gymn
Digest
Sun, 26 Feb 95 Volume 3 :
Issue 74
Today's
Topics:
A Couple of Questions
American Classic Comments
American Classic senior c...
beam flight series (2 msgs)
CAL/STANFORD/UCLA/SJSU/WMU MEET ON 2/25
Deva article (2 msgs)
Hi
Scherbo New Skills
Some Code changes.. etc (fwd)
TV Alert
UF-GA-Mich Collegiate Meet
UGA, FL and Mich
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 25 Feb 1995 17:42:21 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject: A
Couple of Questions
| Also, has anyone heard from / about Michelle Campi lately?
| Or, better yet, Michelle, are you out
there and how is
| your recovery going?
Michelle
had to drop Gymn because it was taking up too much
time, but
she sent me a very nice note saying that
she had enjoyed her time on
Gymn.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 25 Feb 1995 17:49:20 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@rmii.com
Subject:
American Classic Comments
| Quite a few of these
gymnast are invited to compete in the American Cup
| and, I would assume, the Mixed Pairs Competition. Are they all waiting
| until after those competitions do head to Argentina for the
Pan Am Games?
| I saw that Miller may not attend but I would think there
would be
| conflicts with some of the others as
well.
Miller has not yet declined the Games, so we probably shouldn't
count
her out yet. I have heard that Moceanu
has declined the Pan Am Games
(and American Cup)
-- which would explain why Mohini Bhardwaj
is
alternate (because Jaycie
would now be on the team).
I think the only real conflict with the Am
Cup and Pan Am Games is
maybe the opening
ceremonies for the Games. The Pan
Am team is
leaving straight from Seattle for the
Games. The men in fact have a
training camp in Seattle the week prior. (Maybe the women do too, I
don't know...)
Rachele
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 24 Feb 1995 04:45:04 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: American
Classic senior c...
just a general note about
the gymnasts at the American Classic.
I have known
a number of these girls since
my first Classic in "89 as a
Jr. B some before
that.
Amy Chow- the first time I competed
with her was at the "89 classic in
Oakland(a bit
ironic) and at that time she had everything inculding
the
kitchen sink in her beam and bar routines the
only problem was form and
consistantcy.
Alot of people didn't notice her untill
the past couple of
years I remember my coaches
saying that when she pulled it all together that
every
one needed to watch out!!!!
Heidi Hornbeek- like
Amy the first time I competed with her was in '89 We
became friends and teamed up because we were both the only
ones from our gym.
She has
always been one of the best and everyone thought at that time all
she needed was experience...But (i
hope this doesn't sound rude) for the past
6 years I think she's only had 2
or 3 "on" meets I honestly don't know how
she
keeps going.
Kristy Powell-All I can say is that I have known her since she
was 9 and she
has always been able to swing
bars. All a coach would have to do
is suggest
a trick and if kristy
wanted to do it she would BY THE END OF PRACTICE.
Also just as a little
side note: in one letter i read someone
mentioned
Terry Walker, Cypress
coach As an Ex-Cypress gymnast I know the way he
became
one of the girls coaches(he originally coached boys he said girls were
too moody!?!) Anyway one day me and another girl were trying
to learn the
hect half
in the old comp. bar routine (for some reason it was a
hard skill
to learn and teach) And our normal
coach Debbie Kaitschuck was about to kill
us and herself trying to spot and correct us. So she got Terry over to help
spot and from then on he was forced(I mean that literally)
to help Deb spot
part time And as the Elite
program there grew he became full time girls
coach.
And in my opiion a very good one at
that. But I am sure tht even now
if you were to
ask him he'd still tell you that girls are still too moody!!
Sorry this is so long But I'm filled with stories!!
-sara
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 24 Feb 1995 00:04:43 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: beam flight
series
In level 8 you only need one flight element in the acro series. However, the
other
element must be a moving element and a handstand step down flip flop
doesn't cut it as a valid acro
series so I wonder whether any acro series
with a backward roll would work.
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 24 Feb 1995 09:42:39 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@minerva.cis.yale.edu
Subject:
beam flight series
> In level 8 you only need one flight
element in the acro series. However, the
> other element must be a moving element and a handstand step
down flip flop
> doesn't cut it as a valid acro series so I wonder whether any acro
series
> with a backward roll would work.
I
think in that case I would guess that a backward roll is ok. At least
it
seems to me that it's "moving" in a way that a handstand is not.
There must be some judge one can
ask to find out for sure. I wonder
if
what is "moving" and what is not is
defined according to the categories of
elements
in the Code -- handstands are under a category called "Holds",
which by definition are not moving, so you'd think that
everything else
that is not under that category
must be moving. But that makes me
wonder
about the sideways shoulder stand, which
is categorized under "Rolls".
