GYMN-L Digest - 14 Mar 1995 to 15 Mar 1995
There
are 24 messages totalling 799 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Pan Am Womens
AA
2. technique
(2)
3. Sports Illustrated
4. Values of skills
5. girls coach
needed
6. Collegiate Gymnastics
7. Questions (6)
8. Misc
9. Girls Coach Needed - There is
more
10. 1980 men's Polish
Olympic Team
11. more scoring etc (2)
12. Hi!
13. Scoring
14. Deductions for doing the same two
tumbling passes (2)
15. 1980
men's Polish Olympic
16. New Business
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 1995 23:59:31
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Pan Am Womens AA
The US Women swept the AA
medals at Pan Ams, however, it was a very close
competition due tobeam problems by
all three. Annia
Portuondo was leading at
one
point, before falling from UB to 4th.
Miller - Gold
Borden -
Silver
Chow - Bronze
A few tiny blurbs from the AP [less than 5%
of the piece]
``The balance beam is a strange animal,'' U.S. coach
Steve Nunno
said. ``This
time it bit us all in the butt.''
Borden, whose up-tempo routines drew
cheers from the packed house,
nailed a 9.825 on
the uneven bars. The Cincinnati native finished
second,
just 0.012 points behind Miller.
In the final event, Miller played it
safe with a solid vault. All Chow
needed was to
clean the beam, but she managed only a 9.225 and watched
the
gold evaporate.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 1995 23:08:10
-0700
From: ***@ASU.EDU
Subject:
Re: technique
>What about
the differnt mechanics of the twist? One of the reasons front tumbling
_should_ be rewarded is the difficulty of learning front
twisting. I know
fro
personal experience that
they at least feel different.<
Yes, front tumbling is difficult,
but is it really on par with the
other skills of
the same rating? Is a front-full
*really* as
difficult as a piked
full-in? Is a Rudi *really* as
difficult as a
double layout, double-double, etc? There is
no way it can be.
Everyone elite can throw a rudi
dismount, or a rudi second pass, on
floor. How many
gymnasts are dismounting floor with double layouts?
Double-doubles? Gutsu is the
only one I've ever seen doing this
(double lay
dismount on floor).
Sometimes I stop by the local gym and just watch
the kids having fun.
I watch one class one night for awhile,
and noticed one girl (14 or 15
maybe) doing front fulls.
("Let's do front-fulls!" she
said.) But no
way could she do a full-in. She could not even approach a
double-back.
This was the level 6 or 7 group, if I could tell by
their compos.
I'm sorry, but a front full should not be rated the
same as a full-in.
A Rudi should not be rated the same as a double
layout.
>(And
if it were truly
the same, why haven't we seen
more double fronts or front double fulls?)<
We
haven't seen more of these difficult E moves because everyone is
throwing Rudi's up the ying yang
and getting the same bonus. There
is
no incentive to go for true E moves with this code. This code was
supposed
to reward difficulty, but is has done nothing but the
opposite. One thing somes
up this code: (they should have cancelled
gymnastics
due to obvious lack of intelligence on part of the WTC) ff
layout ff being the same as ff layout-layout.
Hah!
>Granted, coaches have long noted (I remember an
article in the early '80's)
that little time is
(used to be) spent on front skills; they simply weren't
as
'impressive'.
What about on vault? A
handspring 2 1/2 twist off is an
INCREDIBLY difficult vault.I honetly believe it
is as difficult to learn as a
Yurchenko 2/1 twist.<
I don't recall anyone saying anything to the
effect that all front
skills are easier than all
backwards skills. Obviously that
would be
ridiculous, a double front vault is
harder than a Yurtchenko double
twist any way you look at it. A double front is harder than a
double
back on any event. A front with a full is harder than a
back with a
full. BUT IS A FRONT WITH A FULL AS HARD AS A
FULL-TWISTING DOUBLE
BACK????
Of course not, and they should not be rated the same.
>As
for the new compulsory vault of Yurchenko-1/2, Layout front: If done as
it
is described in the code, this is an INCREDIBLY difficult
vault. But the,
how
many women actually
complete the 1/2 PRIOR to the initiation of the layout
front? Most cheat into it like an Arabian.<
Right, and if it was a fair and just world,
nobody would get the
credit for doing this vault
wrong. Done correctly, this is
a
potentially beautiful vault. But I wouldn't know, I don't think
I've
seen it done correctly. Of course there is Podkopayeva,
the Lord and
Saviour of the Hristekieva,
but even she is a bit iffy on the twist.
