GYMN-L Digest - 8 Jun 1995 to 9 Jun 1995
There
are 19 messages totalling 565 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Tumbling
2. stereotypes
3. new guy
4. Unsubscribe
5. What the .....
?
6. more
gymn stuff (4)
7. Change in Gymn List Administrator!
8. Benchmarking
9. no-leg
gymnast
10. PREP
11. GYMN-L Digest - 6 Jun 1995 to 7 Jun
1995
12. Good Responses
13. Mary Lou's rebuttle.
14. More Comments on Little Girls In P
Boxes
15. Re[2]:
more gymn stuff (2)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 8 Jun 1995 23:25:54
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Tumbling
In a message dated 95-06-06 23:07:06 EDT, you write:
>Hi. Can anyone tell me which is harder, a double
front on the fx, or
>an
>arabian
double front?
Hi all !!!
Haven't responded in a while since my emphsis was getting through my first
year
of Grad School and Coaching.
The answer to this question is
hard since each gymnast has his/her strong
points,
However for most gymnasts over the years double flipping out of Back
tumbling is much easier then doubling flipping comming from a forward move (
front
handspring).
One
of the Gymnasts on the team I coach does a running double front and
performs it well.
He does however have shoulder trouble and can't back
tumble and front tumbling is his strength anyhow.
If I were to give
advice on which I would Train it would be a double
Arabian. You are probabily
asking why. The answer is simple
there is many
more moves on floor and other events
that transfer out of a double arabian.
Half in half out, Full in Back out,
Thomas ect.. Not to put Down
a running
double front but its harder to teach not
to mencion spot and it has less
benificial progression "In my
perspective" for the gymnast.
Hope this helps
Peace :o)
Carl
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 00:05:56
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
stereotypes
I'm not sure if this really is an answer to the question that was
asked,
but I was reminded of it by the post that
mentioned how people immediately
assume you're on
Kim Zmeskal's level if you're a gymnast. Well another
rather
humorous thing I've noticed is that the
"average Joe" assumes
that if you
mention you're going to a gymnastics
meet, then OBVIOUSLY you must be a
competitor.
It's like no one can grasp the concept of going just to watch, of
being a fan. I go to quite a few meets and have been on all
the IG tours to the
World Championships, and every time the topic of where
I'm going has come up on
an airplane, for
instance, or in a taxi cab or the camera store or wherever,
someone has asked, in all seriousness, whether I'm
competing! Granted, I AM
small (5'1") and
look younger than my age (an ancient 32), but there is no way
I look like
an elite gymnast! Maybe an ex-gymnast (although I'm not really even
that; I've always been mainly a fan). I find the whole thing
pretty funny, but
also kind of sad in a way. I
usually get VERY strange looks when I tell people
I'm going to the
competition just to watch - as if this is an extremely bizarre
thing that no sane person would ever do. Somehow I don't
think I'd get the same
quizzical looks if I said I
were going to the World Series, the Superbowl or
the NBA Playoffs. Do any of the rest of you run into this
reaction if you
mention you're going to a meet? I
just sort of wonder what this says about the
average
public's knowledge and image of gymnastics... ("Ignorance" is a
word
that comes to mind.)
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 8 Jun 1995 21:54:27 EDT
From: ***@PRODIGY.COM
Subject:
new guy
Hi David! My name
is AL and I live in Toronto. I am
a
coach and a judge for Men's gymnastics. Did you happen to
attend
the Provincial CHampionships that were held in
Ottawa
this year? If so you would have had the opportunity
to
watch some of the best gymnastics in Canada
short of the
Senior National Team. Anyways, this fall the Soapberry
World
Challenge should be going on (most likely in
Hamilton). Last Fall I had the opportunity to work ont he
floor there and met
Gina Gogean and Anna Maria Bican. You
might
want to try going there.
-=-AL-=-
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 08:46:04
EET
From: ***@FREC.BULL.FR
Subject:
Unsubscribe
Please delete my subscription. Thanks.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 02:51:23
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: What the ..... ?
