GYMN-L Digest - 8 Sep 1995 to 9 Sep 1995
There
are 12 messages totalling 598 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Support
2. Vault values
3. Lisa Moro on 'Today'
4. floor
ex's
5. USA World Team Trials:
Comments on Women's Compulsories
6. USA World Team Trials: Men's Compulsories event scores
7. '95 Intl. Jr.
Champs.
8. Italy vs Russia (men), Italy vs Russia vs Spain (women)
9. USA World Team Trials: Men's Team
10. Phelps Article
11. New Book
12. Floor routines and choreography, NCAA
difficiculty
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 8 Sep 1995 23:30:16
-0500
From: ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject:
Support
Date sent:
8-SEP-1995 23:24:21
Thanks to everyone who mailed support this
afternoon, and for any
further messages that may
come in (no, that's not asking for more:))
I appreciate people going out of
their way to let me know that the
opinion I got
today was not held by everyone, nor was the way it was
handled
appreciated. I decided to post this hear for two reasons. First,
I think I
missed a few thank yous this afternoon, and wanted to
make sure
everyone knew I appreciated it. The
second is more important. A response
I got this evening said
"I hope this doesn't degenerate into a flame
war."
I agree. I think most people in here (and maybe all) have a degree
of common sense, but I'm going to post this anyhow. Please,
no flaming
in response in public. None of us need
it, including Svetlana. I am NOT
defending her
actions, but anything nasty done in return will only sink
you to her level. So far, I've seen rational responses, but
I really
hope it stays that way. Privately, you
may sink as low as you like with
anyone for any
issue we discuss here for all I care. :)
There, that's it, everyone.
Thanks again, and, if anyone is interested,
a
preview taking at look at the total picture (ie
different countries)
will be available after
worlds. If ya wanna see it,
and I get enough
requests, I will post it on the
list.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 8 Sep 1995 23:37:57
-0500
From: ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.ED
Subject:
Vault values
Date sent:
8-SEP-1995 23:34:05
You know, I was thinking about this the
other day, and I decided to
post it here, so that
I could get some commentary on it. Most of the
vaults
being performed are still from the Yurchenko family,
mostly,
I think, because it is so hard to get a 10.0 start value vault
from
the handspring family. The new code of points
really should be a
bit revised. While I agree that
the code separates the tucked and
piked
vaults well, it is still allowing for no 10.0 value except a
handspring front-full and a handspring layout back (sorry
not sure of
terminology there, one girl from Kazikstan does it). Why not value the
vaults at 9.7, hand spring front tuck, 9.8, handspring front
pike,
9.9, handpsring front tuck half, and 10.0,
handspring front pike
half, along with the two
above. i think it would
allow for a greater
variety in vaulting styles,
and still force gymnasts to upgrade to
more difficult
vaults.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 00:09:45 -18521200
From: ***@MADRAD.RADIOLOGY.WISC.EDU
Subject:
Re: Lisa Moro on 'Today'
Thanks for the piece on the
Lisa Moro interview, but what is a
"blue budgie"?
Lani.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 02:02:25
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
floor ex's
Does anyone know of any good,
reasonably priced floor ex systems for sale?
Thanks in advance.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 10:46:34
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
USA World Team Trials: Comments on Women's Compulsories
1995 World
Team Trials
Frank Erwin Center, UT campus
Austin, TX
8 September
1995
Women's Compulsories
The depth of the USA women's
program simply can't be ignored. The
women's
compulsory meet was really a treat, and this was without some
of the USA's best gymnasts: Amanda Borden (Cincinnati) has
an injured
toe; Kristy Powell (CO Aerials) has a
sprained ankle; Heather Brink
(Dynamo) sublexed
her toe (or something like that); and Jaycie
Phelps
(Cincinnati) had a sore knee.
In addition, Doni Thompson (CO Aerials)
was a slight question mark before the meet as her back is
quite
sore. (Thompson was able to co mpete.) Despite the absence of these
strong
gymnasts, the level of competition did not suffer in any way.
Vault:
I
don't think it's really possible to pick the best vault. Moceanu
received the top score (9.9) but her distance was definitely
lacking. With more distance, however, I would not have been
surprised
to see a ten. She gets great height and her pike is
very clearly
creased. The sudden way she popped
open to a layout is kind of
interesting, almost
like someone shocked her by holding an ice bag to
the
small of her back. (Trust me, that's the best way I can describe
it.)
Strug was next on the vault list with a 9.85. Her vault was strong
but her legs were significantly apart on the layout, and she
really
had to fight the landing, digging her toes
into the mat (no step).
Miller and Dawes received 9.825 and 9.80
respectively, both clearly
not being deducted for
lack of pike. The compulsory vault is a piked
Tsukahara, and as I understand it, a gymnast is supposed to
achieve a
minimum of 90 degrees in the pike
position. Miller also had a small
scoot backwards
on her landing.
All of the vaults were really quite good generally
speaking, as you
can see by the scores:
1.
Moceanu 9.900
2. Strug 9.850
3.
Miller 9.825
4.
Dawes 9.800
5.
Chow
9.775
6. Flammer 9.612
6. Arnold 9.612
8.
Pickens 9.600
9. Kulikowski 9.525
10. Teft 9.500
11. Bhardwaj 9.487
11. Tomasek 9.487
13. Thompson 9.425
14. Ingram 9.387
Uneven
Bars
Miller dominated the bars compulsory with a very smooth
routine. The
handstands
were sometimes a tad short, but that was only so readily
apparent
because the rest of the routine was so good. Her straddle
back
to low was easily landed in a completely vertical handstand,
however. Chow's
straddle back was also sweet, as was her Hecht to the
high
bar. Some of the best handstands
overall came from Doni Thompson
and Mary Beth Arnold. Arnold's positions throughout the
routine were
very exact. Moceanu's
score I considered to be a little high,
considering
that her dismount resulted in a hop and a step, and her
feet
were flexed on her Hecht (but pointed throughout the rest of the
routine). She
did hit several handstand positions, however.
Bars was the low point
of the night for Katie Teft, who came off right
at the beginning, and for Flammer,
who missed her Hecht to high.
I really liked how the Cypress girls
(Pickens and Flammer) flaired
the
dismount (toe-on front with 1/2 twist out) by
throwing out their arms
to the side before
landing.
1. Miller 9.812
2. