GYMN-L Digest - 12 Jun 1995 to 13 Jun 1995
There
are 12 messages totalling 418 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. men's
regional qualifiers (3)
2.
"little girls..." (2)
3. Layout body position.
4. Something Positive
5. practice
time, burn out, and pushing
6.
GYMN-L Digest - 11 Jun 1995 to 12 Jun 1995
7. GBR v AUS (M/W)
8. Contortionists' Web Page
9. rewards
& stereotypes
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 23:28:49 -0400
From: ***@PHARM.MED.UPENN.EDU
Subject:
men's regional qualifiers
The men's regional qualifiers will be held
the first weekend in august.
The locations will be: Temple Univ. (Phila., PA), Ohio State Univ. (Columbus,
OH)
Oklahoma Univ. (Norman, OK), UCLA
(Los Angeles, CA) and Stanford (Oakland, CA)
I have also heard that
Scott Keswick is back in the gym - doing light training.
He is also going
to try to come to USA's and perform a few routines, but
not
actually compete.
Mayland
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 21:28:10
-0700
From: ***@OREGON.UOREGON.EDU
Subject:
"little girls..."
Julianne MacNamara
was in middle school in 1980, so she was at most 18 in
the
1984 Olympics.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 12 Jun 1995 21:35:27
PDT
From: ***@CISCO.COM
Subject:
Re: Layout body position.
Out of interest why is a
layout (I think that's the gymnastic term)
hollow,
ie. hyper-extended, and not
straight? In trampolining this
hyper-extension
is generally frowned upon ...
In gymnastics, layouts are supposed to
be straight as well. It can be
a
little hard to crank around a double-layout type
move from the height of
the upper uneven bar, or
on floor. (Some men manage...) You'll notice
that
the twisting single layouts tend to be much straighter.
Chops
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 02:23:13
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: "little girls..."
>Julianne MacNamara
was in middle school in 1980, so she was at most 18 in
the
1984 Olympics.<
Don't know where this came from (did this get sent
to the list by mistake, or
did I miss a message?),
but anyway, I thought she was 19.
Which would make
her old enough for the '80
Olympic team (18 would make old enough too, but
only
if she turned 19 sometime in '84).
:-)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 02:20:34
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: men's regional qualifiers
>The men's regional qualifiers will
be held the first weekend in august.
The
locations will be: Temple Univ. (Phila.,
PA), Ohio State Univ. (Columbus,
OH) Oklahoma Univ. (Norman, OK), UCLA (Los
Angeles, CA) and Stanford
(Oakland, CA)<
Stanford is in Palo
Alto, CA.
:-)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 09:47:01
-0400
From: ***@A1.CSOC.UMC.DUPONT.COM
Subject:
Something Positive
Anne wrote:
>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.
That
would be me.
Well, I guess that I've been remiss in thanking everyone
who offered
suggestions and support both through
posts and private email. It's
been
great fun working with Vince the last couple
of months, watching him attack
everything with
determination and a great attitude.
We started him off in a
small class where
one of us could always give him our full attention, but I
have found that he is quite capable of working on skills
without constant
supervision. Therefore, we just moved him into a
larger beginner class where
he could be with other
kids his own age (he's six for those people who missed
the
original discussion).
Vince is making great strides in all aspects of gymn except vault.
This
seems to be a little frustrating for
him (being the one thing he can't join
in with),
and is the thing I am thinking the hardest about right now. Other
than
that one event he is doing great and (I hope) having fun.
Here are
some thoughts that I have, developed both from observation as well
as responses to my original post:
- We use
different body shapes to change both our moment of inertia as well
as our center of gravity. There are many times that we choose a
body shape
that moves the CG to the outside of the
body. The backward roll is a
good
example where we move the CG to a point
outside of the body and to the other
side of the
center of rotation to complete the roll.
This happens
intuitively and most of us
teach the roll without much thought to the
mechanics
involved. Without legs, Vince is
not able to move his CG very far
from its natural
center (which is much higher in the torso than most
gymnasts)
and therefor has difficulty with skills that require this
technique, no matter how simple they may seem. Understanding this has made
it easier to develop new techniques as we go along.
-
I asked if anyone had suggestions about the tap swing, and I believe it
was
Texx who commented that he might be able to
generate enough power from
curvature of the spine
to do a giant swing. Allison
suggested a weight belt
to help with the
swing. At this point, I think that
Vince will be able to do
a giant swing (if he
chooses to stick with gymnastics) without any prosthetic
assistance,
but more advanced HB skills may require the weight belt (an
excellent idea I might add). I guess I should qualify that last
statement by
saying that he is already able to
generate a tap swing to about 20 degrees
below horz. which, IMHO, is great for a
beginner.