>A Rudi on floor is a
front layout with one and a half
twists. Currently it is rated as an
"E" skill for women.<
I don't
think it has to be a layout -- it's the 1-1/2 twist that makes a
front flip a rudi. Starting this month, it's been devalued
to a D.
:-)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 02:49:09
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: more gymn stuff
>ballet: flexibility - ok. not
30s here, but 20s
Just for the record, there are certainly 30s in
ballet. Not as many as 20s,
but not exactly unusual either. Also, it takes great leg strength,
endurance, and IMHO, it is *the* basic building block for
proper body
position and control.
:-)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 08:08:30
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
Change in Gymn List Administrator!
Hey
everyone,
Please join me in thanking Robyn for the amazing amount of
effort she
had dedicated to Gymn
over the last three years. As of
yesterday, she
officially resigned as Gymn List Administrator. She is still on Gymn
(of course!), but since her email account for Gymn admin stuff will
soon
die, she decided to offload her Gymn list admin
duties. I'm sure
you all will agree that she's done a great job, especially
for the
smooth transition to the Penn State
listserv!
Our new Gymn list admin will be
Debbie. All of you are away of
her eye for detail and her valued participation in Gymn. When
we
three (Robyn, George, myself) were
brainstorming for Gymners that we
felt were willing and dependable enough to do the job,
Debbie seemed
the obvious choice. We asked her and she thankfully said
yes!
Everyone please also join me in welcoming Debbie to the Gymn List
Administrator position! If you have mail concerning Gymn admin items
that you
cannot handle through commands on the listserv, then please
contact Debbie at the following address (which hasn't
changed, it's
just pointed at her now):
gymn-l-request@psuvm.psu.edu
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 10:17:28
+0500
From: ***@HEDLEY.EAST.SUN.COM
Subject:
Re: Benchmarking
Maybe it's just me, but I thought the whole idea was
supposed to be making
sure our kid's have fun, healthly, diverse experiences. My 6 year old spends
4 hours a week at
the gym, my 9 year old spends 14 hours.
Next year they are
upping the hours for the
competitive girls, but I already told them Sara
can't
do it. At 9, she also has school,
dance, mountain biking, road biking,
skiing, and saxaphone lessons.
She doesn't want to give up any activity
because
she is young and curious; I think that is great.
Don't get me wrong,
this is what I know works for Sara and Arielle - THEIR
CHOICE. There is also a six year old that will
be moved to team this summer
that at SIX already
KNOWS that GYMNASTICS is what she wants.
I will be
curious to see how she does next
year (3 of the 4 six year olds that moved
up last
year, stressed out and quit).
One thing I always make sure to tell
Sara that the benchmark she needs to
worry about
is how she did last time, not how other girls are doing. I am
very leary of mistaking competitive success for personal
success...
sheri
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 10:38:25
EDT
From: ***@BIOMED.QUEENSU.CA
Subject:
no-leg gymnast
I lost track of the coach of the little boy with no
legs. I'd like to know
how well he is doing in gym and if his coach found different
techniques for
movements.
Anne Dupont
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 11:30:12
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
PREP
To those who are interested in P.R.E.P.
Poise
Rhythm
Execution
Presentation
Prep
is a beginner optional program. It will allow the recreational gymnast
to get out of the compulsory program. This could be an athlete who would
never make it to a full on floor or giant on the bars
because of the amount
of hours available at their
facility to train or because of body type or
ability
or, in some cases, because they entered the sport at an older age.
It
also it is an opportunity for the seriously training gymnast who is in
Level
5-7 to be introduced to a wider base of optional skills while still
developing and exiting through the compulsory program. Beginning coaches who
have not yet trained optional should find this a welcome and
low key
introduction to coaching optional
gymnasts.
The emphasize is on good
execution. Difficulty is not
awarded in any way.
There are
no special requirements and no value part requirements. Only
execution,
presentation, rhythm, amplitude and other general deductions such
as out of bounds, under time and overtime will be deducted
from a 9.0 start
value.
