GYMN-L Digest - 4 Nov 1995 to 5 Nov 1995 - Special Issue
There
are 10 messages totalling 508 lines in this
issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. Atlanta Invitational (2)
2. Canada vs. USA Results
3. A Fine Day in Montreal
4. CD-ROM Project
5. Parkettes
Exhibition
6. IG
7. WOMEN:International
Challenge
8.
Worlds-comments
9. GYMNASTICS
ATTIRE and ROUTINES
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 1995 23:28:00
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Atlanta Invitational
Here's another update on the Atlanta
Invitational:
According to Friday's ( Nov. 3
) Atlanta Journal & Constitution, Dominique
Moceanu,
citing "illness" has withdrawn from the competition. As Rachele
mentioned in a previous post, she will be replaced by Katie Teft, as well as
Mohini Bhardwaj. In
addition, the article mentions that Kip Simons and Jair
Lynch
will join Mihai Bagiu and
Blaine Wilson to form the U.S. men's
delegation.
It
will definitely be good to see Katie Teft back in
action after that scary
mishap at the U.S. World
Trials. There is no more detail
about the nature of
Dom's illness, though. That's all the info I have at the
moment, but the
Atlanta Journal seems to be covering this meet pretty well,
so if I find out
anything else I'll definitely
post it! :)
Amy
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 1995 23:33:38
-0400
From: ***@CAPITALNET.COM
Subject: Canada
vs. USA Results
Canada vs. USA 1995
November 4, 1995
Centre
Pierre-Charbonneau
Montreal, Quebec
Competition for Junior
Men
TEAM RESULTS
(Top 5 scores/event out of 7 gymnasts/team)
FLOOR POM.
H. RINGS VAULT P. BARS H. BAR TOTAL
USA 44.45 1 43.20 2
43.90 1 45.75 1
43.90 1 45.30 1
266.50 1
CANADA 44.25 2
44.95 1 42.35 2
45.25 2 41.40 2
44.25 2 262.45 2
INDIVIDUAL SCORES (no
awards)
FLOOR POM. H. RINGS VAULT P. BARS H. BAR AA
Alexandre
Jeltkov CA 9.10 3 9.20 1T 9.05 1 9.40 2 8.75 9.60 1 55.10 1
Sean Contreras US 9.20 1 8.05 8.75 9.50 1 8.65 8.90 53.05 2
Freddie Umall US 7.90 8.50 8.65 9.15 8.95 2 9.40 2 52.55 3
Sebastien
Fortier CA 9.00 9.10 3T 8.75 9.15 8.10 8.20 52.30
Anthony Petrocelli US
8.60 8.75 8.50 9.20 3 8.00 9.05 52.10
Leo Oka
CA 8.65 9.10 3T 7.65 9.05 8.15 8.60 51.20
Ben Potvin
CA 8.70 9.20 1T 7.30 8.80 8.55 8.30 50.85
Martin
Fournier CA 8.80 7.80 8.30 8.30 7.85 8.55 49.60
Ryan Waggener US 8.95 8.65 9.00 2T 8.80 ---- 8.75 44.15
Daniel Furney US 9.15 2 8.95 ---- 9.10 8.85 7.55 43.60
Aaron Floyd
US 8.55 8.35 8.45 8.65 8.35 ---- 42.35
Rob Popkin
CA ---- 8.35 8.60 ---- 6.80 9.20 3T 32.95
Jason Gatson US ---- ---- 9.00 2T ---- 9.10 1 9.20 3T 27.30
Aaron Akeson CA 8.20 ---- ---- 8.85 ---- ---- 17.05
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 00:23:12
-0400
From: ***@CAPITALNET.COM
Subject:
A Fine Day in Montreal
Okay, forget what I said a few days ago about
there not being much action
on the men's side of
Quebec gymnastics. Watch out for
Sasha Jeltkov!
In today's Canada vs. USA
junior men's dual meet, the 17 year-old Montreal
resident
finished all-around with more than two points ahead of the
second-place finisher, American Sean Contreras of Lincoln,
Nebraska
(Nebraska School of Gymnastics). Sasha (Alexandre)
is the 1995 Canadian
Junior Champion and immigrated from Russia to Montreal
with his family just
over three years ago. He is coached by
Michel Venne at Centre Immaculee
Conception in Montreal.
He is most certainly the rising star in Canadian
gymnastics
and hopes to be able to represent Canada once he receives
Canadian
citizenship.
Gymnastics Canada's High Performance Director and FIG
judge, Hardy Fink,
congratulated Jeltkov on his fine performances and encouraged him to
enter
the Senior High Performance level this
coming season. The removal of
compulsories after next year's Olympics make this a very
attractive option
to Sasha.
