GYMN-L Digest - 8 Jul 1996 - Special issue
There
are 20 messages totalling 602 lines in this
issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. OLYMPIC ALL-AROUND QUALIFICATION
2. Moceanu's
tumbling, and spring-loaded legs
3. direction in compulsories
4. Ivankov
5. Woops!
6. Caffeine
7. Predictions
8. Olympics- Ivankov
Out
9. Womens
Euros and other stuff...
10.
Survey
11. Picks
12. Comments on USAIGC's (LONG)
13. Rythmic
Gymnastics
14. Elfie
15. Handedness and turns
16. U.S. Team in event finals past
17. WAG/Amanar's
FX SV
18. Fabrichnova,
UKR teams and other things
19.
Final questions and comments on US trials
20. email me
please
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 10:45:32 -0500
From: ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject:
Re: OLYMPIC ALL-AROUND QUALIFICATION
Chris asks:
> How
do gymnasts qualify for the all-around from the team competition
>if not every athlete does every routine? Will the only athletes eligible to
>compete in the AA be ones who compete every single apparatus
in the team
>event? The 7-6-5 rule should allow some athletes not to compete in some
>events, which should make rules for qualification more
complex. I think I
>have that right.
Any information would be appreciated. Thanx in advance.
In order to qualify to the AA, a
gymnast must compete all events, both
compulsory
and optional. This means that many
gymnasts will compete in the
team event knowing
they can't possibly make it to AA finals, even with all
10.0s. It also means
that coaches will have to balance the importance of
the
team medal against the importance of individual AA medals when choosing
which gymnasts to compete on what events.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 10:45:40
-0500
From: ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject:
Moceanu's tumbling, and spring-loaded legs
I've
never see Moceanu perform any of the more difficult
tumbling I hear
she can do. What exactly is she able to
perform? Has anyone out there
seen her double layout?
Her double front? How are they?
Moceanu is mighty springy, and remembering that got me about
other springy
gymnasts. Among the women, Chusovitina
strikes me as the springiest around
currently. As I recall, Dianne Durham had amazing
height on her tumbling.
As for men, does anyone else remember Ron Galimore? I
have _never_ seen
springier legs. I wonder what his tumbling would look
like to me today,
now that I've seen far more
difficult skills being performed.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 10:45:36
-0500
From: ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject:
direction in compulsories
When I was competing, I remember that I'd
walk into a new gym and instantly
know where I
wanted to mount the beam and where I wanted to start my fx
routine. I have
no idea how I knew, or what my decisions were based on,
but
one direction would feel right and the others would all feel wrong.
Has
it always been true that elite gymnasts can decide on the directions of
turns and various elements in their routines? I never competed elite, but
the last Class I (equivalent of level 10, for those of you
who don't
remember) beam routine I competed was
set up to insure that everyone had to
do some
elements in what was probably their less favored direction. It was
actually
kind of good for me because I was never a consistent enough righty
or lefty, so it was nice to see other gymnasts have the same
problems I'd
always had. Still, it meant I had to do a wrong-leg
split leap and a wrong
direction handstand
pirouette--not hard skills, but skills I had to
remaster because I'd never bothered to learn them in
the wrong direction.
I would have _loved_ to choose my direction on
each skill separately.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 11:11:30
-0400
From: ***@YORKU.CA
Subject:
Ivankov
According to the Cetate internet
gymnastics magazine, 1994 World
Champion and two time
defending European champion Ivan Ivankov of
Belarus
will not be able to compete in Atlanta
after rupturing his achilles tendon
during training in Charlotte :-( Very sad news indeed........
Chris.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 12:57:00
EDT
From: ***@PSUVM.PSU.EDU
Subject:
Woops!
Oh boy. What a
typo. I just read my post about
Kathy Johnson's comment
during Euro's and what I
meant to say was she had the GUTS to say it,
not
the guys to say it. Boy am I stupid.
Just to clarify...
:) Joy (blushing)
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 10:04:12
-0700
From: ***@SEATTLEU.EDU
Subject:
Caffeine
Somebody wrote that Dom M had 5(!) cokes during the optionals at Trials.
Has anyone else ever heard that
caffeine "sucks" calcium out of a
person's
body? I would think that this would
be bad for the healing of
her leg. Please write if you know anything about
this.
Corrie :)
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 12:06:07
-0600
From: ***@STUDENTS.UIUC.EDU
Subject:
Re: Predictions
This is fun, but I am sure the final results will be
nothing like this.
Here goes (only for WAG, as I don't know much about the
men):
1. Which three
teams, in your opinion, will win the medals in Atlanta
(in
order)?
1. China
2. United States
3. Romania
4. Russia
5. France
2. Which ten gymnasts would you expect to
place in the top ten in the
all-around?
1. Mo Huilan
2. Lilia Podkopayeva
3. Svetlana Boginskaya
4. Shannon Miller
5. Dominique Dawes
6. Lavinia
Milosovici
7. Alexandra Marinescu
8. Svetlana Khorkina
9. Roza
Galieva
10. umm . . . maybe Piskoun, or Moceanu if healthy,
or Strug?
or
Gogean if she
has really recovered from the surgery (if not then
Marinescu),
or Amanar who I just don't like much. This field is SO deep.
It is going
to be so exciting to watch.
The above aren't really in order except
for the first two, who I do think
will medal. The bronze is just a toss up for the
rest of the field.
3. Who
do you think will place in the top three for each of the four
event
finals?
Vault
I just don't know. Gogean if
healthy, but who knows about that?
I've seen
Huilan vault well in the past,
but haven't seen her recently (not since 95
worlds). Pod usually hits her vaults, but the
second one is out of 9.9.
Khorkina could medal if
she sticks. I would pick Chusovitina but the
judges
never score her fairly. Piskoun ought to be a contender. Amanar
will probably medal but I just hate her piked
second vault that she gets
full credit on.
Bars
1. Khorkina
2. Huilan
3. Dawes or Piskoun
or Miller or Pod
Beam
1.
Boginskaya (sentimental favorite for me,
although I doubt she'll win)
2.
Kochetkova
3. Huilan or Marinescu
Floor
1. Pod
2. Miller
3. Kui Yuanyuan
I know I should have a Romanian in there,
but I just can't handle the lack
of choreography
and I'm betting that Gogean will not be full
strength.
4. Who are your three (or more??) favourite
"elite" gymnasts a) of all
time, and b)
presently competing.
a) Boginskaya,
Nadia, most of the old Soviets with perfect form and great
choreography, Dobre too
b) Bogi,
Pod, Khorkina, and Huilan
I'd
be interested in feedback. If you
try to do this yourself, I think you
will find it
very difficult. There are so many
amazing gymnasts now. I
remember back to previous Olympics where you could easily
pick out who
would/should medal it they hit. In 76, it was all Nadia and Nelli Kim, in
84 all Retton and Szabo, in 88, all Silivas and Shushunova. In 92, there
were
more contenders, but still far fewer than today. With the improvement
by China, France, and the US as well as the breakup of the
Soviet Union
allowing great entrants from BLR,
UKR, and Russia, the number of really
great
gymnasts has just exploded.
Jill Conway (jconway@.uiuc.edu)
UIUC
College of Medicine
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 13:38:24
-0400
From: ***@CYBERNEX.NET
Subject:
Olympics- Ivankov Out
According to Cetate World Gymnastics Ivan Ivankov will not be able
to
compete in Atlanta because he "tore up his achilles
tendon in preperation
for
the games in Charlotte." Its a shame because he could have won several
medals in Atlanta.
In
my local newspaper there was a short article about the Romanian
womens team. Apparently they left for Atlanta
yesterday. It had a short
quote from both Milosovici, and Gogean so I assume they will be competing.
Lori
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 10:48:58
+0100
From: ***@ASUCLA.UCLA.EDU
Subject:
Womens Euros and other stuff...
I'm so glad
I got to see Dina K.'s
sleepwalking FX performance AGAIN rather
than
Joana Juarez's lyrical spanish performance. My
favorite part of Dinas
FX is right before her
last pass when the music is going crazy and she is
staring
blankly into space. You can't teach
that.
A note to all those folks out there that are getting all bent
out of shape
because people have opinions that
don't agree with theirs.... GET OVER IT!
These are the same people who
resort to name calling and making statements
like
"Dont post that garbage" or whatever. I guess as long as you agree
with them its ok..
You need to separate the person
from the gymnast..Kevin
Costner might be a
nice guy and he might read to
the blind in his spare time and he
might have
done the AIDS ride and all that, but I
think he's a horrible actor, and I'll
say so. I have that right. The same goes with gymnastics... Amy Chow
might
be a cool kid but she has all the fluidity of a bad Level 6.. This is
solely a statement about her gymnastics, not about her
personally.
Love,
Me
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 12:00:21
-0700
From: ***@NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Survey
Here's the first paragraph of an article I found in one of the clari.
newsgroups:
> GREENWICH, Conn.--(BW SportsWire)--July 8, 1996--Synchronized
>swimming, rhythmic gymnastics, beach volleyball and
sailboarding
>(commonly known as
"windsurfing") should be dropped from the Summer
>Olympics,
according to the results of a nationwide media survey
>sponsored by The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance
Company.
> The survey
of sports editors, columnists, writers, sportscasters
>and commentators
RSG ranked third in negative
reaction (57%), behind sailboarding (69%) and
synchro. swimming
(63%). Those being surveyed said
the sport they'd most
like to see added to the
Olympics was golf [ugh!...apologies to those who
like
golf].
Debbie
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 14:04:40
-0700
From: ***@IX.NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Picks
>>1. Which
three teams, in your opinion, will win the medals in
Atlanta
>> (in
order)?
1. Romania or USA(you have to admit, we have a teriffic
team!)
2. China
3. Russia
>
>
>>2. Which ten gymnasts would you expect to
place in the top ten in
the
>> all-around?
NO PARTICULAR ORDER!!
1. Shannon Miller
2. Dom Dawes
3. Milo
4. Pods
5. Moceanu
6. Gogean
7. Bogi
8. Marinescu
9. Dina K.
10. Korhina
>
>>3. Who do you think will place in the top
three for each of the
four/six
>> event finals?
>
>
> VAULT
UNEVEN BARS
BEAM
FLOOR
>
-----------
------------
-------------
1. Amanar 1.
Dawes
1. Mo
1. Miller
2. Strug 2. Mo(any
Chienese)2. Dina
2. Mo
3. Mo
3. Korhina
3. Moceanu 3. Borden
>
>>4. Who are your three favourite
"elite" gymnasts a) of all time, and
b)
>> presently competing.
A.) KIM ZMESKAL
B.) Kerri Strug, Amanda Borden
(B was hard. I have a lot of respect for all of the
athletes who are competing today. I like them all!!!!)
Laura
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 17:07:21
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Comments on USAIGC's (LONG)
Hi
to all,
I just watched USAIGC's on tv, and I wanted to add some comment----
Gymstrada, IMO, looked excellent. Alexis Brion's floor impressed me, (double
layout,
OVER ROTATED) and not just the
tumbling, but the dance was much
improved over
last year. Her interview afterwards, was great, although who
ever was interviewing her got annoying, fast. Katie McFarland's vault,
Yurchenko 1 1/2, impressed me,
even though she sat it down. Cory Fritzinger's
9.9
on bars was well deserved. When's the last time you've
seen an
international competition where a gymnast
has thrown a front giant full,
double front
combo?? The other Gymstrada gymnast, (name escapes
me) gets the
credit for hitting beam when it
counts most, after 2 previous falls from
teammates!!!
Gymcarolina gets the choreography award. Each gymnast's
beam and floor were
unique, and interesting. It
was nice to see 11 year old Micha
Gross dance to
the fullest, with mature, but fun,
choreography. On beam, the whole team was
fun to
watch. I have seen this team in the
past, and every gymnast, down to
their level 8's,
have the same quality to their dance. It's nice to see.
American
Twisters, looked to me, to be much improved over last year. Susie
Kinkaid's
(spelling?) vault, Yami-double full, was incredible,
along with
Morgan White's bars--(did she do *3* healys into her counterswing-handstand?)
