GYMN-L Digest - 11 Jun 1995 to 12 Jun 1995
There
are 8 messages totalling 322 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Rudi on floor (2)
2. more on rudi's
3. in "IG"
4. Tina B's rudi pass
5. English Mens
Championships
6. 1995 China
Cup results
7. Pretty Girls in
Little Boxes
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 02:25:05
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Rudi on floor
It just occurred to me that I should clear something
up from my last post --
while a Rudi doesn't have
to be in the layout position, I'm pretty sure only
the
layout Rudi was an E (now devalued to a D).
Kathy E. writes:
>Tina
Brinkman of ASU does a pretty good [tucked Rudi], but it still
looks clumsy to me.<
Is she the one who does
tucked Rudi-ff-ff-double
back? While the tucked Rudi
may be somewhat unattractive, I think that's a cool
pass.
:-)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 12:05:30
BST
From: ***@CS.BHAM.AC.UK
Subject:
more on rudi's
In trampolining
twisting single somersaults get the same tariff (difficulty
score) regardless of shape, ie. a tucked rudi gets the same value
as a piked
one, as a
straight one. However, as some people have pointed out, straight
looks best.
Christian
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 07:35:36
-0700
From: ***@LELAND.STANFORD.EDU
Subject:
Re: Rudi on floor
Adriana ponders:
>
> Kathy E.
writes:
>
> >Tina Brinkman of ASU does a pretty good [tucked
Rudi], but it still
> looks clumsy to
me.<
>
> Is she the one who does tucked Rudi-ff-ff-double back? While the tucked Rudi
> may be somewhat unattractive, I think that's a cool
pass.
>
Yes, Tina is the one who does this combination. (Actually,
did <sniff>,
since she has finished her
collegiate career.) I thought it was pretty cool
that
(in collegiate scoring) she was doing an E and a D in the same pass.
Then
again, Tina is pretty cool in general.
After all, she *is* from
Wisconsin and the Pac-10. :) It's too bad her senior year was
shortened
by a concussion. She made it to NCAA's, but I don't
remember whether she
did this combination. (I might have been changing lenses at
the time.)
-Patrick
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 14:17:13
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
in "IG"
Hi everyone!
I just got this month's issue
of "International Gymnast," and I thought I'd
post
some things that might be of interest to those of you who don't get any
of the mags:
1) "Superstars of Gymnastics"
will be on the USA Network on Thursday, July
13 at 9 pm
EDT, and then again on Saturday, July 15 at 1 pm EDT.
2) There was an
article about Cirque du Soleil and since I've seen some
questions
on this forum about gymnasts who are in it, here are the names
listed: Philippe
Chartrand, Yves Decoste,
Mario Pontbriand, Terry Bartlett,
Mike Rice,
Terry Notary and Natasha Hallett.
3) Lots of
discussion (and GREAT pictures) about the controversy over the
Chinese gymnasts and their eneven bars at
the Visa Challenge. Included
is
part of an interview with Jackie Fie in which
she says the competition was
not an FIG event, so
she didn't want to interfere, adding that she wasn't
saying
whether she agreed or disagreed with the value of the routines.
4) There was
also an update on Michelle Campi. She went to one of the NBA
doctors for a second opinion about her back, and that doctor
gave her the
go-ahead, but apparenly
it's been hard for her to get Nunno to believe
it.
She says she may return to
American Twisters after high school and is hoping
to
compete in college next fall.
5) Milano USA is coming out with a
Kim Zmeskal line (leotards)!
Well, I hope
this interests some of you!
Ann Marie
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 18:35:40
EDT
From: ***@PRODIGY.COM
Subject:
Tina B's rudi pass
Yep, she's the one who
does the running tucked rudi ff
ff
double tuck!!! I just
about flew out of my seat when I saw
that...
AMAZING!!! But I have to admit that Jenny Hansen's
handspring
front with a full twist vault had the same effect
on
me!<G>
Anne :)
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 01:07:21
BST
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
English Mens Championships
English Mens Championships
(Bletchley)
1. Paul Bowler
(Manchester Central) 55.35
2. Lee
McDermott
(Sutton)
54.30
3. Dominic Brindle (Leeds)
53.30
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 19:32:57
-0600
From: ***@HARRIER.SASKNET.SK.CA
Subject:
1995 China Cup results
Hi everyone,
Just got a fax today with
these results. I couldn't make out
a few of
the scores so I hope they add up. (The totals are right, but some
of the event scores may be incorrect.) It appears that there were two
separate competitions.