Would that be moving or not?
Would it depend on whether the gymnast
stops
in the shoulder stand or goes right through the vertical without
stopping? I
wonder about this because it occurs to me that a back dive
right into that might look pretty cool.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 24 Feb 95 11:02:33 PST
From: ***@mcm.com
Subject:
CAL/STANFORD/UCLA/SJSU/WMU MEET ON 2/25
Hello,
This is the
first time posting for me. I just
got on the list recently.
Just wanted to let everyone know that there is a
great college
men's meet this saturday
at Stanford. Cal, UCLA, San Jose
State,
Western Michigan, and host Stanford will all be competing.
Last
Saturday Stanford and Cal met with Cal coming from 1.45 down
on the last event, high bar, to win it by one tenth. It was real
exciting
watching the whole meet, but especially high bar with
many
National team members competing.
Toe-on back hecht
to
geinger, double
twisting double layouts, full twisting Kovacs, and
many
other combinations were typical order in nearly every routine.
For the
meet this weekend, former Olympian Jair Lynch and
National
team member Mark Booth will also be
competing.
If you are in the area, I highly recommend attending this
meet.
I believe it starts at 7 pm on Saturday. I will try and post an
update on Monday on the results.
Josh
Cal
'93
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 25 Feb 1995
01:56:57 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject: Deva
article
Here is the article about Deva from Sovetsky
Sport. I can't
vouch for the accuracy of the
author's information. For example,
I had no idea Vanda Hadarean
was still at Deva or that Maria
Neculita had been
so seriously injured. Does anyone know anything
about
this, for instance, exactly what the injury was? I'm
curious
to know, and if anyone can verify that Hadarean is
still
training, I'd love to know! I really like
her style, and would be
happy to see her in
competition again. :)
Beth
IN DEVA THERE ARE ONLY GIRLS. -
The Big Secrets of a Small Town.
(By Natalya Kalugina.
Sovetsky Sport, Jan. 13, 1995, p. 4.
Translated
by Beth Squires:) Before the Montreal Olympics, this
was
a god-forsaken little town. And it wasn't just anywhere, but
in Ceaucescu's Romania, which
means it was "god-forsaken
squared." A
year later, that is in 1977, Deva, having become
renowned
all over the world, was turned into a closed city.
It was so closed that,
it seems, the Romanians themselves
didn't know
what was going on there. True, the products labeled
"Made in
Deva" were applauded by the entire world. They (the
products)
had names: Nadia Comaneci, Emilia Eberle,
Daniela
Silivas, Aurelia Dobre,
Eugenia Golea, Cristina Bontas
and
Gabriela Potorac. They (once again the
products) knew how to beat
the most distinguished
rivals in gymnastics arenas, but they had
no idea
how to talk to journalists or gymnasts from other
countries.
At press conferences, which were impossible to avoid,
they
looked with plaintive eyes at their coaches, and the latter
parried the bothersome journalists' questions with
pre-prepared
stock answers. Everything was simpler
with girls from other
countries. You could talk to
them. Therefore, the stars from the
Deva production line lost their names,
became simply "the
threatening and invincible
Romanians" and evoked irritation among
those
around them. For a little girl, especially the most
brilliant
gymnast, especially a girl who is very strong in
spirit,
cannot be made into a non-human, into a small cog in an
enormous
machine. But it was thanks to these cogs that Deva's
secret
could be observed.
But then the Berlin Wall came crashing down. While it was
being dismantled, Deva's most famous pupil, Olympic
champion
Nadia Comaneci, quickly fled Romania. And then Nicolae
Ceaucescu
himself was
removed from the scene. And the secret center for
training
super-gymnasts in the Romanian provinces became open. To
such
a degree that journalists were allowed into Deva. Here is
what they saw there.
It turned out that
Deva was the site of more than just an
academic
and training center for the national women's gymnastics
team
of Romania. What was there was something like schools for
potential Olympians at which 800 girls study, with 300 of
them
living in school dormitories. This is
convenient, since it helps
in balancing training
hours and school hours. Little girls enter
a Deva
school at age six, when they begin to learn flip-flops and
the alphabet, and they leave there with a bachelor's
degree
[that's literally what the article says,
but I would assume a
high-school degree is meant]
and the ability to spin a triple
somersault (true,
not everyone can do the latter. Some do simpler
elements).
There are three classes of 30 pupils each all studying
the
same things. Everyone wroks out at
least 20 hours a week.
Beginning in the
second year of study, academic-and-training
groups
are formed, with 20 future gymnasts in each one. Then four
groups are chosen that spend 30 hours in the gym instead of
20.
