gymn
Digest
Fri, 16 Dec 94 Volume 3 :
Issue 48
Today's
Topics:
Cheap skills and why
front fulls suck (was Re: Brought to you by USA
Cheers for the USA Women .
Confused in Arizona (2 msgs)
Dortmund report 1
GER Women's Team Champs.
Grips (3 msgs)
gymnastics on tv (2 msgs)
Indy
In the News
intro
Men's Gymnastics (3 msgs)
Sorry
Sov Sport Dortmund report (1) (2 msgs)
Sveta Ivanova Todorova
Text notation system for gymn
Ummm
USA crowds
which proposal are the U. Pres. voting on?
Whoops!
This is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 09 Dec 1994 15:09:59 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@asu.edu
Subject: Cheap
skills and why front fulls suck (was Re: Brought to
you by USA
> Good front tumbling is hard to master. I like to see
the variety in tumbling
> passes now that front
tumbling is more encouraged by the code.
> Leesa
>
Good back tumbling is hard to master too. Variety is good, but at the
expense of what?
Raising the value of often unseen skills to the same
value as the more difficult, common skills results in
athletes opting for
the easier skills and killing
the purpose of a code that was supposed to
accurately
seperate gymnasts based on difficulty.
What is more
difficult: a double layout (E-move) or a Rudi
(E-Move)? I'll challenge anyone who says a
Rudi. Or even that they're
equal. From how
many gymnasts do we see Rudis from whom we'd never in
a
million years see a double layout? A lot. Why do a double layout when
you can throw a Rudi?
Why do the ever rare E move of a double
twisting
double back? Just throw a Rudi for the same
bonus-everyone else does.
Why even throw a
full-in (that's a double backwards somersault
with
a full twist on the first somersault folks) when you can do a front
full? They're
both equal according to the judges' tablets (but not in
their
minds and unless you're wearing a US or Romanian leo
your score
reflects it because most aren't dumb
but that's another point altogether.)
Obviously,
front tumbling is hard. (How many
of us can do a front
full?) But for some gymnasts, front tumbling is
easier. A double front
is hella hard. How many of those do we see? (Hardly any-they're *very*
rare). That's
variety right there if someone attempts one. But they can
do
a Rudi and get the same credit do why do one?
My
point being:
- a Rudi is not a true E-move if
you look at the scale of difficulty and
the value
of the moves from A to E.
- a front full is
not a true D move and not equal to a full-in (that's a
double
backwards somersault with a full twist on the first somersault
folks) which is rated the same
- if
you want to encourage variety, then do it.
Currently, there is no
bonus given for
originality and/or virtuosity.
Upgrading low-rated
(comparitively)
skills has only cloned women's floor exercise into one big
ball of mush like Spaghettios. Most gymnasts are so eager to get their
bonus to be competitive
and start from a 10.00 SV that they just toss in
the
moves all over the place and by the time the morning session is over
you've seen 361 Rudis and about
6,209 front fulls and 230,890 Popas
and
the highlight of your day so far was the Nacho
bar.
It's very
depressing.
Amanda
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 4 Dec
94 01:20:00 UTC
From: ***@genie.geis.com
Subject: Cheers for the USA Women .
>when people
discredit something that you received, you can't help but get
>hurt by it
(i.e. Zmeskal in 91 worlds. She really didn't deserve the AA
>title but,
did the Soviet coaches need to say that in front of her face?
As someone who was there, I was
disgusted by the reception most of the
foreign
gymnasts received. The audience
went absolutely crazy any time a US
gymnast
appeared, while giving only polite applause to other gymnasts. I
won't
repeat what was said to me when I cheered for the Soviets. As for the
Soviet coaches saying
that Zmeskal didn't deserve the title, why should
they
not be allowed to speak their minds? Could it be that they were
disgusted
by the competition, too?
I should point out that not all US
audiences are like those at Indy.
At the
'93 University Games, the spectators cheered for *all* the
gymnasts, not
only the American ones.
Debbie
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 11 Dec 1994 16:59:04 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@asu.edu
Subject:
Confused in Arizona
> |
> | To Those Who Hold The Future Of
Men's Gymnastics:
I
don't understand how the future of the sport of men's
gymnastics
will be in jeopardy if it is cut by the NCAA.
Signed,
Confused in
Arizona (and really mad that Fox Channel 15 refuses to play the
49er game
because of copyright regulations and is instead playing a b&w
movie about slot machines).
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 22:10:54 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
Confused in Arizona
| > |
| > | To Those Who Hold The
Future Of Men's Gymnastics:
Amanda asked:
| I don't understand how the
future of the sport of men's
| gymnastics will be
in jeopardy if it is cut by the NCAA.
College gymnastics is the very backbone of American men's gymnastics
as it now stands.
It would be a HUGE setback for the men's program to
lose the support of the NCAA.
If the NCAA drops
men's gymnastics, the opportunities available to a
male
gymnast will drop DRASTICALLY, which will of course lead to fewer
gymnasts and less competitiveness. College Athletic Directors who
have men's gymnastics teams in their programs support those
teams
*because* the NCAA sponsors men's
gymnastics, and therefore the teams
can raise the
AD's totals for Academic All-Americans, All-Americans,
NCAA
titles and so forth. This is
important for the AD to keep
his/her job. Hopefully, the AD also supports the team
for the
student-athlete and for amateur athletics,
etc. However, if the NCAA
cuts men's gymnastics, then the AD will need to use the
money/scholarships in his/her department that goes towards
men's
gymnastics and instead put it towards other
NCAA sponsored sports.