Jeltkov earned top marks on pommel horse, rings, and capped
off the day
with a world-class high bar
routine. He performs with great
technical form
and engaging panache.
Since
this was a team competition, there were no awards for individual
all-around and apparatus placements. With only three of the seven men
competing on all six apparatus, the US men took the team
title by just over
a four-point margin. The Canadians were ahead after the first
two events,
floor and pommel horse, but
difficulties on rings opened the door for the
Americans who took over the
lead after the next two events, rings and
vault. The Americans solidified their lead with
some strong parallel bars
routines, where the
Canadians had further problems.
Both teams displayed great spirit and support for their teammates. It was
interesting
to note that each of the Americans came from different states.
The
atmosphere was very relaxed in the sunlit Parc Olympique gym, with
music of
the Stone Temple Pilots and the Tragically Hip playing in the
background. The
lads looked like they were having a lot of fun.
All in all, it was a
fine day in Montreal.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 00:50:25
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Atlanta Invitational
With regard to my previous post about The
Atlanta Invitational, it was
pointed out to me
that there were only supposed to be 2 male and 2 female
entrants
per country. However, according to
The Atlanta Journal &
Constitution, the reason why Kip Simons and Jair Lynch will be joining the
already
named squad of Blaine Wilson and Mihai Bagiu is because of the
withdrawal
of 2 other foreign athletes....no mention of who these athletes
were!! Anyway,
sorry if I confused anyone! Feel
free to e-mail me if you
have any other
questions.
Amy
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 00:50:47
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
CD-ROM Project
CD ROM resource for gymnastics coaching, technical,
legal, and medical
information
As a gymnastics coach
who began coaching in a small program, I often
found
myself
in the position of teaching new skills with which I had no
prior experience.
As the
gymnasts in the program gained confidence and ability, it
became a constant
challenge to
develop new drills and ways of teaching these skills. Although I knew many
other
coaches had good, well
refined methods of teaching them, with the exception
of
the
times I could find to go to clinics, there was
no way to learn them.
Technique
magazine
often provided a good resource, but even
after a few years in the sport, my
library
was
pretty thin. Inevitably, I have constantly been
"reinventing the wheel".
I
am sure many
of
you have done this also.
Multimedia technology
provides the perfect vehicle for education of
gymnastics
training techniques.
The ability to simultaneously and easily go between
text, graphics,
animation and
video is the next best thing to hands on training. Many things
in
our sport
do not lend themselves easily to text or
two dimensional graphics. I
often
spend hours
scanning
through my videotapes and back issues of Technique, searching for a
specific
skill. It is a time consuming proceedure which has a simple solution, a
CD-ROM
which
has archives of text descriptions,
animations of biomechanical diagrams, and
video
clips
of skills and spotting techniques.
In addition to the
direct aspect of coaching techniques and methods,
this
CD will
serve as a resource for the many other
areas which impact on our industry.
There will be
articles
devoted to the business, medical and legal issues which impact on
the
development of a successful
gymnastics program. I would ask gym
owners,
doctors and
lawyers
involved with gymnastics to contribute articles on these topics.
I have had
discussions with a number of other people interested in this
idea, and have
researched what
it would take to compile such a CD-ROM.
I am beginning the
process
of compiling this now, and am looking for contributors for a
variety of
needs.
The CD will be
compatible with Windows 3.1 (and higher). It will include
600mg to 1G of text, graphics, animation, and video. I would like for this
CD to represent
a collective effort of the USA Gymnastics community; I am
soliciting submissions for review in all of the areas
detailed below, in the
formats specified.
Depending on how I
compress the files (a kind of editorial decision) I
will
be able to
include somewhere between 600 MB and 1 GB of information
on the initial
CD-ROM.
I will be distributing this information in a
1:2:3 ratio, with approximately
100MB
dedicated
to text , 200 to graphics and animation, 300 to video.
The most important
part of this project is up to you, the gymnastics
community. I
cannot
compile the information if I don't have it. I need submissions for
review in all
areas. I would ask you to submit your material
in the following manner:
Please submit on
3.5" floppy disks, PC format, or videotape, VHS format.
-or- uploaded to the USAGO! libraries
-or- sent to me on my AOL account,
"GymPhoenix". Please label each disk and video with
filename and/or title,
your name, and your contact
(email, phone, and/or address). Disks and videos
will
not be returned.
1- Text:
Files with the extensions .txt, .wps, .pub, .doc.
2-Graphics files: .jpg, .gif, .tif, .bmp, any CAD program. The Windows 3.1
software
"PaintBrush", in your
"Accessories" program group works well for
diagramming
drill station setups.
3- Video: (The best part!). Please keep
playing
length to a maximum of 15 seconds, which
is ample for demonstrating a skill
or spotting
technique. Most of you are not
equipped to transfer video clips
to your computer,
so I welcome already edited submissions on video which I
will
convert to .avi, which is the requested file format
for videos.