- An interesting discovery I made is that he is more
comfortable in a planche
position
than a handstand. He is much more
stable in the planche (makes
sense
when you think about it) and has incredibly strong shoulders from
walking on his hands his whole life. We've been working a good bit on
developing a better handstand.
- I think the thing
he likes best about the gym is the abundance of padded
surfaces
everywhere. Getting around on your
hands must take a toll on the
wrists, so the hour
of running around on the mats is great fun for him.
All in all, I
think that this has been a great experience for both of us and
I look
forward to (hopefully) many years of coaching Vince. If anyone has
any
more suggestions or comments, I am always listening.
Jim
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 10:41:50
-0700
From: ***@ENG.SUN.COM
Subject:
practice time, burn out, and pushing
HI! HI!
There seems to
be some talk on the alias about amount of time
in
the gymn and what is too much, etc. I thought I'd post
what our gym does and what I've noticed regarding burn
out.
C squad (level 1-4): 2 hours X 2 days plus
1 optional day
B squad (level 5): 2 hours X
3 days plus 1 optional day
A squad (level 5+): 3 hours X 5
days plus 1 optional day
( I believe that the A squad requires a score of
31.00 or better on their level 5 routines but
I'm not
100%
sure.)
My daughter is 10 years old. She started on the C squad
last
January and is now moving up to the B squad. The amount of
time
in the gymn seems to fit her... she's progressing
well
without burning out or getting tired of it.
There are girls
on the both C and B that are
younger than her (8). Some
of them seem to be dropping out of the B squad. I think
that
the time in the gymn
is too much at that age or maybe they're
progressing
too slowly or maybe they've been at it too long...
since
age 5/6. Frankly, physically
maturity, mental maturity,
and attention span are
key in progressing and in keeping
injury free...
and those just comes with age.
My daughter is just now getting into
it. She wants to do
extra workouts this summer and she wants to do more
ballet.
She KNOWS that ballet helps on the floor and on the beam
plus she now likes ballet for itself. She doesn't talk much
about competitiveness, but I know that she wants to do
well
'cuz she's asked
for the extra classes in ballet and wants
to go to
all of her optional workouts.
But I'm VERY careful NOT to push her
because then one of two
things will happen: (1) she'll dig in her heels, revolt,
and
quit gymnastics completely and (2) she'll burn
out, get sick of
gymnastics, and quit gymnastics
completely. Either way she
quits gymnastics.
I firmly believe that gymnastics
is a wonderful building block
sport and is just
plain fun. It supports agility,
flexibility,
strength, acrobatics, generousness
towards competitors, team
solidarity, good work
ethics, consistency, and a healthy
attitude
towards perfectionism.
Now I do get competitive myself and want her to
improve and
do more and do better and move up more
quickly. So in that,
her head may be straighter than mine. But I keep telling
myself that if I want to get so competitive, I can
channel
those desires into my career (take more
classes) or into my
running (get more consistent
with training).
I have to say that my father did the pushing part
with
me with running when I was a kid. Granted I will never
put down my own successes AND my kids DO brag to their
friends about my successes. BUT I have to tell you that
at the age of 18, I found out that my father cared more
about my success in track and road racing than my own
emotional health. It was quite a shock. (At the time, I was
in the hospital from being in a car/motorcycle
accident.)
I'm SURE you don't want to hear the gorey
details.
BUT I don't want my daughter to EVER think that I
consider
her success at a sport more important
than being a healthy,
happy, loved, and
well-adjusted human being.
Of course, I'm also very happy that she is
choosing to take
more classes and put more time
in. But last time I pushed
Rita
in a sport (diving), (I thought it would be good for
her),
it poisoned her for a year. Just
one lesson with a
diving coach who pushed too hard
did it. She wouldn't dive
into the pool for fun
for one year and even now I can't get
her to take
lessons (two years later).
One thing that I've learned from my own experiences
with
running and weight lifting and from watching
the top level
athletes in track and in the
marathon over the years;
there are no quick
fixes. The successful athlete is
the
athlete that is consistent, keeps at it the
longest, and
stays injury free the longest.
Anyway,
who knows what she'll decide next year or the year
after
that... she has an older brother
who has been one
of the top league baseball
players since he was 9 years old.
This spring, at the age of 15, he dropped
the sport cold and
switched to roller
hockey... there goes any
remote
possibilities of partial athletic
scholarships...
oh well, at least hockey burns
more of his nervous energy
and keeps him out of
trouble... at least when he's
practicing.