Therefore, if the NCAA drops it's sponsorship of a
Championships for
men's gymnastics, you will
almost immediately be able to count on one
hand
the number of colleges that offer men's gymnastics.
Now, why will this
be a problem? So what if there are
no men's
gymnastics programs in colleges
anymore? We still have USA
Gymnastics'
Olympic Training Center, Ed Burch's Gold Cup, and
Daggett's also looks to
be very promising. Probably a few
other clubs
would step up to the plate. But there are two problems: (1), it's
just not enough, and (2),
it will force a gymnast to choose between
college
and gymnastics, or between gymnastics and other sports.
Regarding it
not being enough -- there is no way that the current
club/USGF
system could fund the number of gymnasts that the college
system supports.
Somewhere between 400 and 500 gymnasts are NCAA
Div
I gymnasts... these gymnasts range anywhere
from full to no
scholarships, but they do not have
to pay for most of their basic
gymnastics
expenses. That's a lot of money
that has to be generated
really quickly if the
NCAA drops the sport.
And of course, it's a question as to if that
money will even need to
be generated, because what
everyone in the men's world is wondering
is, just
how many male gymnasts will be left if the NCAA drops the
sport? Many of
the current ones will have to choose to finish their
college education as oppposed to
continuing in gymnastics... and it
will be very very difficult to do both, for those who want to,
because
they won't have the help they receive as a
student-athlete to
accomplish both goals
(financial support, academic support, and
athletic
support). Many of the potential
future gymnasts will choose
not to continue in the
sport when they realize that they can run track
(or
whatever) and get a scholarship for college. Therefore, many
believe
that boys' gymnastics will suffer, particularly when the guys
get to high school age and find that other sports can offer
them a
better future.
Also, the NCAA
provides many more goals for current gymnast -- can I
be
All-American, can I get a scholarship for my gymnastics, can I win
the regional title -- etc? If the only post-high school goal that
a
male gymnast has is the National team and
hopefully Worlds/Olympic
team, combined that with
the difficulty of participating in the sport
(great
expenses, putting your education on hold, and very few
opportunities),
well, things just don't look good for having a nice
large
number of gymnasts competing and pushing each other to raise the
level of the sport.
Hopefully other people have
more comments and questions -- feel free
to
post!
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 23:41:58 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject:
Dortmund report 1
Regarding Mara's
question about whether Roshchina and Fabrichnova are
club-mates,
that's what the author of the article clearly says. The word he
used was "odnoklubnitsa,"
which broken down basically translates literally into
same-club-girl.
Maybe the girls train at their clubs with their personal
coaches and only go to Krugloye
before big meets. I'm really not sure.
Mara is right that the
Russian coaches make a decision about whom to
promote,
regardless of results. I remember back in 1987-1988, the Sovetsky
Sport reporters were already touting Boginskaya
as the next big star and as
Shushunova's successor. Plus, when Shushunova
and Omelianchik were competing as
co-World AA champions, the powers that be in the Soviet
system clearly chose to
promote Elena over Oksana.
I loved them both, and to this day don't really
understand
why Oksana wasn't given the chance to live up to her full potential.
I
assume with Khorkina they're using the same reasoning
as with Bogy - going
for a nontraditional look, a
style that really stands out. Even though
Roshchina
won nationals, her coach even said that it was only
because of
Khorkina's beam
fall. I think all the coaches, and Svetlana herself,
know that
she's been
picked to be the leader. We asked her about this in Dortmund, and
she said she's uncomfortable with that role and that helping
the team is more
important to her than individual
stardom. But more on that in the February IG
(as
far as I know). :)
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 94 02:19:00 UTC
From: ***@genie.geis.com
Subject: GER
Women's Team Champs.
>From the DPA, following are results from the
German Team Champs. (women),
held
Dec. 10 in Kiel.
1.
SG Schorndorf 179.75
2.
SC Berlin
178.85
3. TuG
Leipzig
173.35
4. PSV Rostock 162.20
The best individual gymnast was Rufina Kreibich (TV Hoffnungsthal) with
37.70 pts.
Debbie
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 9 Dec 94 10:00:56 PST
From: ***@geoworks.com
Subject: Grips
>
Inverted: Someone help me out here. I think that this
is the reverse of
> the eagle grip (i.e. start
with a regular grip and do the old "skin the
> cat". This is the grip used for the german giant.
The
difference between inverted and eagle is in shoulder and wrist
possition, the turn of the arm is
the same. In an eagle, the wrist
is
flexed (i.e. your hand is dragging behind as
you go around the bar).
Because of this you can't really support weight
going over the top, so you
usually have to dump
your shoulders over the bar ahead of your body so your
wrists
can support your weight. In an
invert, the wrist is extended, so
your wrist is
leading your hand over the bar. In
this position you can
support yourself in the
handstand, so people can (and usually do) go over
the
top with their head in, something that would cause them to peel off in
an eagle.
I
might have done a better job of describing this in the FAQ.
