GYMN-L Digest - 18 Apr 1995 to 19 Apr 1995
There
are 28 messages totalling 785 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Scherba
(3)
2. Zmeskal's
second Vault (4)
3. PR: VISA
Challenge
4. Help! Boys' coach needed!!!
5. Anyone hiring?
6. Bela as
judge (4)
7. Zmeskal's vaults (3)
8. Oklahoma explosion
9. PR for Visa challenge
10. Coaches' Thoughts on Judging
11. NCAA Women's Hotline
12. SI slams rhythmic gymnastics
13. Oklahoma explosion (fwd)
14. Scherba & lang.
15. Seinfeld alert
16. Shcherbo's
English
17. Yurchenko
Loop on Beam.
18. Trivia Quiz
#28 Beam & PH
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 18 Apr 1995 20:35:52
-0700
From: ***@LAFN.ORG
Subject:
Scherba
Is Vitaly Scherba really that fluent
and well versed in English
communication as that
interview portrayed? He displayed
an awfully good
vocabulary and facility for the
language for someone who has moved to the
U.S. only a few
years ago. His answers
seemed as polished as the
president's! Is he that good with the language or was
it just some handy
work by the interviewer?
Whatever the answer though I'll always be impressed with him...
one of the greatest gymnasts of all time. hands
down. :)
Thank You
-Adam
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 00:27:43
-0400
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's second Vault
>
>
> I wouldn't even think of putting a gymnast who can do only one decent
vault
> > on the list. Zmeskal may
have had a powerful Yurchenko-full, but she
>
> couldn't do a simple handspring front. And she never showed anything
>
> harder, like a Y-double full.
>
>
Just for the record, Zmeskal did show something
harder. At the 1989 DTB
>
Cup and the 1990 French International she did a handspring piked
bariani,
> and it was
fairly good (certainly a world better than her pathetic
> handspring front!) I have often wondered why she didn't use
it in
> Vaulting finals after that since it would have given her a
chance at a medal.
I don't think a piked barani-out is harder than a Yurchenko
full. It
certainly
isn't as hard as a Y-1 1/2 or 2/1, which top vaulters
have
been doing since 1985. I would guess she stopped doing it
because she
stopped being able to do it (not
necessarily for lack of physical
ability, but
possibly for sheer lack of practice).
I can't
imagine any other explanation -- I
really doubt someone would *choose*
to do an
easier vault she can't do over a harder one she can do.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 18 Apr 1995 23:09:22
-0700
From: ***@SEATTLEU.EDU
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's second Vault
Today it would be
better to do the handspring front pike with a half
instead
of the Yurchenko full because the front is worth a
9.9 and the
y-full is only worth a 9.8. Only time will tell what happens to
vault
values in the future, but you know the yurchenko half off, front layout
will
be a 9.8 value starting in June.
>
> >
> > >
I wouldn't even think of putting a gymnast who can do only one decent
vault
>
> > on the list. Zmeskal may
have had a powerful Yurchenko-full, but she
>
> > couldn't do a simple handspring front. And she never showed anything
>
> > harder, like a Y-double full.
>
>
> > Just for the record, Zmeskal did
show something harder. At the 1989
DTB
> > Cup and the 1990 French International she did a handspring piked bariani,
> > and it was fairly good (certainly a world better than her
pathetic
> > handspring front!) I have often
wondered why she didn't use it in
> > Vaulting finals after that
since it would have given her a chance at a
medal.
>
>
I don't think a piked barani-out
is harder than a Yurchenko full. It
> certainly
isn't as hard as a Y-1 1/2 or 2/1, which top vaulters
have
> been doing since 1985. I would guess she stopped doing it
because she
> stopped being able to do it (not
necessarily for lack of physical
> ability, but
possibly for sheer lack of practice).
I can't
> imagine any other explanation
-- I really doubt someone would *choose*
> to
do an easier vault she can't do over a harder one she can do.