Don't know exactly how things went about.
1995 CHINA
'SOARING DRAGON' CUP
MAY 27-28 - CHENG'DU
WOMEN'S ALL-AROUND
Vault Bars Beam Floor Total
1 - Mo Huilan
CHN-A
9.837 10.000
9.850 9.700 39.387
2 - Liu Xuan
CHN-B 9.737 9.875 9.850 9.925 39.382
3 - Kellee
Davis
USA 9.600 9.775 9.800 9.700 38.875
4 - Ji Liya
CHN-B
9.775 9.325 9.800 9.500 38.400
5 - Lyutov Sheremeta UKR 9.587 9.700 9.250 9.800 38.337
6 - Elvire Teza FRA 9.717 9.325 9.800 9.400 38.242
7 - Mohini Bhardwaj
USA 9.600 9.775 9.250 9.500 38.125
8 - Marleen
Lavoie CAN 9.275 9.625 9.700 9.300 37.900
9 - Qiao Ya
CHN-A
9.562 9.875 8.500 9.875 37.812
10 - Maria Olaru ROM 9.650 9.625 8.600 9.675 37.550
plus
11 others
WOMEN'S EVENT FINAL RESULTS
Vault
Balance Beam
1 - Mo Huilan
CHN-A
9.837 1t - Liu Xuan
CHN-B 9.850
2 - Ji Liya CHN-B 9.775 1t - Mo Huilan
CHN-A 9.850
3 - E.Teza FRA 9.717 3t - K.Davis USA 9.800
4 - M.Olaru ROM 9.650 3t - E.Teza FRA 9.800
5t - M.Bhardwaj
USA 9.600 5 - M.Lavoie CAN 9.700
5t - K.Davis USA 9.600 6t - L.Sheremeta UKR 9.250
7 - L.Sheremeta UKR 9.587 6t - M.Hashiguchi JPN 9.250
8 - Kim Yoon-Ji KOR 9.425 6t - M.Bhardwaj
USA 9.250
Uneven
Bars
Floor Exercise (may be incorrect)
1 - Mo Huilan CHN-A 10.000 1 -
Liu Xuan CHN-B 9.925
2 - Liu Xuan CHN-B 9.875 2 - L.Sheremeta
UKR 9.800
3t
- M.Bhardwaj USA 9.775 3t-
Mo Huilan CHN-A 9.700
3t - K.Davis USA 9.775 3t- K.Davis USA 9.700
5 - L.Sheremeta UKR 9.700 5 - M.Olaru ROM 9.675
6t - M.Olaru ROM 9.625 6 - M.Hashiguchi JPN 9.600
6t - M.Lavoie CAN 9.625 7 - N.Ziehfreund GER 9.525
8 - N.Ziehfreund
GER 9.525 8 - M.Bhardwaj
USA 9.500
1995
CHINA CUP
JUNE 1 - WU'HAN
(DON'T HAVE VAULT OR FLOOR RESULTS,
SORRY)
UNEVEN BARS
BALANCE BEAM
1 - Mo Huilan
CHN-A
9.900 1 - Ji Liya CHN-B 9.875
2 - Elvire Teza FRA 9.850 2 - Mo Huilan
CHN-A 9.800
3 - L.Sheremeta UKR 9.825 3 - M.Bhardwaj
USA 9.625
4 - Qiao Ya CHN 9.800 4 - Elvire Teza FRA 9.600
5t - Kellee Davis USA 9.775 5 - M.Hashiguchi JPN 9.500
5t - M.Bhardwaj
USA 9.775 6 - Maria Olaru ROM 9.475
7 - Maria Olaru ROM 9.750 7 - L.Sheremeta
UKR 9.200
8 - M.Lavoie CAN 9.475 8 - Kellee Davis USA 9.100
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 21:40:07
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Pretty Girls in Little Boxes
Like many of you, the discussion of this
book on the list made me curious
enough to read
it, when I probably never would have otherwise. It's been
interesting
to follow the discussion as I've been reading it, and I wanted to
add my impressions of both the book and the discussion of
it. My daughter,
who's 10 and in a recreational gym program, grabbed the book
as soon as she
saw it, and finished it in a day,
so we've been discussing it, too.