Dave
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 10 Dec 1994 18:27:03 -0800 (PST)
From: ***@netcom.com
Subject:
Grips
Jim
>
> [This message is converted from WPS-PLUS
to ASCII]
>
> OK, I'll take a shot at this.
>
>
>the description of some of these new skills on
bars go into detail on
> grips...
>
>can someone give a brief description of the types
of grips (reg,
> inverted,
>
>eagle) and describe what the hand positions
are?
>
> >thanks
>
>
Regular: Hanging with the palms facing forward. Thumbs point toward
> each other.
>
> Reverse: Hanging with palms
facing behind you. Thumbs point
away from
> each other.
>
>
Eagle: Start with a reverse grip, then do a "skin
the cat". This grip
> would normally be
obtained by pirouette (only with good shoulder
> flexibility)
or shoot through; not by doing a skin the cat.
>
> Inverted:
Someone help me out here. I think that this is the
reverse of
> the eagle grip (i.e. start with a
regular grip and do the old "skin the
> cat". This is the grip used for the german giant.
>
> Mixed: One hand in reg.
one in rev. grip. Thumbs point in
the same
> direction.
>
> Cross: Wrists crossed over. Usually
(always?) in mixed grip.
>
Texx
terrorizes the gymn gang by admitting:
Uh... definitely NOT always.
I have been known to do cross grips
with
thumbs pointing the same way as well as
opposite ways.
>
{rest of Jims post
omitted}
-texx
>
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 10 Dec 1994
23:31:58 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@minerva.cis.yale.edu
Subject: Grips
On
Sat, 10 Dec 1994, Texx wrote:
> >
Mixed: One hand in reg. one in rev. grip.
Thumbs point in the same
> > direction.
>
>
> > Cross: Wrists crossed over. Usually (always?) in mixed grip.
> >
> Texx terrorizes the gymn gang by
admitting:
>
> Uh... definitely NOT always.
> I have been known to do cross
grips with
> thumbs pointing the same way as
well as opposite ways.
Texx is right about
cross grip not always being in mixed grip, but it's
not
particularly terrorizing. Wasn't
there a cross-grip, non-mixed-grip
giant in the last HB compulsory? And the "mixed grip salto" on UB would,
under
the terminology we're using here, be a cross-grip, non-mixed-grip
salto (this is the one frequently
and incorrectly called a Deltchev).
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 17:58:24 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@mhc.mtholyoke.edu
Subject:
gymnastics on tv
According
to a cablevision guide:
Dec. 24 ESPN 8-9pm Central -some competition from
Mexico City
Dec. 31 ESPN2 2:30-4:00 Central -some comprtition from Richmond, VA.
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 13 Dec 1994 02:29:43 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: gymnastics
on tv
>>Dec.
24 ESPN 8-9pm Central -some competition from Mexico City<<
This
is the exhibition featuring Svetlana Boginskaya, Lavinia Milosovici, and
Bart
& Nadia (among many others) that was taped in, I think, October.
>>Dec.
31 ESPN2 2:30-4:00 Central -some comprtition from
Richmond, VA.<<
This is another re-run
of the Women's World Team Trials (It was also re-run
on
Thanksgiving ... ESPN tends to use things at least 3 or 4 times).
-Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 11 Dec 1994 17:38:27 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject:
Indy
I'm a bit behind the times here, but whoever said that the Soviet
coaches
said in front of Zmeskal
that she didn't deserve the AA title in Indy has their
info
wrong. Both the Soviet and the Romanian coaches boycotted the press
conference after the AA, which I suppose says something
about their feelings,
but they were not THERE to
say ANYTHING in front of Kim. The only people who
showed
up for the press conference were Bela, Kim, and Boginskaya, who chose to
go
regardless of what the Soviet coaches did. I give her a lot of credit for
that. I was her interpreter at that press conference, and
the infamous quote
"I'm 100% sure I would have won if the
championships had been held in Europe"
was
not put in proper context in the US media. First of all, a reporter asked
her a question that was posed that way: "Do you think
you would have won if the
championships had been
held in Europe." So she didn't come up with that
statement
out of the blue; she was responding to a direct question. Plus, after
"Europe,"
she said, "but I'm happy for Kim and congratulate her on her
success," which the US media conveniently left out.
Svetlana was not at all
bitter. On the way to the
press conference, she told me that she knew coming in
that
the best she'd be able to do was 2nd, since the meet was being held in the
US,
so she was not disappointed at all. The only coach I heard make a negative
comment in front of a gymnast's face was Bela Karolyi, who said in front
of
Svetlana that her time had passed. When asked
about this later, Svetlana just
laughed and said
that she didn't think Kim Zmeskal was that good a
gymnast to
cause her (Svetlana's) time to be
over. She seemed to find the whole thing very
amusing.
The only time during Indy that she got really hurt was when Kim didn't
shake her hand and when, the next day, the crowd booed her when
she didn't
shake Kim's hand. She left the arena
in tears, and Chusovitina explained to
reporters that Svetlana's feelings had really been hurt when
Kim didn't shake
her hand. I don't necessarily
agree that Svetlana should have turned around and
done
the same thing, but I know it upset her that she was booed and Kim wasn't.
She
later said in a "Sovetsky Sport" interview
that she really couldn't figure
out the whole
incident, but guessed that Bela had told Kim not to
shake her
hand.