But what judge will stand up and
penalize the gymnast for doing this
vault
incorrectly? I would have loved to
seen it at worlds, Hatagan,
Miller, and Milo etc all getting deducted for calling the wrong vault
when they did their Yurtchenko 1/2
to front pike. Boy would the
fit
have hit the shan
then. This would never happen, and
even I can't
blame the judges for not committing
political suicide by attempting to
penalize. Like I said, in a perfect world they
might, but until then
the safest thing to do is to
devalue this vault that no one is doing
anyway, in
the hopes of draining the pseudo-Hrist's out and
getting
some real vaulting in.
>[I
still like the Yurchenko-1/2
on, Front pike-1/2
off or Korchina's Y-1/2 on, pike Cuervo
off. These are
some
complicated
vaults!!!!!]<
Of course, now THESE are fab vaults. By the way, does anyone know when the
Omeliantchik was devalued to 9.9? It is listed as 10.00 in this code, and
I
wasn't aware of changes taking effect prior to
June of '95.
Amanda :-)
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 14 Mar 1995 23:09:27
-0700
From: ***@ASU.EDU
Subject:
Re: Sports Illustrated
>I actually thought that, for SI, the piece
on Shannon Miller was pretty
good.
The author really stood up for Shannon
and warned people not to count her
out. I was very surprised by how supportive
the author was towards her and
the sport in
general!<
Did we read the same article? It was a typical uniformed-media
slam
on gymnastics. It was the usual gymnastics article,
criticizing the
sport when, after the young
gymnasts "unfold their fragile wings" (gag
me)
their careers are over "seemingly 24 hours later" and they are
replaced by the latest crop of stars. What was the title and caption
of this article?
"Growing Pains: Shannon Miller is the latest in her
sport to learn that time takes its toll." I don't understand how
Shannon has
learned that from the 95 American Cup.
She fell off beam,
big deal, and it wasn't
because of her age. I doubt she
thinks that
is the reason. She won the American Classic last month
against the
same field, with Moceanu
in there as well. Where was the
article
then?
Where was the positive
article talking about her new skills and
routines
and how good she looks? There was
no article, because
gymnastics is not a serious
enough sport to SI to cover it without the
negative
angle. I get no information from
this magazine about
gymnastics that I would not
already have, and half of it is incorrect
anyhow. Borden is a big US star, being on the
last two world teams
and the alternate for one,
but she is described as being an
"unheralded oppenent" of Miller's. The quote from Nunno
is wrong, the
same one was the in the local paper
in Seattle and I think that one
was the correct
one. Instead of him saying it was
the first time she
has fallen off beam in
competition in four years he said it was the
second
time she had. (But that's wrong too, of course, but that may be
just Nunno, counting the two falls
of beam at 93 Worlds EF as one
fall, and ignoring
the two dismount falls (93 Worlds, 94 Nationals) as
she
didn't really fall *off*, and he probably forgot she fell off at
93 Nationals EF).
Anyway E.M. Swift does say not to count out Miller,
but the rest of the article (just look at the title!) seems
to
contradict that point, especially with the
ending, regarding Miller
and '96: "Time, and
perhaps the sands of time, will tell." Gag, gag,
gag.
Amanda
:-)
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 02:20:46
-0500
From: ***@TIGER.HSC.EDU
Subject:
Values of skills
I will have to agree with Amanda that the Code is a
'little' misguided
(my word, not hers). No, I don't think a front-full should be
worth
the same as a piked-full
in, but then remember the days of r.v. and
n.v.? Or inherent bonus? I actually liked those days because a
skill
could be a C and receive +0.2 bonus
points. Granted this system
was
totally conufsing at
times, but is the current one any better?
I
liked how unusual skills received bonus,
and especially how
originators of a skill received
credit for performing that skill.
I realize that front tumbling was
super value raised to increase its
popularity. I still remember when judges (and TV
commentators) would
bemoan a gymnast who performed
only front tumbling. She had no
back
tumbling--remember Margaret Ulett? 2/1 twisting front first pass.