Someone commented that the book is written
from a feminist perspective, and
I think that's really key
to understanding it. The author
makes it clear
that her intention is to prove a
thesis, that there are some abuses that
occur at
the elite levels of gymnastics and figure skating that have their
roots in the values of today's society. It feels to me like her intention
in
the book is to explore how those values have
led to a corruption of what is
good and valuable
in these sports at the elite level, and also have caused
many
people to not want to acknowledge the abuses, much less take action to
correct them. If she were a more skilled writer, it might
come through more
clearly that she is trying to
indict society for creating an atmosphere that
almost
guarantees that this will happen, and to be a catalyst for change.
Some
of the cultural values she identifies as contributing to the problem
are obsession with appearance and with winning, and an
ambivalence toward
women as athletes because when
women are athletes they don't fit into the
"pretty
boxes" constructed for
them. Her purported purpose is to
understand
the societal forces surrounding the
problem, to expose the issues, and create
a sense
of outrage that will lead to action to change the situation. Her
purpose
is not to trash the sports, nor to present a balanced picture of what
the sports are like generally. I'm not saying that she accomplished
her
goal, or that she's a good writer, or that
everything she says is true.
But
I think she's got some valid points. Because grace and beauty are so much
a
part of skating and gymnastics, and because
youth, thinness and beauty are
elements that
contribute to success at the elite level, these sports are more
in conformance with prevalent values than other sports
are. The athleticism,
hard work, and dedication of the participants is not as
obvious as in other
sports; it's supposed to look
like it's easy and natural. No one
wants to
look too closely at what it takes to
achieve this, or what we're really
asking of these
girls and young women, what the price is in human terms for
succeeding.
In that context, I have comments on
some of the thigs that have been said in
the discussion.
1. The book should present more of the
positives of the sport.
Why? The author states her purpose in the
introduction, and that purpose is
not to present a
balanced picture of these sports, but to examine some
problems
that exist at the elite level, and to explain their causes. She is
presenting examples that support her argument, which seems
like a reasonable
strategy to me. The abuses may not be the norm, but they
are what's relevent
to
her thesis.
2. Gymnastics
and skating are not the only sports where there are problems
and abuses.
True, but so what? The reason it's so easy to think of
examples in tennis,
football, etc,
is that they have been written about and presented in the
media in a variety of forms. But this book is about the interplay
between
society's values and characterisitics
of gymnastics and figure skating, so
how are these
things relevent?
She isn't saying other sports are perfect,
and
she does mention some of the abuses in these sports. Her focus is on
what
is unique about gymnastics and figure skating in terms of how problems
are recognized and dealt with.
3. The abusive methods of coaches like Bela Karolyi work.
Yes,
and Mussolini made the trains run on time, and Hitler revitalized the
German
economy. Do the ends justify the
means? Are we, as a society,
comfortable with tolerating abuse so long as the result is a
champion? These
things are not happening in a vacuum, and there is a
question of
responsibility here.
4. No one is forcing these girls to
compete, to tolerate the abuse.
Maybe not, though there are some
pretty heavy pressures on these girls.
Decisions they make are influenced to a
great extent the expectations of
the people who
are important in their lives, and in living up to those
expectations. And my experience with children and
teens (including myself
when younger) is that the
choices they make are not always in their own best
interests. That's why it's so important for the
adults involved to keep a
clear view of the
situation, and step in when things get out of hand, to
really
protect the best interests of the girls as people rather than looking
at just one dimension of their lives, gymnastics. We need to
do a reality
check once in a while, to make sure
we understand what kind of messages we're
sending
through our actions as well as our words.
To me, there's a hint of
blaming the
victims when we say they could choose to quit. Have they really
been
prepared to make a rational decision?
In the context of their lives,
how free are
they to oppose the wishes of the authority figures in their
lives, like parents and coaches? If their sense of self is based on their
performance in the sport,
won't it be difficult for them to break away?
I don't agree with
everything the author is saying, and I'm not impressed
with her writing or her research methods, but I think she
raises some
important questions and that we need
to look more closely at some of the
issues, so we
can do a better job of providing talented gymnasts and skaters
with a healthy environment in which to succeed. The elite gymnastics
community needs to make sure that the sport is heading in a
direction that is
not destructive to the
participants. Virtues carried to extremes can become
harmful
and destructive. Like in other
areas of life, dedication and
discipline can
become obsession, and ambition can override common sense.
Children need to be encouraged to have
balance in their lives, to have the
larger picture
pointed out to them when their focus is too narrow. I've seen
gymnastics
teach my daughter many valuable things that I try to help her
apply to other areas of her life, and I regret that for many
young women,
these lessons become distorted and
perverted, and are destructive rather than
constructive.
Sharai
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 11 Jun 1995 to 12 Jun 1995
*************************************************