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Tue, 13 Dec 1994 00:06:14 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject: In
the News
Here is some info I got from the USOC... notice that in the
middle
somewhere is some recent news on the
Pacific Alliance Games (good
results for
USA)...:
(compiled by the USOC's Public
Information/Media Relations
division.)
December
6, 1994
Samaranch Not Going to Run Again
IOC President Juan
Antonio Samaranch has decided not to run for
re-election
in 1997. Samaranch, 74, feels that he should be
obligated
to respect the age limit for IOC members. He has been
president
since 1980. Story ran on Reuters and today's USA Today.
December 7,
1994
On Nov. 11, 1994, the USOC Executive Committee approved a
proposal from the Athlete Support Committee increasing
Basic
Grants to athletes who are in the top four in the world and
which
may result in Level II grant increases to
athletes in the top
eight in the world for
individual sports and top six for team
sports.
Gymnastics Training Site
USA Gymnastics announced that the
National Team athletes in group
rhythmic
gymnastics will move to Downers Grove, Ill., to train
for
the Pan American Games, world championships and Olympic Games
beginning in January 1995. The facility, Elite Sports
Complex,
Inc., is scheduled for a grand opening on
Dec. 17. All media and
general public are invited
to attend the open house on Dec. 17
from 1:00 p.m.
to 4:00 p.m.
December 12, 1994
Australia Chooses U. of
Ga.
The Australian Olympic Committee chose the University of Georgia
as its pre-Olympic training site for the 1996 Olympic
Games.
Story ran on AP.
Jansen Takes Phone Crown
1994 Olympic
gold medalist Dan Jansen took top honors of the USA
Today's
fan voting for the 1994 AAU Sullivan Award. Jansen beat
out golfer Tiger Woods and Olympians Tommy Moe and
Shannon
Miller. Results ran in today's USA Today.
----------------------------
Date:
December 12, 1994
Luan Peszek, Director of Public
Relations
Ramonna Robinson, Manager of Public
Relations
USA Names Rhythmic Group
National Team Training
Squad
USA Gymnastics, the national governing body for the sport in the
USA,
selected seven gymnasts as members of the
1995 Rhythmic Group National
Team Training Squad.
The squad is training for the 1995 Pan American
Games to be held March 4-19
in Mar del Plata, Argentina.
The seven gymnasts were selected from a
training camp held at the U.S.
Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs,
Colo., November 17-27.
Members of the squad include:
Name/Hometown/Age
Aliane Baquerot/Manhattan,
N.Y./16
Mandy James/Orange Park, Fla./15
Kate Nelson/Arlington Heights,
Ill./16
Nicole Sengstock/West Allis, Wis./16
Brandi
Siegel/Miami, Fla./15
Challen Sievers/Downers
Grove, Ill./15
Becky Turner/Atlanta, Ga./17
The National Team
athletes in group rhythmic gymnastics will move
to
Downers, Grove, Ill., beginning in January 1995 to train at Elite
Sports
Complex, Inc. This new facility was built especially for
rhythmic
gymnastics and will also be called the USA Gymn astics
National Rhythmic Training Center. Former
Bulgarian National Team
coach Efrossina
Anguelova is the coach of the Pan American Games
Team.
Anguelova coached the group World Champions
from Bulgaria in 1989.
USA Gymnastics Rhythmic Program Director Nora
Campbell said, "We are
thrilled to have these
seven talented athletes training together for
the
Pan American Games competition. With the addition of Group
Rhythmic
Gymnastics to the 1996 Olympic Games, we're w orking
extremely hard to
ensure a good showing in Atlanta."
# # #
Date: December
12, 1994
Luan Peszek, Director of Public
Relations
Ramonna Robinson, Manager of Public
Relations
USA Men and Women Gymnasts Earn Team Gold
Medal at the
Pacific Alliance Championships
The USA gymnastics delegation earned
the team gold medals at the
Pacific Alliance Championships in Auckland, New
Zealand, December
9-11.
The women's team included: Kellee Davis, Soni Meduna, Summer Reid, and
Marianna Webster. The men's
team included: Spencer Slaton, Kip Simons,
Josh Stein and Jay
Thornton.
For the women, Davis took first in the all-around
competition as well
as first on floor and vault
and second on beam. Webster took third
all-around,
third on bars and fifth on floor. Meduna took fifth
on
floor and Reid was sixth in the all-around and
third on beam.
Stein took first in the all-around for the USA men,
while Simons
earned third. Still waiting on
individual event placings for men.
The USA
Women's Team:
Name/Club/City/Hometown/Age
Kellee
Davis/American Twisters/Pompano Beach, Fla./Columbia Heights, N.Y./16
Soni Meduna/Dynamos/Oklahoma
City, Okla./Colon, Neb./15
Summer Reid/Flips Gym./Sparks,
Nev./Sparks, Nev./17
Marianna Webster/Dynamos/Oklahoma City,
Okla./Joplin, Mo./15
The USA Men's Team
Name/School/City/Hometown/Age
Spencer
Slaton/UCLA/Los Angeles, Calif./Atlanta, Ga./19
Kip Simons/Ohio
State/Columbus, Ohio/Bloomsburg, Pa./22
Josh Stein/Stanford
Univ./Stanford, Calif./Houston, Texas/22
Jay Thornton/Univ. of Iowa,
Iowa City, Iowa/Augusta, Ga./20
# # #
Date: October 28, 1994
Luan Peszek, Director of Public
Relations
Ramonna Robinson, Manager of Public
Relations
Gary Alexander Named USA Gymnastics
Vice President of
Programs and Events
Gary Alexander has been named Vice President of
Programs and Events
for Indianapolis-based USA
Gymnastics, the national governing body for
gymnastics
in the United States. Alexander will begin on November 9.