>
>
:)
> Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 18 Apr 1995 23:05:03
-0700
From: ***@SEATTLEU.EDU
Subject:
Re: Scherba
I spent a lot of time with Vitaly in 1990 during and after the Goodwill
Games in
Seattle and he, at that time, spoke very good English. I'm sure
that
the past few years have only helped improved his skills. But if I
understand
it correctly, wasn't that author from France? Maybe it was
their
lack of English skills and subsequent polishing that made that
article sound as it did.
Dean
On Tue, 18
Apr 1995, Adam wrote:
>
Is Vitaly Scherba
really that fluent and well versed in English
> communication
as that interview portrayed? He
displayed an awfully good
> vocabulary and
facility for the language for someone who has moved to the
> U.S. only a
few years ago. His answers seemed
as polished as the
> president's! Is he that good with the language or was
it just some handy
> work by the
interviewer?
>
Whatever the answer though I'll always be impressed with him...
>
one of the greatest gymnasts of all time. hands down. :)
>
>
Thank You
>
-Adam
>
>
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 05:29:08
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
PR: VISA Challenge
I go, you go, we all USAGO!:
April
13, 1995
Luan Peszek, Public Relations
Director
Ramonna Robinson, Public Relations
Coordinator
BELARUS AND CHINA TO CHALLENGE U.S. GYMNASTS
1994
National Champion and former Olympian Dominique Dawes and 1992
Olympian
Chris Waller lead the roster of U.S. gymnasts set
to
challenge teams from Belarus and China at the
1995 Visa Challenge. The
action will take place at
the George Mason University Patriot Center
in
Fairfax, Va., April 27-28.
Dominique Moceanu,
the 1994 Junior National Champion, will join forces
with
Dawes, as will 1995 Pan American Games Team Gold-Medalist Katie
Teft and 1994
Pacific Alliance Champion Kellee Davis. Waller
will be
joined by fellow 1995 Pan American Games
Team Gold-Medalists Chainey
Umphrey
and Bill Roth. Also on the U.S. men's roster is John Macready,
an up-and-coming gymnast who won the 1993 International
Olympic
Festival.
The Chinese men won the 1994 Team World
Championships in Dortmund,
Germany, and the Belarussian
finished fourth. The U.S. men placed
ninth at the
1994 Team World Championships.
On the women's side, the U.S. is ranked
second in the world behind
Romania.
The Chinese women finished fourth at the 1994 Team World
Championships.
For Belarus, sisters Julia and Olga Yurkina competed
on
the sixth-place World Championships Team and
are on the roster for
the Visa Challenge.
Complete
rosters follow:
USA
athlete \ hometown \
residence \ club
Kellee Davis, Cambria
Heights, N.Y. \ Parkland, Fla., American Twisters
Dominique Dawes, Silver
Spring, Md., Hill's Angels
Dominique Moceanu,
Hollywood, Calif. \ Houston, Texas, Karolyi's
Gymnastics
Katie Teft, Grand Rapids, Mich., Great
Lakes Gymnastics
John Macready, San Diego, Calif. \ Colorado Springs,
Colo., USOTC
Bill Roth, Mohegan Lake, N.Y. \ Philadelphia, Pa., Temple
University
Chainey Umphrey,
Albuquerque, N.M. \ Los Angeles, Calif., UCLA
Chris Waller, Mt. Prospect, Ill.
\ Albuquerque, N.M., Gold Cup Gymnastics
BELARUS
Inna Poklonskaya
Julia Sobko
Julia
Yurkina
Olga Yurkina
Alexander
Belanovsky
Ivan Pavlovsky
Vitaly Rudnitsky
Alexander Shostak
CHINA
Bi Wenjing
Liu
Xuan
Meng Fei
Sang Lai
Shen Jian
Wang Dong
Dong Zhong
Li Bo
Tickets for each evening are
$17.50 and $12.50, with a limited number
of gold
circle seats. Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster
locations,
at the Patriot Center Box Office or by phone at
202/432-SEAT
or 703/573-SEAT. Combination
tickets for both nights
may be purchased at a
discounted price. For accessible seating call
703/993-3035. For group
discounts, call 301/350-1500.