(Granted she was never
very consistent with her other skills.)
And
Neil Thomas? (Is
this right?) He has a name on floor
because of his
2/1 twisting front.
No, a
front-full is not a full in, but just about every elite DID (or
DOES) a full-in. The
code has been misused, but the Code's purpose of
encouraging
front tumbling has worked. At the
highest level, gymnasts
with the highest
difficulty AND execution are rewarded accordingly.
[Albeit Piskun has had problems.] Judges know the difference--give us
some credit! :) And there are places to deduct outside of
difficulty
if a gymnast has an over-predominance
of a type of skill. [Yet how
often is this deduction taken? In theory Gutsu
should be deducted for
performing a skill
twice. Split leg does NOT qualify
as a difference
in body position. And she only used back tumbling. But who on earth
would
deduct? Or did?]
On the
subject of judging, after watching the Georgia/Alabama meet
(Thank you
Kathy!) I am again highly
disappointed. To score in the
190's
is unbelieveable. Once again nationals will be a
joke. Can we
say
10.0 fest? Granted the girl who
scored a 10.0 on floor had "no"
mistakes,
but a 10.0? I remember one judge
saying that college
judging = elite + 0.50. At least the men have it written into their
rules. Can you imagine? The top 6 collegiate women
competing
against, oh, say the Romanians. Were they to keep up their scores,
how could we lose?
:)
I realize that colleges are under pressure to keep their
programs and
keep up attendance. But women's programs are no longer in (as
much)
danger or folding. [Look at UCLA---it was a highly ranked
program
that DID fold.] Must we keep up this barage
of inflated scores?
Julius
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 10:51:24
GMT
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Re: technique
Amanda wrote:
> We haven't seen more of
these difficult E moves because everyone is throwing
> Rudi's up the ying yang and getting the same bonus. There is no incentive to
> go for true E moves with this code.
Haven't they
downgraded the Rudi now? Or when will the code change take
into effect?
> Of course not, and they should
not
> be rated the same.
There are so
many skills in gymnastics that are different in
difficulty
between one and the other, the FIG are trying to group them
into A to E but I guess when front tumbling started coming
into the
question they weren't sure what to do
with them and grade them as best
they could. I
hope they're learning from experience and will adjust
the
code accordingly (one hopes... I'm defending the FIG! Is this
coffee disgusting or what...)
If all the skills are
rated differently and we'll have categories
F,G,H,
etc. etc.
But of course they have some very wrong judgments as "front
full"
rated the same as "full-twisting
double back" that Amanda mentioned...
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 08:55:08
+0500
From: ***@HEDLEY.EAST.SUN.COM
Subject:
girls coach needed
I am posting the following
for my daughters' gym, Pro Gymnastics
Training Center in Marlboro NJ. The girls program has been totally
revamped this year, and they are looking to finish building
an all new
coaching team.
Leads and inquiries?
Please respond to the phone number listed or to me
via private email...
GIRLS LEVEL 4 THRU * COACHING POSITION
PART-TIME
MUST
BE RELIABLE, ENTHUSIASTIC, WORK WELL WITH STAFF
EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
HOURS AND PAY NEGOTIABLE
Thanks for the time, and if you know
of anyone please let them know...
sheri
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 09:15:44
-0500
From: ***@TIGER.HSC.EDU
Subject:
Collegiate Gymnastics
Don't get my wrong---I LOVE collegiate
gymnastics! And I agree that
if a gymanst who performs only two
passes, one a full twist receives a
9.7, a gymnasts
with a full-in, double back, and 2/1 full dismount
should
CERTAINLY receive a higher score.
If nothing else, I believe the
RANKING of the gymnasts is usually
correct. My complaint is that by the time the
best teams make it to
Nationals it becomes extremely difficult to separate
the top gymnasts.
Schools that do not have a traditionally strong program
suffer from
judging bias. [And don't tell me this isn't true. ANYONE who has
watched
our sport knows this.] I'm not
saying that it is impossible
to break onto the
national scene. Quite a few
'upstart' :) programs
have qualified to
nationals. And Jenny Hanson is an
excellent example
of an individual who has been
successful without the benefit of a
team.
My
favorite aspect of collegetate gymnastics is the team
competition.