USA
Gymnastics President Kathy Scanlan said, "We're
very happy to have
Gary join our staff at USA
Gymnastics. He has a great deal of
experience and
insight into our sport and will make a positive
addition
to the staff."
Alexander has 32 years of gymnastics experience
and most recently
worked at the United States
Olympic Committee as the Director of U.S.
Olympic Festivals. He directed
all areas of USOC participation in U.S.
Olympic Festivals, including
integrating involve ment of USOC
Divisions of
Media, Drug Education, Medical Services, Legal and
Broadcasting. He also
approved and monitored the Local Organizing
Committee's marketing,
licensing and sponsor programs as well as
advised
37 National Governing Bodies participat ing in the Festivals.
Alexander said, "I
can't tell you how excited I am to to join the
outstanding staff at USA Gymnastics. I'm looking forward to
giving
back to the sport that has given me so
much." Prior to the United
States Olympic Committee, Alexander was the
owner/operator of the
Gymnastics Institute of Colorado, where he managed
all areas of the
private gymnastics school
including class programs, team programs,
marketing
and finance.
He was a gymnastics competitor from 1962 to 1978 and is
an
International Brevet judge. He judged the 1992
Olympic Games, and the
1987 and
1989 World Championships. He's currently the General Vice
President of the National Gymnastics Judges Association. He
was the
Technical Director of the 1990 Goodwill Games and the
assistant
Technical Director of the 1987 Pan American Games. In August of
1994
Alexander was inducted into the Frank Cumisky
Judging Hall of Fame.
Alexander will be moving to Indianapolis along
with his wife Sue and
his 12-year-old daughter
Lauren.
# # #
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 11 Dec 1994 21:11 EDT
From: ***@ROO.FIT.EDU
Subject: intro
Hi! My name's Laura.
I'm 24 years old. I'm a senior at
Florida Tech.
In May I'll graduate with a dual B.S.--in marine biology and
aquaculture.
I heard about GYMN from Susan; she's also the one that made
me
a gymnastics fanatic. (She LOVES Dimitri
Biozertchev!)
I'd taken classes
when I was small, but I
never kept up with them. The best I
can do now is
a back-handspring froma cheese mat.
I love to watch gymnastics whenever
the
networks decide to finally show it.
My favorite gymnasts are:
Misiutin, Liukin, Boguinskaya, and really any
ex-Soviet
gymnast. I'm glad Susan told me
about GYMN. I've read a few
messages already, and I love the informal format.
"talk" to you later.
-Laura
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 11 Dec 1994 07:41:13 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
Men's Gymnastics
Ron submitted this letter to the email campaign -- I
thought it was
pretty interesting and so asked him
if I could forward it to Gymn. He
said
yes, so here it is:
| To Those Who Hold The Future Of Men's
Gymnastics:
|
I'm sure you've heard the tale of the three blind people who are
asked
| to touch an elephant and describe what it
is. One grabs the tail and thinks
| it's a rope;
another grabs the trunk and thinks it's a large hose, and yet
| another grabs one of the legs and thinks it's a tree.
| Take those same
three blind people and ask them to describe the NCAA.
| One grabs a small
round ball, feels the stitches and hears the crack of a
| bat. "The NCAA is baseball," he'll proclaim.
Another will grab an odd-shaped
| ball, feel a
helmet and smell the grass beneath her. "The NCAA is football,"
|
she'll say.
| And yet a third
will walk on a bouncy floor, feel the dry sensation of
| chalk
and touch the odd shape of a pommell horse. "The
NCAA is men's
| gymnastics," she'll say.
| Indeed, that's
what makes the NCAA so special. It's composed of so many
| sports, giving athletes and fans so many tastes and flavors,
so much from
| which to choose. It is the athletic
buffet of America.
| I've always
considered the NCAA a microcosm of the Olympics. Indeed, we
| always hear of the Olympic spirit and the way that event
draws nations closer
| together, even if it's for
only a few weeks. Perhaps what makes the Olympics
| so
special is that it showcases so many sports -- sports that we, personally,
|
may not always like so much.
| But the grand
aspect of the Olympics is that this international buffet
| draws us all together, where we can cheer for our favorites,
appreciate the
| efforts of others and all rejoice
in that special thrill we call sports.
| The same is true
with the NCAA. Its strength is in its variety. Wittle
|
the NCAA down to a few sports, and, suddenly, the
organization no longer is
| the same. Think of the
television commercials advertising the NCAA. It shows
| a
volleyball player, then flashes to football player running, then to a
| gymnast flipping, then to a diver splashing into the
water.
|
It is this ideal, the ideal of so many sports being given equal
| footing, that is the foundation of the NCAA. That's why the
decision in
| January by the NCAA to possibly discontinue its sponsorship
of men's
| gymnastics scares me so much.