# # #
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 07:48:06
-0600
From: ***@CSN.ORG
Subject:
Help! Boys' coach needed!!!
My
daughter's gym needs a good boys' coach.
Our boys have had four coaches
in the last
three months and we need to get them someone else now. (The
first
coach got hired by another gym.
Thank goodness...it gave our old
boys'
coach, now an optional girls' coach, a chance to fix poor conditioning
and lack of form.
However, that left the girls in his group without an
experienced coach.
Another coach was hired but his regular work schedule
didn't work out and he wanted to coach the girls. Finally, one of the
parents agreed to coach but _his_ boss refused to allow him
to do it.)
Does anyone know of any good male gymnasts in Northern
Colorado who might be
interested? Someone who was once competitive but has
retired from the
sport? The program needs rebuilding since 8 of
our original twelve gymnasts
have left. However, we do have a couple of good
kids left. One of them
took state in his age group and then third at regionals two
weeks ago. He's
very promising but they all need a coach to work with who
cares about
gymnastics & kids & has some
idea about how it is all done.
I will appreciate _any_ leads.
Thanks,
Cindy
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 12:21:00
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Scherba
The entire article was in
French, and if Vitaly doesn't speak the language
(which he may well as many native Russian-speakers speak it)
then I'm
assuming there was a translator. I doubt any English was involved.
Amanda
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 12:24:26
-0400
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Anyone hiring?
Hi everyone!
I'm new to the list. My name is Jill and I'm a senior at Yale
University. I competed for Yale Gymnastics my
freshman and sophomore
years. I'm originally from South Carolina and I
competed USGF Class II
for three years, Class I
for a year and Level 10 for half-a-year (the
bars
killed me!).
I'm graduating at the end of May and I may be working in
New York City in
book publishing. However, publishing is extremely low
paying so I would need
a part-time job (10-20 hrs/wk) teaching gymnastics. I have over 4 years
experience teaching both recreational (boys and girls) and
competitive
gymnastics (women only), ages 5 to
18. Does anyone know of any
openings
or people I should contact?
Thanks,
Jill
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 14:16:15
-0400
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Bela as judge
Oops -- I stand corrected
about blues not being a ballroom rhythm (or
allowed
as one, anyway). What can I
say? I still like Mitova better.
Gymnasts have to contend with
requirements that can make it difficult to
compose
an artistic routine, too. Having to
put tumbling in a routine
can be quite an
inconvenience. :) I know that
sounds silly, but it's
true. Choreography is driven in large part by
having to work your way to
the corner (although I
think people should really try to do more tumbling
that
isn't corner-to-corner. It's more
feasible with the front
tumbling). Then there's the
3-gymnastic-element-one-of-which-must-be-a-B-series
requirement and the
3-element mixed series that has to be acro-gym-acro or gym-acro-gym (in
the current
Code. For Mitova
there was a 3-element gym series
requirement and a
2-element mixed series requirement).
The more of
these requirements there are,
the less freedom there is to choreograph
something
good. Which always leads me to
think that maybe what we ought to
do is have a
"technical program" like in skating to replace
compulsories. We could put the thousand-and-one
requirements there and
let optionals
be *really* optional.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 14:41:37
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's vaults
In response to the
discussion about Kim Zmeskal's second vault, I
remember
Bela pulling her out of vault finals at least once because of wrist
problems.
Besides, Kim
is more of an all-around gymnast, so why should she have worked
to have two great vaults when the rules permitted her to
need only one?
Speaking of Kim, does anyone know what skills she's working
on? Is she doing
any front tumbling?
What about vault?