4- Biomechanical Animations: Only a few of you out there have the
capability
of
providing these, whether drawn or produced from digitized
video. If
you
do have
this capability, any animations you can submit will be
gratefully
accepted.
Some notes on what
we are looking for in the construction of this archive:
1- Preschool- Graphical
illustrations of preschool drill stations, obstacle
courses
and mat
setups. Detailed
lesson plans, with lesson and session objectives.
2-
Warm-Ups- Games, Dance and other creative approaches to warm up. Feel
free
to
submit VHS Videos of up to 2 minutes in length (this is
obviously
longer than the
15s
for skills and spotting and will not fit on a diskette in .avi
format).
3- Recreational Classes- Descriptions of
program structure, skill divisions
etc. Lesson
plans, with objectives.
4- Spotting Techniques-
Well executed videos of spots for skills on all
apparatus.
5-
Competitive Level-
Technical articles on basic & high level skills,
Videos
of complex
grip changes, twisting and somersaulting
mechanics. Graphical
diagrams of drill
stations, descriptions of progressions. Yearly periodization
charts, peaking
methodologies.
6- Biomechanics- Analysis of
skills on all apparatus. Diagrams,
animations
and/or
digitized video.
7- Nutrition- All areas, including
pathological behavior patterns (anorexia,
bulimia).
8-
Psychology- Topical articles in Child, Adolescent, Developmental, Abnormal
Psychology. Articles on psychological, physical and sexual abuse.
9-
Conditioning- Strength and flexibility programs, pliometrics,
PNF
stretching. Charts,
daily, weekly, monthly and yearly. Skill specific and general
conditioning.
10- Business- Program
structure, distribution. Capital requirements,
resources. Physical
plant construction, maintenance. Gym layout and design, pit
construction. Staff
management. Accessory programs (Birthday parties,
Dance, Karate,
Mobile
Extensions, Cheerleading etc...)
11-
Legal- Liability,
insurance. Corporate
structure.
12- Physical Therapy/Rehabilitation- Injury prevention,
rehabilitation.
Physiological
response to training.
13- Medical-
Genetic diseases of bone and muscle, repetitive use syndrome
injuries.
Muscle fiber types, mechanisms, nutritional requirements. Bone
growth
in
children.
Amennorhea, body fat, puberty and hormonal interactions.
Neurology,
CNS and PNS interactions.
14-
Judging/FIG / JO program: Equipment
specifications, rules and policies.
Some notes on Article form:
Follow the
format of articles appearing in scientific journals such as
Nature,
Lancet
and Science. All articles should begin with a digest
of approximately 100
words
detailing
the contents of the article. If a
related video or graphics file
is submitted,
note
it in a line directly under the digest. Citations and bibliographies should
appear at the
end of the
article.
When
submitting articles with related .avis,
.bmps etc., choose file
names
which
indicate the connection and the topic. For example, a technical jock might
submit 4
files
on the same topic, titled Tkatchev.txt,
Tkatchev.bmp, Tkatchev.jpg and
Tkatchev.avi.
The .bmp file could
contain a biomechanical diagram, the .jpg a photograph of
the
release, the .avi a video or animation of the skill. Please submit each
related file on
separate
3.5" floppies, and carefully label each floppy. If you are
submitting
a VHS tape,
similarly label it carefully. Place your name,
return address and phone
number
on each
floppy or video.
Final notes:
The development of
this resource will take quite a bit of time. If you
are
interested in
contributing, but don't have
anything immediately available, don't panic.
Your best bet is
to
contact me by e-mail, and we can work together to find a topic for you to
develop.
Even if every contributor takes 2 or 3 topics,
we will still be short of our
code of points,
much less the business, medical and legal issues. There is plenty of room
for everyone to
make a good
contribution to this project.
On the other hand, if
you already have material which you feel will be
of
value, feel
free to submit it immediately. As I begin to accumulate data, I will
be
able, in future
issues
of Technique, to define areas in
which we need further contribution.
You may snail mail
submissions to the USAG main office, att:
CD-ROM.
You may
also e-mail me at GYMPHOENIX@aol.com or
GYMPHOENIX@delphi.com. I am
looking forward to watching this project grow and develop,
with your help.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 02:10:27
PST
From: ***@EPIX.NET
Subject:
Parkettes Exhibition
I
just got back from the Parkettes Exhibition in
Allentown, PA.
It included Nadia Comaneci,and Bill Roth. It was a lot of fun to watch.
The
level 9 team did a tumbling exhibition. It
looked great but also very
unsafe. There was one
group of girls doing front tucks from mini tramps
onto
crash pads going diagonally across the floor. While the other was
doing tumbling runs going in the opposite direction
underneath of the
people doing front tucks. The
pattern looked like this.