One of the few comments ESPN made that I agree with is that
for the
first time for many of these gymnasts they
are truly competing as a
team. Especially at the elite level, gymnasts
often train and compete
individually. Once they get to college the focus
changes. Yes it is
important for the gymnasts to do well, but the team becomes
more
important. Also, if the gymnast has a bad day, her
teammates can
rally and compensate. I remember one meet at the U of
Illinois
vs. Wisconsin when Wisconsin women placed
1-2-3 individually and
placed the majority of the
individual event places but we (U of I) won
the
meet.
As for the actual scoring rules--Sherwin is absolutely correct
that it
is much easier to fulfill requirements at
the collegiate level. The
rules for NCAA competition were written to keep the scores
high. Once
again,
like elites, the top gymnasts easily fulfill their requirements
while others scramble to find bonus connections. And trust me, even
at the collegiate level it can be very difficult to find
some of that
bonus! My specialty is beam and unless the
gymnast has superior
tumbling skills the special
connection bonus can be a challenge.
[Unless the gymnast is an excellent
dancer. Ever notice how many
switch-leap to straddle jump combinations are in
routines? Or switch
leap to gainer back-handspring?]
Also, collegiate gymnast only do have 20 hours a week. While I
remember
the problems that arose when this rule was implimented
I
actually think it is better for the
gymnasts. Collegiate
gymnastics
is supposed to be a transition period
where the gymnast learns that
there is more to
life than gymnastics. Especially
for elites and many
level 10's--the majority of
their time has been spent training.
By
the time they reach college their bodies
are tired. Injuries happen.
Physical
changes occur that make it more difficult to do gymnastcs
UNLESS they were able to train through the changes. Remember Missy
Marlowe? She was in better shape her senior year
than when she was an
elite!
I will always
continue to support collegiate gymnastics.
I only wish
that there was a little more
sanity and reasoning in the
oh-so-complicated art
of judging. At
ALL levels.
Julius
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 09:23:51
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Questions
> Is American
gymnast Dominique Dawes planning to stick through 'til
> '96? The last I
heard, she had accepted a scholarship to Stanford.
> If she is
planning on Atlanta, it will be great to see how she goes.
I think
that's the plan ('96 I mean). She
had originally planned to
compete at Stanford, but
now she's signed with an agent, so she is no
longer
eligible for NCAA competition. But
I think she's still going.
Btw, she currently is getting over a broken foot.
>
> How did the
judges possibly evaluate Yeo-Hong Chuls' handspring 2
1/2
>
twisting vault at the 94 asian
Games? What is it's value in the Code
> Of Points?
Surely it is harder than many other 9.8 vaults!
I couldn't find a
handspring 2 1/2 twist. I found a
handspring 2/1
twist, and that's a 9.90. So a 2 1/2 would be 9.90 or 10.0.
> Does anyone know
the where abouts of Romanian sensation Claudia Rusan?
> Rusan made a splash at the 93 Junior Europeans and 93
Nikon
>
International, but I have heard nothing of her since. Is she
injured
>
perhaps?
I think someone posted a few
months back that Rusan retired because of a
back injury.
Does anyone remember if that's right?
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 16:57:37
MET
From: ***@SEPA.TUDELFT.NL
Subject:
Misc
Maybe it is a little late or already
mentioned (NBC super channel
Europe, only showed the American cup this
previous weekend)
Why does the cameraman has to take such a ridiculous
position to show
a bar routine? Half of the moves you can't see.
What
a good job Elfi Schlegel did, nice to see her back as
a reporter
I saw her competing at the Ennia Gold
cup in the early 80's and ever
since I am a big
fan of hers
Does anyone know the whereabouts of Camelia
Voinea?
Chantal,
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 11:15:23
+0500
From: ***@HEDLEY.EAST.SUN.COM
Subject:
Girls Coach Needed - There is more
Folks I know I already sent this
out, but I got a phone asking me to
change it to
full or part time. Once again this
is for a gym in
Marlboro New Jersey. It is a beautiful area (near the beach,
lots of
fun stuff).
Anyway here it is
again. Remember all leads/inquiries
should phone the
number listed or contact me via
PRIVATE email...