Ann Marie
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 14:42:34
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Oklahoma explosion
First, my sympathy to anyone living in Oklahoma
City or who have relatives
there. Hope everyone is well!
Since this is
a gymnastics discussion list, does anyone know if Dynamo or any
other clubs are near the explotion
site? Just hoping and wondering
if
everyone is okay!
Ann Marie
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 14:19:13
-0400
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's second Vault
> values in the future, but you know the yurchenko
half off, front layout
> will be a 9.8 value
starting in June.
I thought it was going to be 9.9?
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 12:24:11
-0700
From: ***@VPL.VANCOUVER.BC.CA
Subject:
Re: Bela as judge
> It was an exhibition
number -- there are no rules.
>
> Even if they do use the number
in competition, they're professionals and
> the
pro rules are much less restrictive (as evidenced by the fact that
> the music itself doesn't have a ballroom beat).
Actually,
Usova & Zhulin won the
1993 World Championships (the amateur
one) skating
to this piece of music. I don't
think it sounds much like
ballroom music either,
but apparently, they were not deducted for it.
(But considering that we're
dealing with ice dance judging, what can one
expect?)
I'll
keep on search for this music.
Thanks to everyone who e-mailed me
with
hints on what it might be. I work
in a large library with tons of
music reference
books. Maybe I can track it
down. If I do locate it,
I'll
certainly post it here.
> PS
> T&D should've won!
:)
>
No argument here! :-)
That incident even got me to do what I had
considered
absolutely impossible - I stopped criticizing gymnastics
judges! Well, for a while anyway ;-).
Lorraine
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 17:05:06
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: PR for Visa challenge
>Also on the U.S. men's roster is John
Macready, an up-and-coming >gymnast
who won the
1993 International Olympic Festival.
What is this meet?
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 18:13:39
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Coaches' Thoughts on Judging
To All:
The following is one of two articles I
wrote for the NCAA Women's National
Gymnastics
Championships brochure.
Coaches of NCAA women's gymnastics teams were asked a simple question:
If
you had a magic wand and could change something
about the way the sport is
judged, what would you
do?
Virtually every coach said
they were tired of what are known as "unwritten
rules"
and felt meets were judged at different levels throughout the country.
In
other words, a team may score a 191 in one part of the country, then throw
the same exact
routines in another part of the country and earn a 193.5.
Here were the individual responses of
some of the coaches.
Kathie Klages, Michigan State University -- Klages
said she feels very
strongly that the judges in
her state are far tougher than the judges in
other
regions of the country. Because of that, she said, teams far worse than
her team will qualify to their respective regions, while
hers may not.
"When you
start to look at the scoring across the country, that's when I
start to get crazy," she said.
She said that among judges, collegiate
meets are considered fun, plumb
jobs, and maybe
that is affecting how routines are judged.
"Somewhere along the line, they
(the judges) get intimidated by a coach,"
Klages
said. "They know if they don't do a good job, they won't get invited
back."
Sarah Patterson, University of Alabama -- Patterson said she has two
main
areas of concern. Some judges give too much
credit to poorly thrown elements
that are rated as
difficult in the code, she said. In other words, in a
judge's
eyes, a sloppy but difficult routine worth a 10.00 can score higher
than a simpler, clean routine that also has a 10.00
value.
"I think a gymnast
should do the hardest skills she can do perfectly,"
Patterson
said.
She said she also
dislikes what she calls "the unwritten deductions," rules
she said that judges sometimes come up with among
themselves. Making it
worse, Patterson said,
sometimes the unwritten rules are enforced; sometimes
they
are not.
"You think the
rules are this, and they're different sometimes," she said.
Leah Little, University of Kentucky --
She, too, said she see unevenness in
how meets are
judged, sometimes within a conference itself, but didn't have
any ready answers. Suggestions have been made to fly judges
around the
country to meets, but that often raises
costs that schools can't afford, she
said.