;-))
Ruth, a mom in Mountain View, CA
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 15:06:21
-0400
From: ***@HUGSE1.HARVARD.EDU
Subject:
Re: GYMN-L Digest - 11 Jun 1995 to 12 Jun 1995
I just want to thank Sharai
for her
thoughtful and thorough analysis
of
"Little Girls In Pretty Boxes."
I agree with everything you said,
and have
been wanting to say so, but haven't had the time.
Thanks, Sharai! --
Kiki
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 23:05:06
BST
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
GBR v AUS (M/W)
Great Britain vs Australia
============================
Bletchley,
England. 10/11 June,
1995
This meet also doubled up as the "English
Championships"
(well, for those competing who
are English anyway!)
Mens
----
1. Brett Hudson
(AUS)
2. Paul
Bowler
(GBR)
3. Andrei Kravtsov (AUS)
4. Lee McDermott (GBR)
5. Brennon Dowrick (AUS)
6. Dominic Brindle (GBR)
7. Austin Woods
(GBR)
8. Craig Heap
(GBR)
9. Peter
Hogan
(AUS)
10. Stephen Frew
(GBR)
11. Brendan Mand
(AUS)
12. Nathan Kingston (AUS)
13. Pavel Mamine
(AUS)
14. Daniel Gregson (AUS)
15.
Shane Lyons
(GBR) (only did
compulsories)
Team
----
1. Australia 539.300
2. Great Britain
539.000
- Marvin Campbell injured his archilles
tendon a week before the
meet thus he did not take part.
Womens
------
1. Annika Reeder (GBR)
2. Zita Lusack
(GBR)
3. Jenevieve Preston (AUS)
4. Joanna Hughes (AUS)
5. Sonia Lawrence (GBR)
6. Gemma Cuff
(GBR)
7. Lisa Monro
(AUS)
8. Gaby Fuchs
(GBR)
9. Nicole Kantek (AUS)
10.
Clare Cribbs
(AUS)
11. Jenny Cox
(GBR)
Team
----
1. Great Britain
372.750
2.
Australia
366.375
- Ruth Moniz flew over with the squad but did not
compete, may be due to
an injury.
- Only the top five scores count (since
Ruth Moniz was a late pull out)
- Karin Szymko
was not there (maybe injury?).
- 4 out of 5 Austalian
girls fell off the beam compared to Britain's only
one (Sonia
Lawrence).
Sherwin
with thanks
to Sarah Baldwin at _Gym Stars_ for providing the results
and info.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 20:41:04
-0400
From: ***@PANIX.COM
Subject:
Contortionists' Web Page
There is a "Contortionists and
Flexibility Home Page" at:
http://www.escape.com/~silverbk/bender.html
with a lot of downloadable JPEGs. There are also links to other
related
pages, and Gymn's
Page is one of the links. :)
Debbie
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 17:48:20
-0700
From: ***@NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Re: men's regional qualifiers
> I have also heard that Scott
Keswick is back in the gym - doing light
training.
>
He is also going to try to come to USA's and perform a few routines, but
>
not actually compete.
How
bad was his accident? Does anyone
know anymore details about
it
and his recovery?
Laura :)
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 18:49:41
-0700
From: ***@HALCYON.COM
Subject:
rewards & stereotypes
Hello, all. Thanks so much for all the great responses i
received-i
wound up using more than a few of them in my paper.
To be exact:
stereotypes:
How
when people find out that you're a gymnast, their
first
question is "Can you do the
splits?" (or, alternately, a backflip). The
second question is "Can you show me?" Of course,
this is always asked while
you're wearing jeans,
standing on cement.
When
you won't demonstrate for them, they wil proceed
to
demonstrate just what they mean to you.
However, these crazy people never
seem to get
hurt.
How
everyone thinks you're going to the olympics.
They
expect you to be able to do what's on tv.
Regardless of how much gymnastics exposure anyone has had, aske
them and they will tell
you that the beam is four inches wide.
Rewards:
Discipline & how it applies to "real life". Quite an
advantage,
if you ask me.
Learning how to make yourself do things. Also,
learning the
courage to "go for"
something.
Time
management. especially if you work out often.
Learning how to focus & concentrate.
Learning the fundamentals of cause & effect relationships-i.e. if
i
do my conditioning, i will get stronger and it will
make my gymnastics
easier/better. Unfortunately,
some of us do not learn this exact
relationship.
:)
That's about it. And, as the preliminary work from the teacher has
it, i
got an
"A". So thanks a lot, everyone! I'm going to be off this list
for
the summer, as i
will be working away from home and my computer. I've
really
enjoyed gymn for the short time i've
been on it, so i hope to
re
join in the fall. Thanks again, and Solong!
-stephanie
------------------------------
End of GYMN-L
Digest - 12 Jun 1995 to 13 Jun 1995
*************************************************