________________________________________
- / \
/ \ -
- / \
/ \ -
-
\
\
/
/ -
- \ T \
/
/ -
- \ u \
/ / \ -
-
\ m \ /tramp/ / m
/ -
-
\ b \
/ a / -
-
\ l \ t /
-
-
\ e \ \ /
-
-
\ r \
-
-
/ \ \ s \
-
-
/ m \ \ \
-
-
/ a / \ \
-
-
\ t /
/tramp/\ \ -
-
\ /
/
\
\ -
- /
/
\
\ -
- /
/
\
\ -
- \ /
\ / -
-
\ /
\ / -
-
-
_________________________________________
What if someone had
tumbled crooked and collided with another. This seems
kind
of dangerous but WOW did it look awesome.
Tara
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 08:49:58
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
IG
I agree with the person who said that since Paul Ziert took over IG the
quality
seems to have gone down. It seems
to have become somewhat of a
mouthpiece for his
strong, often competitive or negative views (the
editorials)
about the sport and officials of USAG, and that a lot of the
articles are written by or about a small circle of people
who are connected
with him, somewhat forwarding their own
careers or agendas. I must
balance
that by saying that I still enjoy many of
the articles and pictures, but I've
subscribed for
20 years (hard to believe!) and I've really noticed this.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 17:27:46
PST
From: ***@LSS.CO.ZA
Subject:
WOMEN:International Challenge
1. Anamaria Bican
ROM
39.125
2. Raegen Tomasek
USA
38.400
3. Oksana Cusovitina UZB 38.075
4. Nadine de Kock
RSA
36.350
5. Andrea
Leman GBR 35.350
6. Caroline Demetriou RSA 34.425
7. Zandre Bruwer
RSA
34.150
8. Natalie Berowski
RSA
34.100
Bican performed beautifully
with a 9.750-9.850 all the way around. Raegen
was consistent for 2nd and Chusovitina
fell twice on beam (flic-layout,
punch front) to
drop to 3rd. Nadine was clean except for a fall on beam and
bar while Andrea had a disappointing beam but finished with
a great floor.
The three other South Africans are young and this gave them valuble
experience.
(Nadine-13, Caroline-12, Zandre-nearly 14,
Natalie-13) Caroline
turned 12 on Thursday the 2nd
November.
Helen.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 17:28:39
PST
From: ***@LSS.CO.ZA
Subject:
Worlds-comments
Hooray! We finally saw Worlds on TV over here. (Not
much). One hour
including men's and women's team
and all-around. In women's team they showed
Miller's bar, Meng Fei's vault, Kochetkova's beam, Moceanu's
floor and
Amanar's floor. In women's AA they showed Pod's floor and bar, Khorkina's
beam, bar and floor
and Milo's beam dismount.
Comments:
Khorkina's
beam had loads of difficulty and was performed beautifully IMO.
Score too
low - 9.775.
Khorkina's floor had great dance and
tumbles. Score too low again-9.687. Is
that just
because of the double twist at the end? Why didn't she use the
triple?
Khorkina's bar was amazing,
especially the full-out!! - 9.912 I loved the
squeal of joy and the hugs from the coach! ;-)
Pod's bar
had great form. But when is she going to get her legs together on
her Gienger?
Pod's floor had
excellent tumbles (double front-half). The choreography was
okay.
Amanar's floor had great
tumbles. The choreography was pretty good but I
don't
think it suits her.
Moceanu's floor had okay choreography which I think she carried off well,
but I'd like to see her with classical or dramatic music.
She is very bouncy
and never looks out of
breath.
The coverage was
bad. Although the commentary was fine, they didn't show
nearly
enough. I preferred Sherwin's coverage on the net, because I felt
like I was really there!!
Helen.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 13:13:53
-0500
From: ***@UMICH.EDU
Subject:
GYMNASTICS ATTIRE and ROUTINES
Could someone please explain to me
1.
Why girls wear slippers on beam
2. Why some boys opt for the shorts on
floor and the pants and socks on
high bar
3. What are grips and why do some girls use
them on uneven bars and
others don't
4.
Is there a compulsory leotard
( Country leotard ) and all around and
even final leaotard. Meaning why do so gymnasts change
leotards and
why other gymnasts keep the leotard that their
country has provided.
5. How often do people change their rountines. Is it before
international competitions.i.e
Worlds and Olympics. I read in
IG
Feb
95 that Cuchini Cup ?and the
rest of those competitons show
what the gymnast have been working on in the gym.
6. Is it possible
that a coach will tell the gymnast to do the same
routine although the new routine is already planned. Why?
Which coutries
get to go the Worlds in 1996 in Puerto Rico?
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 4 Nov 1995 to 5 Nov 1995 - Special issue
***************************************************************