| It may seem a
minor thing. After all, it's just one sport. How much
| could
it hurt to get rid of it? But that's the trap of which you must be
| aware. Slowly, ever so imperceptibly, the NCAA will begin to
drop the
| so-called "unpopular" sports,
the ones that aren't necessarily so well known.
| The very mission
of the NCAA, as stated in its constitution, is ``to
| initiate,
stimulate and improve intercollegiate athletics programs for
| student-athletes." Dropping sponsorship of a sport
because it does not meet
| some arbitrary number
of sponsoring schools goes against the very foundation
| of
the NCAA.
|
At your upcoming convention in San Diego, you have a chance to keep
the
| foundation solid, to keep the NCAA the grand
buffet it is.
| I urge you to
vote yes on Proposal No. 2-124, which extends the
| moratorium
on Bylaw 18.2.10.1 and gives men's gymnastics a chance to survive.
| Please
give the sport that much of a chance.
| And above all
else, if you have suggestions, please voice them. Think
| the sport is being run incorrectly? Perhaps not promoted
correctly? Or
| perhaps simply needs just minor
adjustment? If so, please stand up and give
| your
suggestions.
|
Men's gymnastics is at crossroads in its rich, centuries-old history.
I
| urge you to vote yes on the proposal.
| Help save the
sport and in the process, keep the Olympic spirit -- and
| the NCAA spirit -- alive.
|
| Ronald
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 10:03:53 -0500
From: ***@isscad.com
Subject: Men's
Gymnastics
I have been reading all the gwyn
E-mail threads concerning the NCAA`s vote
next month on
Proposal No. 2-124 which extends the moratium on
Bylaw 18.2.10.1.
However in
none of the messages I have seen has there been an actual posting
of their
contents. Could someone in the know please post what the Proposal
and Bylaw
actually state? I have hesitated bringing the Email letters into my
own gym because
of this. Although I have shown the letters to a few people.
The question has been asked
of me, and I really couldn't give a definitive
response,
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 21:30:15 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
Men's Gymnastics
| I have
been reading all the gwyn
E-mail threads concerning the NCAA`s vote
next
month on Proposal No. 2-124 which extends the moratium
on Bylaw 18.2.10.1.
This will be posted soon -- look for either Mayland or Chuck to send
in
this info.
Many of you
may know the Vexler family -- featured in a side bar
in
the USA Champs _IG_. Annie Hoog,
now the grandmother was an Olympian
-- both of the
parents are gymnasts -- both of the kids are gymnasts
who
competed at USAs this year in the Juniors division -- daughter
Talya and son
Aaron (who got 2nd). Aaron
is a Temple gymnast this
year -- I just got a call
from Mayland saying that Aaron's mother has
submitted FIFTY letters to our email campaign!
Keep
the letters coming!
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 19:25 EDT
From: ***@ROO.FIT.EDU
Subject: Sorry
Sorry
for the mail clutter. My intro
bounced back to me several times.
--Laura
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 11 Dec 1994 14:07:53 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject:
Sov Sport Dortmund report (1)
Here's the
first report from Sovetsky Sport on the Dortmund
Worlds.
Actually, it's probably the 2nd, since men's comps were
before
women's comps, but either the paper didn't cover them or I
haven't gotten that paper yet. I'll post the rest of the
articles
once I've gotten them translated.
[Susan, could you pass
on the Khorkina parts to our e-mail-
less friend John? I think he'd like them! :)]
Beth
SCORES
ARE NOT BALLS. BUT THEY WERE KICKED HIGHER AND HIGHER. -
Aleksandr Barmin, Commentator for
the Sports-N Television Studio,
Reports From Germany From the World
Gymnastics Championships,
Special to Sovetsky
Sport. (Sovetsky Sport, Nov. 18, pp. 1,
4.
Translation by Beth Squires:) According to a draw, in the first
round the hostesses of the podium opened up the women's
compulsories on the beam. Everyone expected a minor
miracle,
remembering the excellent performance of
the German's men team
the day before. It did not
happen. Four of the six made serious
errors, and
the attention somehow shifted automatically to the
other
teams. It was suddenly noticed that the loudest crowd
support
was for the Japanese, and the fans were shouting in
Russian. FIG President Yury Titov, who was sitting at
the
officials' table on the other side, was
surprised. But,
recognizing compatriots among the
fans, he began to smile. Even
though he didn't
realize right away what was going on. It turned
out
that the Japanese girls had been led onto the podium by the
prestigious Russian coach Viktor Razumovsky,
who relatively
recently began working with the
Japanese gymnasts. Thanks to us,
the Japanese
confidently surpassed the Germans, Cubans and
Canadians,
who were performing with them.
The Russian gymnasts
appeared in the second round. They
began on bars.
Yelena Grosheva of Yaroslavl went up first.
Everything
was fine - 9.612. Something has to be said about the
judging
here. In comparison with the rather modest scores for the
men gymnasts the day before - 9.3-9.4 (and they were
considered
very decent scores) - here all the
judging problems remained:
excessive lenience and
the so-called "escalation" from
participant
to participant and from round to round - something
that
had especially regrettable consequences.