GIRLS LEVEL 4 THRU 8 COACHING POSITION
FULL/PART TIME
MUST
BE RELIABLE,ENTHUSIASTIC, WORK WELL WITH STAFF, DEPENDABLE
EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
HOURS AND PAY NEGOTIABLE
This really is a great place, with a
real "it's for the kids"
attitude. I wouldn't dream of putting my girls
anywhere else
(locally), because I really like the
attitude and style of the owners
and their
coaching staff.
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 11:18:02
+0500
From: ***@HEDLEY.EAST.SUN.COM
Subject:
1980 men's Polish Olympic Team
I know this sounds odd, but does anyone
have the names for the above
(coaches and
gymnasts)?
sheri
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 10:28:51
-0700
From: ***@ASU.EDU
Subject:
Re: Questions
>
> > How did the
judges possibly evaluate Yeo-Hong Chuls' handspring 2
1/2
> >
twisting vault at the 94 asian
Games? What is it's value in the Code
>
> Of
Points? Surely it is harder than many other 9.8 vaults!
>
> I
couldn't find a handspring 2 1/2 twist.
I found a handspring 2/1
> twist, and
that's a 9.90. So a 2 1/2 would be
9.90 or 10.00.
Aren't all men's vaults
maximum of 9.8? I believe that
under the current
thinking (of course that's the
same one that has a tucked double-double
equal to
a layout double-double) the 2 1/2 twist would be 9.8, and the
other vaults devalued.
Amanda :-)
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 10:37:05
-0700
From: ***@ASU.EDU
Subject:
more scoring etc
I lost the original post,
but Julius said something to the effect that
Gutsu
should have been deducted when she mounted and dismounted floor
with double layouts, because she repeated the skill, and
that her
mounting with a split leg double-lay
didn't count as different body
position from a
double layout.
Well anyway I don't think this is right, because I
don't believe there
is a deduction for repeating
skills. How many times have you
seen two
ff 1/4 in a
beam routine? Milosovici
for one, 93 world beam champ.
And a split-leg
double layout is a different skill and would have a
different
number and possibly value than a double layout. Also she
used
to mount with a whip to double layout, and dismount with a double
layout. Many
people have mounted with a whip to full-in and then
did
another full-in. Silivas, Gogean, Miller, Stobvchataya etc too many
to name. I believe in men's gym the gymnast is
allowed to do the same
skill twice but three times
is a deduction, maybe it is four I don't
remember. That's why Rustam
does his 15 Tkatchevs in exhibitions
only.
Amanda :-)
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 15:04:39
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: more scoring etc
[all
Code comments pertain to the women's Code]
> I lost the original
post, but Julius said something to the effect that
> Gutsu
should have been deducted when she mounted and dismounted floor
> with double layouts, because she repeated the skill, and
that her
> mounting with a split leg double-lay
didn't count as different body
> position from
a double layout.
Split legs generally isn't supposed to be a different
body position,
but I don't think it always
holds. For example, a layout
step-out on
BB is a C and a layout to 2 feet is a D, and I think in that
case the
different layouts count separately under
the rules for repeating
skills (see below):
>
>
Well anyway I don't think this is right, because I don't believe there is
>
a deduction for repeating skills. How many times have you seen two ff
> 1/4 in a beam routine? Milosovici for
one, 93 world beam champ. And a
> split-leg
double layout is a different skill and would have a different
> number and possibly value than a double layout. Also she used to mount
> with a whip to double layout, and dismount with a double
layout. Many
> people have mounted with a whip to full-in and then did
another full-in.
> Silivas, Gogean, Miller, Stobvchataya etc too many to name.
I believe in
> men's gym the gymnast is
allowed to do the same skill twice but three
> times
is a deduction, maybe it is four I don't remember. That's why
> Rustam
does his 15 Tkatchevs in exhibitions only.
You
can do a skill as many times as you want, without deduction, but
you can only get value-part credit for it twice, and then
only if it
is in a different combination (except
on UB, where it can be in the
same combination or
no combination). As for bonus, you
can only get
bonus for an extra D or E, or a
connection, once. But I'm having
some
doubts now (maybe Kathy E. can clear this
up). If a gymnast has a
whip to full-in and a full-in, assuming all other
requirements are
fulfilled, does she get 0.1 or
0.2 for extra D's? She definitely
gets
at least 0.1 for one of the full-ins, plus
0.1 for the whip to full-in
connection (of course,
the smart thing to be safe is to do one tucked
and
one piked, and then you're assured of 0.2 in extra
D's). So the
point
is, you can repeat skills, it just doesn't do you a whole lot of
good (at least if you do it more than twice).