Sandy
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 08:56:07
-0700
From: ***@ENG.SUN.COM
Subject:
Re: more gymn stuff
Well! It looks like top athletes hit their
prime in their 20s and
30s across the board...
strength, flexibility,
endurance, speed, etc...
Therefore, the same
should be true for
gymnastics. Why isn't it? Any
opinions out there?
Looking in from the outside, there doesn't
appear to
be an infrastructure for elite
gymnastics after college.
Just out of curiousity,
would an independent gym
coach a woman after
18? Is cost a problem here?
Ruth
-----
Begin Included Message -----
From owner-gymn-l@PSUVM.PSU.EDU Fri Jun 9 00:04 PDT
1995
Subject:
Re: more gymn stuff
To: Multiple
recipients of list GYMN-L <GYMN-L@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>
>ballet:
flexibility - ok. not 30s here, but 20s
Just
for the record, there are certainly 30s in ballet. Not as many as 20s,
but not exactly unusual either. Also, it takes great leg strength,
endurance, and IMHO, it is *the* basic building block for
proper body
position and control.
:-)
Adriana
-----
End Included Message -----
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 12:46:42
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: GYMN-L Digest - 6 Jun 1995 to 7 Jun 1995
>Those of you who are
accusing Ms. Ryan of "yellow
>journalism":
are you critical because she is exposing >gymnastics'
"dirty
laundry" in public, or do you
think she is >lying about what the various
gymnasts
told her?
As for myself, as many people on this list will readily
attest, I would
probably never be accused of
either wanting to or trying to cover for the
generally-acknowledged
"powers-that-be" in U.S. gymnastics. I would probably
be considered something of a muckraker who is tolerated only
in the name of
free speech and spicy
repartee.
But when a writer approaches a topic with the conclusion and
then seeks
evidence to support it, would you call
this responsible journalism? Certainly
gymnastics
has its warts, but no more or less so than any other sport. Either
you want to solve the problems or eliminate the sport. If
Ms. Ryan was
genuinely interested in solving the
problems, she would have been far more
balanced in
her approach, and would have suggested a way for all concerned to
work together to find solutions.
But Ms. Ryan's
objective is, I feel, pretty clearly belied by her approach.
She gravitates
toward the dark, somewhat anecdotic side of the sport, seeking
the excesses, the extremes, and uses those to condemn the
sport in general
rather than the perpatrators in particular. Anyone who has even a
pedestrian
relationship with gymnastics as it
exists in clubs today would agree that
there is
much good that Ms. Ryan inexplicably ignores.
What further discredits
Ms. Ryan is her target audience. She seeks to sell
this
book NOT to gymnasts, skaters, and sports professionals, but to the mass
market, who are collectively posessed
with an even lesser apprehension of
gymnastics
than the author herself. When you toss this ugly little snapshot
of gymnastics into a group of people never before exposed to
it, they will
see gymnastics as ugly. That is both
bad for the sport in general, and
unhelpful in
genuinely making any positive changes. If this is not "yellow
journalism" in the most objective reading of the term,
I ask all and
sundry--what is?
So I call
Ms. Ryan's work (not Ms. Ryan, mind you) yellow journalism, not as
a gymnast, coach, or parent (which I have never been), not
as a
self-interested club manager (which I am no
longer and never will be again,)
and not as a
professional member of the USAG (which I gave up nearly a year
ago,) but as someone who knows a pile of fertilizer when I
smell one.
Fini. As usual, flamethrowers use
e-mail only, please.
David
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 09:51:32
-0700
From: ***@BETA.TRICITY.WSU.EDU
Subject:
Good Responses
Yesterday, Courtney wrote:
> Another which
I really don't understand is people seem to think that if you
> do gymnastics you are automatically going or want to go to
the Olympics. I
> believe that this is related to the belief that if you do
gymnastics you are
> like Kim Zmeskal.
"Can you do those flips like Kim Zmeskal
or are you as
> good as her." Anyhow, a zillion times when I have told
people I do
> gymnastics they are like,"
Oh, are you going to go to the Olympics, or do you
> want
to?" Yes folks, it is possible
to do a sport without going to the
> olympics.