But let's return to
the performances of our girls. Muscovite
Yevgenia
Roshchina began her bars routine brilliantly. She
hit
everything in a handstand, showed good flight,
kept her body
tight, everything was perfect! But
then she missed a connection
from the low bar to
the high bar - 8.9. I immediately recalled
the
poor start of our men the day before. But then that was
immediately
forgotten. Whereas Oksana Fabrichnova, who
followed
her club-mate, out of inertia lost a few
hundredths on trivial
mistakes, the third gymnast
from the capital, Dina Kochetkova,
was very precise - 9.725.
As Sveta
Khorkina, the beauty from Belgorod, was
approaching
the apparatus, cameras began to snap
in a chorus. The sense of
pride in our star, which
I immediately caught myself feeling,
grew during
her exercise into a kind of overwhelming delight. All
of
Sveta's movements are not simply precise and
technically
exact. They are specially accented
because of her unusual height
for a gymnast. These
accents seem to be slightly delayed, coming
after
smooth, broad movements, and they are especially effective
because of that. A brilliant 9.8! Yelena Lebedeva
of St.
Petersburg, who was seventh on the list as the alternate,
completed the Russian girls' performance on the apparatus.
Her
9.562 was most likely a result of the
escalation in scores. No
offense is meant to her -
her exercise just hasn't been brought
to the
necessary level yet. Yet our team's total on bars was
absolutely
the best result.
On the beam, the Russian girls performed
to such a powerful
accompaniment of cheers from
the stands that this immediately
affected their
mood and fighting spirit. Gymnastics specialists
from
various cities in Russia who had come to the championships
with a tourist group didn't spare their voices or their
hands.
[Note - it's definitely true that the Russian fans cheered and
clapped A LOT, but some of the noise also came from
various
members of the IG tour! :)] Directed by
Oleg Stokin and Valery
Starkin,
our fans shouted loud enough for the entire stadium to
hear.
And they "shouted up" a few tenths for the girls, I think.
They
saw, heard and smiled in response. It seems that the judges
also reacted to this psychological pressure. The Russian
team had
the second highest score of the day on
beam. It was exceeded only
by one team from the
final round. But more on that later. The
scores ranged from 9.587 for Roshchina
and Fabrichnova to 9.75
for
Kochetkova. They performed everywhere as a six-some,
without
the "floating" seventh
participant, since Natasha Ivanova had
badly injured her foot at the last training session.
In the Russian girls'
floor exercises, the judges came
slightly
"back down to earth," and the girls themselves did not
all soar to the proper height. Grosheva
got a 9.325 and Khorkina,
a
9.612. The rest of the scores were within this range. On the
vault, our girls put a fitting end to their first appearance
on
the podium at Westfallenhallen.
Everyone scored between 9.387 and
9.762.
The gymnasts from
Ukraine also performed in this round. They
were
very steady, strong and confident. They lost to the Russians
by a few tenths, but their leader, Lilia Podkopayeva,
had the
absolute best result in the all-around.
And this is taking into
account this round, the
previous one and the next one.
While waiting for the
third group of teams, my foreign
colleagues
complimented our girls and predicted a victorious
outcome
for the Russians. That was nice to hear.
Performing in the
third round, the most equal and strongest
in terms
of composition, were the gymnasts from Romania, the US,
Belorussia and
Spain. The judges' "escalation" played into the
hands of our main rivals here. The scores were "kicked
up" a
little bit everywhere, but it turned
out to be a great deal in
the end. Both the
Romanians and the Americans passed the
Russians. And in the fourth and last
round, so did the Chinese.
Shannon Miller, the
leader of the US team, was
unquestionably good.
She was excellent on beam and floor. Her
vault was
weak, but the judges had given in to the trend they had
taken
from the beginning, and they didn't retreat. Even vault
expert
Turishcheva, as well as other judges on this
event,
Andrianova (Russia), Kim (Belorussia) and Korolenko (Ukraine),
couldn't
do anything about themselves or the circumstances.
But when Miller made
two blatant errors on the bars and was
given a
9.525, things began to resemble a scandal. The two
mistakes,
worth .3 each, made it impossible to score even an
ideal
routine higher than 9.4. And then, what was the purpose of
this from a practical point of view? The US team wasn't
going to
have any difficulty ending up among the
six best teams, and
everything would start from
zero in the finals. And the
championships were not
for the individual AA but for the team. In
short,
there are unresolved but important problems in women's
judging.
[Understatement of the century!!]
In the fourth and
final round, the Chinese were brilliant.
Especially on
the beam. Without question, they were the strongest
here. On floor and vault it is difficult to give preference
to
anyone, but our girls were best on bars. The
Chinese, by the way,
blew this event, for all
practical purposes. Three gymnasts in a
row made
flagrant errors. Nevertheless, they put pressure on our
girls.
Tomorrow, the men will
complete the preliminaries with their
optional programs. The minimum task here is to get into the
top
six, and the maximum task is to finish in a
higher place, to
psychologically dispose the
judges, the crowd and our rivals
toward our
aspirations to be the champions.
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 21:54:55 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Sov Sport Dortmund report (1)
I found the
reporting style in the Sovetsky Sport piece a
refreshing change
from what appears in many
English-language papers. There's
clearly a fair
amount of cheerleading in the
piece, but also criticism and realism where it
is
warranted, something that does not appear often enough in most press.