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 15:19:38
EST
From: ***@MUSIC.CC.UGA.EDU
Subject:
Re: Hi!
Hello, folks. I am
new to this forum, so I thought I'd tell you
something
about myself. My name is Paul; I am
19 years old
and am a sophomore at the University
of Georgia. I have been
interested in gymnastics for as long as I can remember. I wanted to
take
lessons when I was younger, but my parents wouldn't let me. I
really
got bitten by the gymnastics bug when I saw the team here at
school compete.
I'm really not all that knowledgeable about the
technical
aspects of the sport, but I know good gymnasts and routines
when I see them.
I look forward to learning and contributing to this
forum.
Paul
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 13:41:41
PST
From: ***@MCM.COM
Subject:
Re: Questions
Yes, the maximum for men's vaulting is a 9.8 (with .2
coming from
heigth and
distance.
Men's vaults are valued as 9.2, 9.5, or 9.8.
Examples:
9.2 : Hand
front
9.5 :
Lay-out Kasamatsu, Lay-out Tsukahara
w/full
9.8 :
Lay-out Kasamatsu with full (2 twists),
Lay-out Tsuk double full.
I believe that a
tuck Tsuk is a 8.9 value,
laid out is 9.2.
--- Begin Included Message ---
>
>
> How
did the judges possibly evaluate Yeo-Hong Chuls'
handspring
2 1/2
> > twisting vault at the 94 asian
Games? What is it's value in the
Code
> > Of Points?
Surely it is harder than many other 9.8 vaults!
>
> I couldn't
find a handspring 2 1/2 twist. I
found a handspring 2/1
> twist, and that's a
9.90. So a 2 1/2 would be 9.90 or
10.00.
Aren't all men's vaults maximum of
9.8? I believe that under the current
thinking (of course that's the same one that has a tucked
double-double
equal to a layout double-double) the
2 1/2 twist would be 9.8, and the
other vaults
devalued.
Amanda :-)
--- End Included Message ---
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 18:09:05 EDT
From: ***@MIT.EDU
Subject: Re:
Questions
Yeo-Hong Chuls' handspring 2 1/2
is worth the same as a 1 1/2 , 9.8
the last .2 saved for bonus In finals competition for Men
two
different vaults are required, taking the
average of the two. if he
does both a 1 1/2 and a 2
1/2 he would have two different max value
vaults. The .2 bonus might also be given out
more generously for the
2 1/2
In men's scoreing
a value element can only be preformed twice, third
is
a deduction. Some combinations of
elements, can be grouped for a
higher value
element. A front flip is a B, and a
front,front is a
C. It
is consitered one move, a different move from only
one front.
so repetition would not apply
Chris
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 14:58:00
PST
From: ***@MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU
Subject:
Scoring
In all truth, gymnastics is a lot more enjoyable if you learn
to
ignore the scores.. learn
not to look... I enjoyed American Classic
because
I had no idea what the scores were... Don't look to gymnastics
as a sport, but as a mode for self-expression... This is the
lesson I
learned after the worlds longest scAM cup, I mean the indianapolis
worlds of 91... Yes, gymnastics is political.. yes, there is always
someone who is overscored, someone
who is underscored, etc
etc... However in Indy I had the opportunity to see
gymnasts like
Miriam deTena, and Svetlana Todorova and Li Yan.. gymnasts who really
contributed
to gymnastics in different ways.. but who don't get the
scores
their work merits.. and who dont
get much recognition.. but I
will
always remember their performances .. sometimes in
class I giggle
for no reason and it is for some
stupid thing I saw like that Mexican
gymnast in
compulsories who chalked his armpits before floor
(?)..
anyway, I digress, but thats
ok. Im allowed to.. anyway, look at
the
performances, not the scores.. then you are never
really
disappointed.. . unless
of course you are forced to watch Romania on
bars..
thats a joke.. ok.. no hate mail..