The
form was great, and she's an amazing swinger. For only 12, her calmness
during the interview afterwards was impressive, although she
must of said
"thank you" to the
interviewer 100 times. Shannon Watt's double twisting
front
was one of the best that I've ever seen, and I do believe that the last
leap she did (switch side with an extra 1/2 twist) is named
after her, at
least in the JO Code of points. Can
any judges confirm this?? Mary Moore's
beam was
also good. She really showed off her flexibility (gotta
love the
planche at the
beginning) and her switch side shushanova was really
well
done. I think some elite gymnasts need to
take a look at her sheep jump. This
is how it is suspossed to be done, with your feet above *head*
height.
Capital also looked well-trained.
It's nice to see Gail Kachura back in
action, along with some other very talented teammates. Little Monique Chang
(who won US Classic) reminded me of a young Mina Kim on
floor. Presice,
polished....
Stephane Carter, of Ricochets (spelling?) threw a full
*out* on floor. Too
bad she missed her other 2 passes. She also did a full out off bars, and
a
tucked Yurchenko full
vault.
Well, the above is JMO, and since I'm only 14, don't expect
perfection...I'm
NOT Nadia... Anyway, I hope I provided
some insight for those who didn't
see the
competition.
Onto Atlanta....
Jessica
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 17:26:41
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Rythmic Gymnastics
Do rythmic
gymnasts do any tumbling in their routines? If they don't it
would
seem pretty boring(no offense or anything to all those rythmic
gymnasts
out there) to me.
BTW, what do IMO
and IMHO stand for?
Andrew~
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 18:15:17 -0400
From: ***@KENT.NET
Subject:
Re: Elfie
>Elfi Schlegel is a former
gymnast from Canada. I believe she was
>nationals
champion at least one year, though I may be wrong, and
>was featured in "The Yong Gymnasts," by Lyn Moran,
along with Karen
>Kelsall and Monica Goermann.
>
You're right. Elfi
commentated for CBC for many years.
She did
gymnastics and also assorted other
sports like freestyle skiing.
She probably won Canadians for several years;
I don't really know
what her accomplishments
were. She is always mentioned
as one of the Canadian "greats".
Jordynn
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 18:15:19
-0400
From: ***@KENT.NET
Subject:
Re: Handedness and turns
Grace wrote:
>BTW, I still am not
convinced that handedness has anything to do with
>turning
direction.
>
I agree. I
am right handed, but in ballet we have to do turns in either
direction.
Sometimes my left turns are better, sometimes my
right
turns are better, and sometimes both are good! Most
dancers
seem to have one side that they favour more than
the other, but it doesn't correspond with handedness that
much.
What about cartwheels?
I'm right handed and I always
did them the
"leftie" way (left hand goes down first).
Jordynn
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 18:18:56
-0400
From: ***@VAXC.HOFSTRA.EDU
Subject:
Re: U.S. Team in event finals past
She also made the finals in 95, and
chose not to compete
> Kerri Strug
made vault finals at both the 1992 and 1993 Worlds.
>
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 15:58:32
+0000
From: ***@IGC.APC.ORG
Subject:
WAG/Amanar's FX SV
Someone mentioned that Simona Amanar's FX routine
in the event finals at Europeans had a start value of
9.8.
Is that her usual FX routine, or did she leave something
out? I would be surprised if she went to the Olympics
with
only a 9.8 routine--she seems capable of
enormous difficulty.
Let's talk Romanians, btw. What lineup? Marinescu
was the flavor of the month not long ago; is Amanar
going to steal the day,
peaking just in time for Atlanta?
Or will Milo and Gogean
once more get the high scores with
their boring
routines (my opinion, my opinion....)?
(I'm
not a fan of Gogean's
style, but if she's recovered in time
for the
Olympics, good for her).