She did, however, endorse the idea of
making the rules tougher at nationals
in order to
better show the difference between those routines that are good
and those that are very good.
"I think at least at the Super Six,
they should be tougher," she said.
Judi Avener,
University of Florida -- Echoing comments made by Little,
Avener said there needs to be some
way to put more distance in scoring
between
various levels of routines.
"There's not enough differential between the really difficult
routines and
so-so routines," Avener said.
Greg Marsden, University of Utah -- Marsden, like Patterson, also
complained about what they both called "unwritten
rules."
"Sometimes
they make them just before a competition begins," Marsden said.
"That's
frustrating to athletes and coaches. It's especially frustrating when
you go to regionals and nationals."
He also echoed other comments that are
similar to Patterson's. He believes
too much
credit is given for difficulty, even if the difficulty is done
poorly. That sort of emphasis can lead to injuries in a
sport that already
has the highest per-athlete
surgical rate.
"Execution
should be the priority," Marsden said. "If the focus is on
difficulty, then to be competitive, gymnasts may take
risks."
But Marsden said
his primary concern with judging is the fact that the
judges
makes the rules, not the coaches, as is the practice in most other
sports.
"I always felt that was not the way it should be," Marsden
said. "I think
the judges in our sport have
been given too much power, too much control."
-- Ronald
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 18:13:43
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
NCAA Women's Hotline
To All:
My answering machine will act as a hotline for the NCAA Women's
National
Gymnastics Championships in Athens, Georgia.
It will be updated at 7 p.m. this
Thursday for the afternoon session, then
at 11
p.m. or so for the night session. On Friday, it will be updated at 11
p.m. after the Super Six session, and on Saturday, it will
be updated at 11
p.m. after the individual
all-around finals.
Please keep in mind that the updates may come a littler earlier or
later,
depending on how the session flows.
The hotline number is 904-335-9194.
--
Ronald
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 18:18:09
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
SI slams rhythmic gymnastics
There is a reference
to rsg in this week's _Sports Illustrated_ (with
Joe and family on cover). It is in the "Point After"
column on the last
page, by our favorite EM
"I know nothing about gymnastics but cover it anyway
and call myself a journalist" Swift, author of the
American Cup article.
Anyway he
is mentioning the proposed Olympic sport of ballroom dancing. The
headline
is "Callng Arthur Murray: Ballroom dancing has
as much right to be
in th
Olympics as, say, rhythmic gymnastics." Later he says, "Let then make
room (for the sport) by throwing out synchronized swimming
and rhythmic
gymnastics, two ridiculous
activities."
Any comments?
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 18:32:30
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
Oklahoma explosion (fwd)
>
>
First, my sympathy to anyone living in Oklahoma City or who have relatives
>
there.
Hope everyone is well!
> Since this is a gymnastics discussion
list, does anyone know if Dynamo or any
> other
clubs are near the explotion site? Just hoping and wondering if
> everyone is okay!
>
> Ann Marie
>
I had the same
question. Edmond, Shannon's hometown, is near Oklahoma City
(I'm not sure
exactly where Dynamo is located), plus Paul Ziert,
Bart and Nadia
are all in nearby Norman. They also
have a gym, but again, I'n not sure if it's
in Oklahoma City. Let's hope everyone is okay.
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 18:55:13
-0400
From: ***@TSO.CIN.IX.NET
Subject:
Scherba & lang.
I
think there are several things to consider here. This guy has been
interviewed by 100's of reporters all over the world, and it
would not
surprise me if it was at least 15
different languages. Now he might
have
had a translator, the interviewer might have
had one, they both might have
used one or even
some 2nd or 3rd language that they both have in common.
Most of the
Europeans I know (and lived amongst) speak at least 3 languages.
Then
again, maybe whatever medium that printed the article, had someone
translate the article before it was printed. Who knows?
Personally, I wouldn't be
surprised if he was actually that comfortable
with
English. After all, when you move
to another country, you'd be amazed
how quickly
you learn the local language. I
know I did.