P.S.
underrated gymnast of the week: Diana Dudeva
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 16:29:53
-0700
From: ***@DANA.UCC.NAU.EDU
Subject:
Deductions for doing the same two tumbling passes
I
remember that there was a deduction for doing the same
tumbling
pass twice (extra handsprings, whips, and fronts, etc. don't
count - has to be _exactly_ the same) in a floor routine in
1990,
because Brandy Johnson received one for her optional
routine in AA
finals at 1990 Nat'l Champs. Her
second and third passes were both RO,
HS tucked double back. She left out a tucked full-in
for her second
pass...
Regarding Amanda's comment about Gutsu's
tumbling at the 1992
Olympics, she was competing a whip to double layout as
a first pass in
'91 and on into '92, but at the Olympics she was competing
a funky
"split leg" double layout on the
first pass with no whip-back. IMHO,
she should've recieved the deduction for form on that pass, not for
repeating the skill. (Now then, if Podkopayeva
were competing the
trick, _she_ wouldn't have form
deductions... :-) )
Cara
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 16 Mar 1995 00:51:15
GMT
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Re: Questions
> I think someone posted a few months back that Rusan retired because of a
> back
injury. Does anyone remember if
that's right?
That was me. I am a bit puzzled
though when I saw in Feb's _IG_ and
there was
Nadia returning to Romania, there was a photo taken in Deva
showing Nadia with Milo, Gogean Bican, Hatagan AND Rusan! If what I
heard is true
that she has retired, then what is she still doing in
Deva? I hope she's
still going. (But then she could've "un-retired",
as a few had done...)
Rusan's
last international competition that I know was Nikon Grand
Prix'93 in Brisbane, Australia.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 19:51:23
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Questions
>
> >
> > > How did the
judges possibly evaluate Yeo-Hong Chuls' handspring 2
1/2
> > > twisting vault at the 94 asian
Games? What is it's value in the Code
> >
> Of
Points? Surely it is harder than many other 9.8 vaults!
> >
>
> I couldn't find a handspring 2 1/2 twist. I found a handspring 2/1
> > twist, and that's a 9.90. So a 2 1/2 would be 9.90 or 10.00.
>
>
Aren't all men's vaults maximum of 9.8? I believe that under the current
>
thinking (of course that's the same one that has a
tucked double-double
> equal to a layout
double-double) the 2 1/2 twist would be 9.8, and the
> other vaults devalued.
Oops, sorry, I was thinking
of women's.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 20:05:43
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Deductions for doing the same two tumbling passes
>
I remember that there was a deduction for doing the same tumbling
>
pass twice (extra handsprings, whips, and fronts, etc.
don't count - has
> to be _exactly_ the same)
in a floor routine in 1990, because Brandy
> Johnson received one for
her optional routine in AA finals at 1990 Nat'l
> Champs. Her second and
third passes were both RO, HS tucked double back.
> She left out a
tucked full-in for her second pass...
There
used to be that deduction in old Codes.
I'm pretty sure the
deduction doesn't exist
anymore. But now extra ff's don't make
for a different pass, so you can't do ro,ff,full-in
and ro,ff,ff,full-in
and
claim two D's.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 16 Mar 1995 01:35:00
UTC
From: ***@GENIE.GEIS.COM
Subject:
1980 men's Polish Olympic
>does anyone
have the names for the above (coaches and gymnasts)?
Poland didn't
send a entire men's team to Moscow, but the
individual
gymnasts were:
Andrzej Szajna
Waldemar
Wozniak
Krzysztof Poraczek
Sorry, but I don't know who the coaches
were.
Debbie
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 15 Mar 1995 22:10:20
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
New Business
Hi everyone! My name is Sandy, and I live in LA. I have a
daughter who
competes at Level 6 and my son is
just getting into it. I am also a
gymnastics
judge. I have helped coach my
daughter for the past five
years and
I really enjoy working with her. So instead of driving the distance
I
have decided to open my own Gymnastics Club. I know that it is not
easy and have really given this alot
of thought. I am in the
process
of finding out everything it takes to run
the business and am looking
for any resources to
help me get started. If anyone is interested I
would
appreciate any advice.
Especialy how to
avoid stepping on other gym toes. You can E-mail me
at CLANOF6@AOL.COM
Thanks
Sandy
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 14 Mar 1995 to 15 Mar 1995
*************************************************