Maybe people ask this about every sports but I don't think so.
>
One reward I think gymnastics has given me is to be more confident and
>
courageous in situations.In
gymnastics, you have to just go for tricks even
> when
you are scared, otherwise you will
never get them.This attitude of
> having to just push yourself to "go for it," even
if you're scared can carry
> over to many other
obstacles and situations in life too.
> Well, thats all I can think of for now.
> Courtney
:)
You have a very good attitude. I am not a gymnast myself, but one
good
response I thought of to "Oh, are you
going to the Olympics, or do you
want to?" is
something like, "Well, only X% (2%??) of gymnasts
make it to
the elite level and even less than that
make it to the Olympics. So the odds
are against
me there. But I do gymnastics because I really enjoy the sport for
the courage it gives me and gives me a good aspect of
teamwork, etc." And
if the person's really
interested you can further _educate_ them. Maybe
this
statistic and others like it will start a chain reaction and, maybe
in 50 years or so, we will be rid of many gymnastic
stereotypes (probably
not, but we can hope.)
Anyway,
good luck with fielding questions.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 12:05:40
-0600
From: ***@MERLE.ACNS.NWU.EDU
Subject:
Re: more gymn stuff
>Well! It looks like top athletes hit their
>prime in their 20s
and 30s across the board...
>strength, flexibility,
endurance, speed, etc...
>
>Therefore,
the same should be true for
>gymnastics. Why isn't it? Any
opinions out there?
I think the strength-to-weight ratio
is the key (age-limiting) factor here.
>Looking in from the
outside, there doesn't appear to
>be an
infrastructure for elite gymnastics after college.
>Just out of curiousity, would an independent gym
>coach a woman after 18?
Is cost a problem here?
My former club coach had a rule
that any team gymnast who stuck it out
through
high school could come back and workout at anytime for free. He
even
coached me at no cost for 2 summers when I was home between collegiate
seasons. I
still take my grips with me to the gym when I go back to visit
him. :)
- Allison
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 10:58:17
-0700
From: ***@ENG.SUN.COM
Subject:
Re: more gymn stuff
I'm not sure I can buy
the strength-to-weight ratio
arguments for why
gymnasts peak at age 15 rather than
the 20s and
30s.
I'm only 10 pounds off my age 15 weight at the ripe
old age of 38.
So I don't think you HAVE to be heavier
as
you get older...we just gain weight 'cuz we
don't
exercise as much.
As far as
strength goes, you get stronger the longer
you
workout.. we're talking years here. Weight
training
makes a huge difference in strength for a
relatively
small weight gain from muscle mass.
fyi, it's good to know that at least one club
supports
training after the high school
years.
Ruth
reference: ----------------------------------------
>>Well! It looks like top athletes hit their
>>prime in their
20s and 30s across the board...
>>strength,
flexibility, endurance, speed, etc...
>>
>>Therefore,
the same should be true for
>>gymnastics. Why isn't it? Any
opinions out there?
>I think the strength-to-weight
ratio is the key (age-limiting) factor here.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 14:32:54
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Mary Lou's rebuttle.
Lets have a show of
keyboards from those of us who would like to have the
"abusive pressure" of competition reversed and placed
squarely where it
belongs...on the media. Talk
about pressure...remember speed skating, anyone?
How many times does an athlete who has
been at the pinacle of world
competition
see one of their (very) few failures rerun over and over again
before it rips
their future ability to perform to shreds?
This same media
subordinates the local successes of young heros
and heroines
to the scorebox
two weeks after competition when they're preforming and
inproving at near miracle paces within their
regions. Nearly all world
class
gymnasts, especially in the US and other
non-socialist countries, come from
club
environments, not school systems.