--Mary Lynne
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 19:31:24
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
Fabrichnova, UKR teams and other things
I was fortunate enough
to attend the Ukrainian team's
exhibition/intrasquad meet yesterday (it was open to the public,
though not
particularly well publicized). The men
performed only exhibition routines, and
Korobchinsky
and Misyutin did not take part at all. But I saw Korobchinsky
train, and he is
a living miracle! After rupturing his Achilles just last
November, he has
made the most remarkable recovery I have EVER seen. His
opening
pass on floor is a full-twisting double layout and he ends with a
double layout. He was also practicing handspring double
front vaults. I didn't
think this was even
possible only 8 months after an Achilles injury. He is VERY
motivated and wants so much to compete AA in Atlanta. I hope
he gets his
chance! Misyutin
looks completely unmotivated, but is still strong on floor
(again, I am basing this on what little I saw of him
training, since he was not
at the intrasquad). He will do at most 4 events (floor, pommels,
rings and
MAYBE vault). The rest of the men looked good: Sharipov, Svetlichny, Kosyak,
Yermakov and Shamenko. Stepanchenko was there,
but unless someone gets injured
will surely be
heading back to Kiev soon (as with Russia, the 8th gymnast is
getting sent home). I THINK the gymnasts doing all events
and, thus, trying for
AA are Svetlichny,
Sharipov, Korobchinsky and Shamenko.
The girls
currently in the States are Lilia Podkopayeva,
Viktoria
Karpenko, Anna
Mirgorodskaya, Lyubov Sheremeta, Svetlana Zelepukina,
Yelena
Shapornaya, Olga Teslenko
and Oksana Knizhnik. The general consensus seems
to
be that Knizhnik is
No. 8 and will not be in Atlanta, which is a shame. She
looked
quite good at the intrasquad, although she did not do
bars. Karpenko had
to
sit out the meet with a pulled hamstring, but I doubt she'll be replaced
unless this injury is REALLY bad, and I don't think it is. Shapornaya has a
foot injury,
but performed beautifully. Just from what I saw, I would make
Zelepukina the alternate and send Knizhnik
to Atlanta, but there is evidently a
lot of
politicking going on here, very much like the US it seems. Lilia fans
will be pleased to know that she looks to be in great shape,
although seemed
not to be pleased with her
performances. But her legs were completely together
on
her Gienger! :)
Let's hope she can do the same in Atlanta. Mirgorodskaya
looks 100 times better than she did in Puerto Rico and
Birmingham - slimmer,
more motivated, more emotion
in her dance. And her bars are still amazing.
Sheremeta
also looks very crisp and clean, but might be denied a slot in AA
because of being kept out of a compulsory event (I HATE this
7-6-5 rule...)
I was talking to Sheremeta's coach, and she
said Arkayev changed his mind
and
sent Fabrichnova to the US for Russia's training
camp. :) I assume this is
reliable information (Sheremeta's coach said she spoke to a Russian coach
after
the team had arrived in the US). The other
girl "on the bubble" is Dolgopolova.
So
perhaps Fabrichnova will be in Atlanta after all - I
hope so!! I asked about
the men, but the UKR coach
didn't know which 8 made the trip here from Russia.
There were various
rumors going around about Belarus, the main ones being
that
they have nowhere to train in the US and were still at home as of July 3.
But
the worst news, if it is true, is that Ivan Ivankov
popped his Achilles and
will not be in Atlanta at
all. A lot of this info is word-of-mouth, so I'm not
sure
how accurate it is, but the sources seemed reliable (Slavic coaches).
Well,
we'll know soon enough...
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 20:09:27
EDT
From: ***@COMPUSERVE.COM
Subject:
Final questions and comments on US trials
Hello to all,
Just a few simple comments and questions in regards to the US
Olympic Trials.
1. What exactly is a Phelps? Is it a half-twist
on; back layout with a
half-twist?
2.
What is the purpose of the chalk markings on the side of a balance beam? I
saw this at Trials and noticed it before. Are they for the benefit
of the
gymnast or the judges?
3. Mary
Beth Arnold's beam routine actually resembled a floor routine IMO. It
was nice to watch.
4. A. Maloney's FX music was
*Sweet Georgia Brown* except for a small portion in
the
middle of the routine. Anyone know what the other piece was? *Georgia on
my
Mind* perhaps?
Dana
Good luck
to all competitors in Atlanta.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 7 Jul 1996 15:07:00
-0600
From: ***@MEDICINE.ADELAIDE.EDU.AU
Subject:
email me please
Leonie Hadzic, could you please email me? I
want to write
back to you but dont
have your address.
Thanks,
Tara
------------------------------
End of GYMN-L
Digest - 8 Jul 1996 - Special issue
*************************************************