A
few thoughts:
>Whereas Oksana Fabrichnova,
who followed her club-mate
I thought Roschinya
trained at Dynamo Moscow with Fabrichnova at Kruglove.
> As Sveta
Khorkina, the beauty from Belgorod, was approaching
the
apparatus, cameras began to snap in a chorus.
The sense of pride in our star,
which I
immediately caught myself feeling, grew during her exercise into a
kind of overwhelming delight.
This paragraph
surprised me. One would expect
either Kotchetkova (or maybe
Roschinya)
to be the 'star' of this team as one is Goodwill champ, the other
Russian National champ.
Obviously, on the Russian team as on the Soviet
before
it, the opinionmakers have greater importance than
the competition
results.
>Her 9.562 was most likely a result of the escalation in scores. No
offense
is meant to her - her exercise just hasn't
been brought to the necessary
level yet.
Realism even though the author is clearly pushing for his
countrywomen. Very
refreshing to see this comment!
>[Note - it's definitely
true that the Russian fans cheered and
clapped A
LOT, but some of the noise also came from various
members
of the IG tour! :)]
During the compulsories, probably as much or more
came from the IG tour
members! ;-)
>In
short, there are unresolved but important problems in
women's
judging. [Understatement of the
century!!]
Of the milennium...
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 09 Dec 94 11:47 PST
From: ***@MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU
Subject: Sveta Ivanova Todorova
The
ultra-cool Sveta Ivanova Todorova of Bulgaria won the recent
Golden Sands
Invitational I was told. That
clinches it, there
really is a God. She is one of the last true artists left
and her
floor ex is to die for. Style anyone? Passion? Feeling? Maturity?
She has
it all. Ok, she cant
tumble or do bars anymore, but nobody
left in
gymnastics today moves like she does.
Womens
gymnastics today is not worthy of her.
------------------------------
Date:
Mon, 12 Dec 1994 20:23:01 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Text
notation system for gymn
After having spend
the better part of the day staring at pages of my own
text,
I realized that part of the problem we all deal with on gymn
is in
describing routines and moves online.
Until
such time as we have graphics and full-motion video as part of our
internet interface (don't hold your breath), I suggest that
we develop a
system of notations (similar to those
used by judges) based entirely in the
ASCII character set to describe the
key moves in the FIG code.
We could then develop a Gymn
ASCII dictionary and put it on the FTP sites or
distribute
it as updated.
Ideas? Anyone?
David
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 9 Dec 1994 21:25:35 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Ummm
Szabo reccomends the Nacho's with chili ...
Stoby
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 10 Dec 94 13:41 PST
From: ***@MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU
Subject: USA
crowds
I must agree with Debbie's comments about Indy.. the crowd was very rude
to the foreign gymnasts. Amy and I were repeatedly told we
"weren't patriotic
enough" because we
were cheering for gymnasts from <gasp> other countries.
A woman
stopped us at the concessions stand (Amy was wearing a t-shirt that
was a replica of Bogy's 89 AA leo
and I was wearing a shirt that had a replica
of
the Groshkova flower leo
with "where the hell is groshkova" written
on the
back.
We were carrying numerous flags we made out of posterboard)
and told us
that she really wanted to root for the
gymnasts she liked (foreign) but she
felt
compelled being an American, to root only for the Americans. I only hope
that for Xmas (or Channukah) she
got a mind of her own.
AMazing.
An
erudite woman who sat behind us told us it "should be illegal for Bontas
to use American
music". It actually should be
illegal for this woman to
reproduce. But then Tractor Pulls might go out of
business.
Several foreign gymasts did
amazing routines to no reaction from the crowd.
American gymnasts were
getting huge cheers just for mounting the podium.
Thank God its
over.
------------------------------
Date: 12 Dec 94 14:50:55
EDT
From: ***@notes.bsginc.com
Subject: which proposal are the U. Pres. voting on?
John asked the
following question, and I thought it best to reply to
the
whole list:
> Ron said:
> > | I urge
you to vote yes on Proposal No. 2-124, which extends the
> > | moratorium on Bylaw 18.2.10.1 ...
> But Rachele's original message said:
> > Q. WHAT
>
> A. The University Presidents will vote on Proposal 1-87. If this
>
>
proposal passes, the NCAA Championships for
Men's Gymnastics will
> >
be guaranteed through 1997.
> Are 2-124 and 1-87 the same thing? I'm concerned that some
of our
> emails may refer to an irrelevant or
nonexistent proposal.
John, and other interested Gymners,
They
are the same, and in fact, there is a new proposal number, "3-??" --
I
don't know the exact number. But they are all the same. The first digit
refers
to the manual number, the post-dash number refers to the proposal's
number in that manual.
The NCAA put out a second manual sometime in early fall
(I believe)
and then just put out a third one recently.
It's of course nice to use the
latest number, but I don't think we'll lose any
points
for asking for a YES vote to 1-87.
=)
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 10 Dec 1994 01:58:57 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Whoops!
Ahh, note that the Szabo/nacho
message entitled "Ummm" was meant for
Amanda
and not the entire list and is based on a
rather inside joke pertaining to
her front fulls message. I've actually sent mail meant for _Gymn_ to her
too.
Sorry
about the mail clutter!
Susan
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************