Of these 80 girls, only 15 will work at the international level,
although this doesn't mean that the others are
automatically
dropped from the program. Moreover,
each girl is cherished like
the apple of one's
eye.
Remember there was a very talented girl named Maria Neculita
on the junior team? Then she disappeared somewhere. It turns
out
that she suffered a serious injury. In fact it
was so serious
that she had to give up gymnastics
forever. But she still
continues to study at
Deva.
"Everything is so wonderful for us here! We are like a
family. When things went bad for me, all the girls supported
me,"
Maria says with a smile.
But let's return to
the 15 chosen "ultras." Currently among
them
are Lavinia Milosovici,
Vanda Hadarean, Gina Gogean
and
Andrea Cacovean. They are the distinguished
ones, so they are
known to everyone. But there are
also quite young ones. Only
gymnastics fans know
about them. But that is today. Tomorrow... I
think
that it is sufficient to note that at the 1994 Junior
European
Championships they surpassed their closest rivals, our
girls
[the Russians], by 2.5 points.
The future and current
champions in Deva receive special
treatment. They
have to work much more than the others. Granted,
they
have been "spared" in three areas. First, they don't have to
take lessons in music or drawing (they complete the rest of
the
secondary-school curriculum in full). Second,
they are freed of
free time. So at least their
heads are not filled with foolish
things from TV.
Third, a special schedule has been developed for
them.
It looks like this: From 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. the champions
are regular schoolgirls. Then they work out from 10:30
until
1:00. From 1:00 to 5:00 is lunch, tomorrow's
homework and at
least a little time to relax. Then
they work out again from 5:00
until 8:00. The
"stars" at Deva, in contrast to the non-stars, do
not get Saturdays off or school vacations: There is no time
for
that.
So the secret center
in the little town with the feminine
name of Deva
has revealed its secrets. The only thing left to
remind
people of is that it was once founded by handball coach
Bela Karolyi
and his wife Marta, a former gymnast. By the way,
Bela also has his own gymnastics center in the US, where he
works
now. The whole world is familiar with its
results...
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 25 Feb
1995 09:33:00 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@minerva.cis.yale.edu
Subject: Deva
article
On Neculita: To say that an injury
was so serious that she had to quit
gymnastics
could mean almost anything, really.
Maybe I'm being
naive, but somehow I think
that if it had been something really huge we
would
have heard about it.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 25 Feb 1995 16:11:04 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@blue.UnivNorthCo.EDU
Subject:
Hi
Hi I am a new subscriber to your gymnastics forum and I thought I'd
introduce myself to you. My name is Holly and I am 19 years
old.
I grew up in New York
City where I competed from the age of 8 to 17 in
various
levels and at three different gyms.
I am currently attending the
University of Northern Colorado where
I am a double major in both
Management and Marketing. I hope to eventually get into the Sports
Administrative Field. I have
just read what was already sent to me and
am very
glad I subscribed. I still love
gymnastics and work out when I
can. Recently I went to the Winter Cup
competition in Colorado
Springs.
I hope this was what was meant by sending an
introduction.
Look forward to receiving more gymnastics related
mail
Holly
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 24 Feb 95 19:33:55 -0800
From: ***@mhs.mendocino.k12.ca.us
Subject:
Scherbo New Skills
There was an interview
with Scherbo in one of the recent digests where
he
mentioned new skills and a unique new release
move on HB. Does anyone know
what his new
supposedly spectacular release is and if he's competed it yet?
I'd also be
interested in hearing about any other new skills he's performing.
Thanks,
Orion
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 23 Feb 1995
23:14:20 -0500 (EST)
From: ***@minerva.cis.yale.edu
Subject: Some Code
changes.. etc
(fwd)
Someone just asked about the new value
of a Hristakieva and about
what
other skills were devalued, so here's a
repost.
:)
Adriana
---------- Forwarded message
----------
Date: Tue, 7 Feb 95 23:13:55 CST
From: ***@mad.adelaide.edu.au
To:
gymn@MIT.EDU
Subject: Some Code changes.. etc
Hi
from Anne in sunny down-under
A couple of elements
have been changed in value by the FIG Women's
Technical
Committee, the changes to take effect on 1st June 1995.
Vault Yurchenko (roundoff) onto the
horse, half turn and stretched
front salto off (formerly number 4.505) is now 4.410 with a
Start
Value of 9.90. [this
is the Hristakieva]
On floor:
The Popa (straddle pike jump with full turn) was D now C
Stretched
front salto with one and a half twist was E now
D
The front flyspring - was B now A
(regardless of whether to one or
two feet). This change will dramatically affect the
acrobatic
series bonus for many gymnasts.