Anyhow, that's my opinion.
Now in regards to Mitova and her music, and the concept of a
"technical"
program, I like the
idea. I think it would allow the
gymnasts to display
not only more of their
talents, but also their personalities, which
sometimes
can make the difference for an extra .05 points. However, since
I can't imagine that
one happening any time soon, I think the current rules
just
challenge you more to dust off some Code books.
;)
Liz
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 19:40:55
-0400
From: ***@MHC.MTHOLYOKE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Bela as judge
A
technical program would be interesting, but I kind of like
compulsories - in skaing and
gymnastics. It really shows the different
gymnasts
strengths AND weaknesses. As for having a program with no
requirements whe almost anything
goes, that would be fun for a while, but
impressive
though it may be, how would you like to see ONLY as many
tumbling
runs as a gymnast could fit into 1.5 minutes, with nothing else?
Or the
same release move done about 20 times making up the whole bar
routine? Yeah, it would look pretty cool the first few times
you saw it,
but what about a few years later when
EVERYONE'S doing only that? I say
SOME restrictions should apply, just to
prevent monotony.
-Emily
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 20:09:37
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
Seinfeld alert
For everyone who missed it the first time around, the
"Seinfeld" episode
in which Jerry dates
a former Romanian gymnast is being repeated tomorrow night
(Thurs.). You
don't actually see any gymnastics, but Kramer gives a good
analysis of a routine they all watch on TV, and he is
amazingly well-versed in
gym terminology. (Maybe
ESPN should hire him for commentary!). Anyway, it's a
cute
episode, especially for gym fans. :)
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 20:44:24
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
Shcherbo's English
I've heard Shcherbo speak English, and he is really very good in it.
When
Susan and Joe interviewed him in Dortmund, he
insisted that the whole thing be
done in English,
and even though he knew I spoke Russian, he didn't want any
help when he was struggling for words. He was very pleasant
about the whole
thing, and I found his English
very impressive. I'm sure living in the US has a
lot
to do with it. When you're immersed, you learn quick!
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 19 Apr 1995
21:17:38 -0400
From:
***@AOL.COM
Subject: Re: Zmeskal's
vaults
>Besides, Kim is more of an all-around gymnast, so why
should she have worked
to have two great vaults
when the rules permitted her to need only one?
Two comments here:
First,
since she qualified for vault finals in several major meets, it would
have made sense for her to have a second vault to have a
chance to medal
there at Worlds or Olympics.
Second,
we were discussing best vaulters, not best all-arounders.
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 21:29:28
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's second Vault
>Just for the
record, Zmeskal did show something harder. At the 1989 DTB
Cup and the 1990
French International she did a handspring piked bariani,
and it was fairly
good
She also did this vault as her second vault as 1990 US Nationals,
but sat it
down. I never saw her do it after that, which
was disappointing.
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 21:53:20
-0400
From: ***@PRISM.GATECH.EDU
Subject:
Re: Bela as judge
> something
good. Which always leads me to
think that maybe what we ought to
> do is have
a "technical program" like in skating to replace
> compulsories. We
could put the thousand-and-one requirements there and
> let optionals be *really*
optional.
>
What I think would
be a
better idea would be t allow longer routines, to escape the "I better
get back in to the corner and rest up for this final
full-in" syndrome
that prevents adequate (at
times) chorography. If I had a nickel for every
time
an announcer said "She's resting up here before the final tumbling
run" which translates to "lots of arm waves and
poses in the corner".
Some how, there are some really good floor
performers who can do it all.
You'ld hope that
every gymnast can, but with a slightly longer routine,
it
might be easier.
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 22:05:24
-0400
From: ***@PRISM.GATECH.EDU
Subject:
Re: Zmeskal's vaults
>
> In
response to the discussion about Kim Zmeskal's second
vault, I remember
> Bela pulling her out of
vault finals at least once because of wrist problems.