When they make level nine or ten
before the
age of 11 who hears about it save the parents and the
"inside-the-gym" circle? You won't find it heralded in
the local paper,
that's for sure. Well, you get the drift. What would be nice is to see a
multiple gold medalist, live on world TV, answer a few short
questions at
their big olympic
interview, then say..."This is for all my compatriots from
the world over who worked their whole lives to get here and
for one reason or
another fell short...'the
media din't
know or care who we were until they
thought they
could get millions from advertisers exploiting our efforts, and
especially, our failures. I didn't need you to get here and
I don't need you
to help me with my choice tomove on with my life, or win again should I
decide to remain in the athletic arena. We love your
viewers, our spectators
who come to the local
gyms, fields, whatever to see us when we're on our way
up,
but the media, we can live just fine without. Therefore, this interview
is terminated, and so is my interest in you.' ".
Just
a thought.///Don
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 15:08:52
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: More Comments on Little Girls In P Boxes
I haven't read the book,
but I think it should be recognized that not so nice
things
happen behind the scenes in gymnastics training. But don't things
like
this happen in every sport when training on a competitive level. I mean
I know that at my school (I
just graduated from high school) kids on the
wrestling
and crew team run around in sweatsuits and so on in
order to make
the weight categories. I mean I don't think the coaches are
calling them
pregnant animals or anything, but
they feel they must lose weight in order to
reach
the competition level. Nobody
should feel they have to do that no
matter what
age. Or some other kid I was
talking too said that for the
football team they
were forced to practice for hoursfully clothed with
all
the padding and everything in August when it
was higher than 90 degrees
outside. So my point is that every sport has
problems that must be faced,
but that doesn't make
it less of a great sport. Sure
there are a million
horror stories about the
little gymnasts, but it seems to me there are
probably
just as many for other athletes on high skill levels. It just seems
ridiculous
that the media seems to think this is limited to gymnastics.
Courtney
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 14:50:56
EST
From: ***@PCH.GC.CA
Subject:
Re[2]: more gymn stuff
I'm
not sure I can buy the strength-to-weight ratio
arguments
for why gymnasts peak at age 15 rather than
the
20s and 30s.
I'm only 10 pounds off my age 15 weight at the ripe
old age of 38.
So I don't think you HAVE to be heavier
as
you get older...we just gain weight 'cuz we
don't
exercise as much.
As far as
strength goes, you get stronger the longer
you
workout.. we're talking years here. Weight
training
makes a huge difference in strength for a
relatively
small weight gain from muscle mass.
fyi, it's good to know that at least one club
supports
training after the high school
years.
Ruth
reference:
----------------------------------------
>>Well! It looks like top athletes hit their
>>prime in their
20s and 30s across the board...
>>strength,
flexibility, endurance, speed, etc...
>>
>>Therefore,
the same should be true for
>>gymnastics. Why isn't it? Any
opinions out there?
>I think the strength-to-weight
ratio is the key (age-limiting) factor here.
I really don't know
to much about this seeing how I've never competed, but I
think
that girls at age 15 or 14 are stronger than women at 20-25. Having
watched
older gymnists at the college level and younger ones
like Amanda Borden
you can almost see the strength
difference. I think alot also has to do with
weight
distrobution.
I think?????
David Gegear
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 17:37:17
-0600
From: ***@MERLE.ACNS.NWU.EDU
Subject:
Re: Re[2]: more gymn
stuff
>I really don't know to much about this seeing how I've never
competed, but I
>think that girls at age 15 or
14 are stronger than women at 20-25.
Having
>watched older gymnists at the college level and younger ones like Amanda
Borden
>you can almost see the strength
difference. I think alot also has to do with
>weight
distrobution.
I think?????
I agree that weight distribution is a
factor. Maybe to be more precise,
it
is the "strength - to - moment of
inertia" ratio that matters.
Certainly there are some great
collegiate+ gymmnasts, most of whom
continue
to improve and get stronger with
experience and training. For
someone who
has "grown up" doing
gymnastics, I don't think age/size necessarily imposes
limitations. For someone starting out in gymnastics,
however, I think such
factors probably do matter,
particularly when learning certain skills.
- Allison
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 8 Jun 1995 to 9 Jun 1995
***********************************************