Can
anyone help by posting the results of the Peachtree classic
where a group of Australian gymnasts took part? Would appreciate
any
available results - thanks!
Anne/Adelaide/Australia
------------------------------
Date:
Sun, 26 Feb 1995 05:39:06 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: TV
Alert
ESPN is doing a feature on '95 Dial Award winner Shannon Miller on
Sunday's (26/2/95)
"Scholastic Sports America" It's on several times during
the day so check your local listings.
-Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 25 Feb 1995 22:05:53 -0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject: UF-GA-Mich Collegiate Meet
To All:
When the triangular meet
between then #2 Georgia, #5 Michigan and #7
Florida was over, the favored
Bulldogs were victorious, but the team from
Georgia was not the happiest.
Michigan was.
In
what Michigan Coach Bev Plocki is calling her team's
greatest away
meet in her six years as head coach,
the Wolverines earned the highest score
in school
history and were trailing Georgia by less than half a point going
into the final rotation.
Finishing on floor as
Michigan finished on beam, Georgia went on to win,
earning
a 197.3 over Michigan's 196.45 and Florida's 192.925. But when the
meet was over, it was the Michigan team that quite literally
was dancing on
the floor in utter joy.
"Every year, our team
seems to grow another level," Plocki said.
"We're
looking forward to coming back here
(for nationals)."
The awards ceremony afterwards seemed like a prelude to nationals,
where
not even a 9.9 was good enough for third
place on an apparatus. Three 10s
were awarded on
vault, going to Michigan's Heather Kabnick
(handspring-front
with a half) and Georgia's Julie
Ballard and Kim Arnold (both
handspring-fronts piked).
Michigan's Beth Wymer easily won bars with a 10.00, throwing a
giant-full
to a giant-half to a piked Yaeger (an "E"
element) and ending with a full-in
dismount. Wymer also took first place on beam, earning a 9.9 along
with
Georgia's Lori Strong and Arnold. On floor, Georgia's quick-twitched
Leslie
Angeles won, earning a 9.925 for her routine that
featured a full-in,
double-pike and
double-full.
After
the meet, Georgia Head Coach Suzanne Yoculan said she
was happy
when it was announced to the crowd after
the third rotation that her team was
ahead by less
than half a point.
"I loved it," Yoculan said.
"Last year, we didn't have that. Until the
national
championships, we didn't know what it was like to have someone
breathing down your neck."
Florida never was a factor
in the meet. Counting nearly two points in
deductions
for falls and breaks on their first event, bars, the Gators played
catch-up for the rest of the meet. The highlight of the
competition for the
Gators was vault, where a school record of 49.10 was
earned as five Gators
earned career highs on that
event.
Interesting Note: Georgia is
taking the art of mental imagery to a new
level.
Most gymnasts at one time or another will close their eyes and imagine
their routine. At Georgia, it's required for beam.
The gymnasts have gotten so
good at it that they can close their eyes and
time
their mental imagery with a stopwatch and have their imaginary routine
the same length as their real one.
"Lori (Strong) has
gotten so good at it that when she's done with her
mental
imagery, her mouth will be dry, just as if she had done a real
routine," Yoculan said.
--
Ronald
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 25 Feb 1995
00:19:17 -0500
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: UGA, FL and Mich
Just in from the meet, but I must say that I
didn't see much of it at all.
The way they were doing the
scores was horrible, I couldn't keep up.
Thank
goodness, Jim is a member of the press and I
was able to get the scores after
the meet. Here goes
UGA had a good
meet all around, though Michigan gave them a run for their mone
y.
Julie
Ballard and Kim Arnold both scored 10's on their vaults.
AA'ers
Total team
score 197.3
Strong 39.65
Ballard 39.3
Arnold 39.3
Florida, seemed weak against the other two teams. But put on a good show
just the same.
AA'ers
Total team score
192.925
Guise 38.8
Selga
38.225
Johnson 37.875
Michigan, was strong on bars and even
though I enjoyed the FX, I don't think
the judges
did! One girl did a routine to
"The Devil went down to Georgia"
and it was great! If they would have done better on beam,
I do believe
they could have beat GA.
AA'ers
Total team score
196.45
Kabnick 39.4
McDonald 38.925
Marshall 38.7
If I
felt better, I would type in all the scores, but my gymnasts have given
me a cold! (really didn't want to go to the meet tonight but had no
choice)
But on the same subject I want to brag a little. UGA is fighting over Jim's a
rtwork! Suzanne loves his work,
and he will be on the calender next year.
And I got to hang out with Jullie Ballards parents, a real
treat for me
since we come from the same part of
the country.
Anyway email me if you want more details and I will get
them out
Lori
------------------------------
End of gymn Digest
******************************