> Besides, Kim is more of an all-around
gymnast, so why should she have worked
> to
have two great vaults when the rules permitted her to need only one?
>
Speaking of Kim, does anyone know what skills she's working on? Is she doing
> any
front tumbling? What about
vault?
>
> Ann Marie
>
All this talk about gymnasts
second vault and one has to wonder if anyone
will
have two 10 vaulst after the Hristova
is devalued. It seems to have a
trend coming. BTW:
Is a Piked Cuervo a 10.0
vault? I know that Khorkina's
derivative
(with the RO half to the horse is) but what about traditional
approach. Makes no sense when the Layout Tsuk
full (or Kasamatsu, depending
on
how you twist) is a 9.9. Who makes up these codes?
BTW: I wish that
they would deduct more for gymnasts who do double
full
Yurchencko's but start twisting on the horse! Ana
Marie Bican does
this
and I was suprised that she scores well with this
vault.
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 22:09:57
-0400
From: ***@PRISM.GATECH.EDU
Subject:
Yurchenko Loop on Beam.
I know that the back
handspring across the beam to back hip circle is
called
a Yurchenko Loop, but I have two questions about this
move.
1)When did Natalia Yurchencko FIRST perform this move in international
competetion?
2)Has anyone ever done it with a full twist, kind of like a Rulfova
across the beam to a
back hip circle.
Typing about across the beam tricks. I know that
an AMERICAN gymnasts
has performed the side aerial
across the beam, but has anyone ever
performed the
back tuck standing sideways? I guess they would have to do
it gainer style to stay on the beam.
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 22:36:02
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Trivia Quiz #28 Beam & PH
Hey, gang! There seems to be a lot more enthusiasm
for 'elite' gymnastics
trivia, and it's great to
see lots of people getting interested again.
One thing that was
mentioned to me is that new subscribers may not be
completely
familiar with the trivia format. As
a reminder for our old
subscribers and information
for our new subscribers, everyone is welcome to
submit
questions on the given topic (and also to suggest future topics).
Then the quiz is posted.
But, as
several list members enjoy the quizzes but don't want lots of 'me
too' type messages in their boxes, individuals *don't* post
answers. The
answers,
with the names of the writers of each question/answer are posted
about 24 hours after the quiz is sent out. At that point, you may feel free
to discuss the question/answer with me and/or the originator
of the question.
Basically, it's more of a challenge to your own
knowledge than a contest
between Gymn subscribers.
Well, on to the Trivia...
********************
Topic: Balance Beam & Pommel Horse
1.
1. At the Montreal Olympic games,
Olga Korbut won her only individual
medal on beam.
What was her final placement and which two gymnasts stood on
the podium with her?
2. How many circles (including
flairs and loops) did Pi Gil Su (North Korea)
use
in his 1992 World Championship and Olympic winning routines?
3. Which
Soviet woman became known for mounting beam with flairs?
4. Name the
Soviet from the '80's who won this event at Worlds every time he
made the team?
5. Who/when was the first American
to medal on beam at a World Championship?
What color medal?
6.
Three men from three countries tied for the World title in '92, 2 of them
went on to tie for the Olympic title and then in '93 only
one was left to
claim the title. Name them.
7. At Montreal in
1985, this gymnast dismounted beam with a piked tsukahara.
8. In '83 there was a protest to raise
the eventual World PH's Champion
optional score.
Who was the athlete, what was the original score, and
what
was it raised to?
9. Which Sov beam specialist and innovator - Sov
team member at '76 Olympics
- married sports
acrobat Evgey Makhalichev
and competed with him as a mixed
pair. (She also
performed beam at exhibitions as late as '87.)
10.
Which Chinese gymnast finished out of the medal at World Championships
twice in a row after bobbling her dismount?
Enjoy! Answers tommorrow!
Mara
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 18 Apr 1995 to 19 Apr 1995
*************************************************