:
V: 1. Begue
9.80 2. Teza 9.435 3. Popa
9.25
UB: 1. Begue &
Teza 9.75 3. Furnon
9.575
B: 1. Furnon
9.25 2. Begue 8.775 3. Teza
8.70
FX: 1. Teza 9.825 2. Begue 9.80 3. Furnon
9.375
Debbie
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 18:43:35
-18521200
From: ***@MADRAD.RADIOLOGY.WISC.EDU
Subject:
AC thoughts
Hello everyone,
Finally made it back to Madison after our
flight
was changed four times (due to weather and
equipment
failure). (Nancy R., Mark and I thought
Seattle's weather was very nice
(warm); we even
went climbing!) I'm sorry I didn't introduce
myself to all the gymners there (I
did meet
Michelle though); should've known that we would
all be sitting in the same area (the 1st callers).
For
what it's worth, here are my thoughts
on the
American Cup:
women's- I liked Shannon Miller's
new fx routine,
even if
she did have to pull hard to make her last
full
in. Eileen Diaz' vault really
scared me; she
consistently placed her hands in
front of the horse
vault, which gave her no post
flight at all. Her
tumbling on beam and fx was also
very low, but I was
impressed with her double
layout/full out dismount
on bars. Kristy Powell has really improved on
her
form, as did Bican. Bican sure has
a pretty smile,
and she seems to give those out
more freely than the
other Romanian gymnasts. Little Mina Kim reminded
me of Kim Gwang Suk (except she
has her front teeth).
Felt Cecile Canquentue was
consistently underscored,
felt bad for Boulakhova, Tarasevitch, and Li Jiya
(not their day). Beth, did you notice that Tarasevitch
was crying after
practicing her double front fulls on
floor (sore ankles)?
It was probably made worse by
all her
attempts on a double front dismount off beam.
men's-
The one thing that really impressed me about
Roethlisburger
was his concentration; unbelievable
concentration
and consistent results. I liked
his
double double on
floor. Felt bad about Belenki's
misfortune on pbars (I missed it), but he was complaining
about his shoulder to his coach prior to his high bar
performance. Shostak too didn't have a good day, but
this guy has potential (nice form). Didn't watch
Vasilenko too much. It was nice to see Bill Roth have
so much fun competing.
Lani.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 1995 19:38:24 -0500
From: ***@PHARM.MED.UPENN.EDU
Subject:
Temple v. PSU v. Syracuse
Temple Univ.
FX PH R V PB HB
Danny Akerman 960 970 960
920 945 965
Dubie
Bader
910 975 920
945 970
Christian Collins 940 950 875
Dave
Frank
940 935 975
900 965 970
Darin Gerlach 975
925
925
Carl Imhauser
905
940
Jason Krane
895
Jason Rushton
950
Kenny Sykes 965 940
945
Aaron Vexler 945 910 955
910 895 965
3845 3795 3865 3675 3800 3870 22850
Penn State
FX PH R V PB HB
Tom Ellefson
960
890 910 980
Roy Malka 935 940 955
920 900 970
JeanMarc
Michel 905 950 920
910 945
Tony Pansy 975 945 965
840 970 965
Lee Ricketts 955 880 910
900 935 965
Dave Riordan 955 940 905
900 965
Brandy
Woods 970 865 940
3855 3785 3810
3640 3780 3880 22750
Syracuse Univ.
FX PH R V PB HB
James Bacik
870
Mark Bechtold
905
925
Joe Buscaglia 960 865 945
915 890
Michael
Emmons
950
835 925 880
Shane
Geraghty
865 930 905 830
Charles Goicoechea
835
Craig Holt
935
970 885 910
Richard Kuenzler
970
Walter Kurfis
835
825
Tom Moss
895
885
855
Ofri Porat
965 920 970
945 815 920
Mark Weber
955
890 950
3830 3625 3815 3675 3690 3490 22125
ALL-AROUND
FX PH R V PB
HB TOTAL
Danny Akerman 960 970 960 920 945
965 57.20 1
Temple Univ.
Dave Frank
940 935 975 900 965 970 56.85 2 Temple Univ.
Tony
Pansy 975 945 965 840
970 965 56.60 3
Penn State
Roy Malka 935 940 955 920 900
970 56.20 4
Penn State
Aaron Vexler 945 910 955 910
895 965 55.80 5 Temple Univ.
Lee
Ricketts 955
880 910 900 935 965 55.45 6 Penn
State
Ofri Porat 965 920 970 945 815 920 55.35 7 Syracuse
Univ.
This was an excellent meet, and the first time that
Temple
has beaten Penn State in a dual meet in 25 years.
Mayland
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 6 Mar 1995 to 7 Mar 1995 - Special issue
***************************************************************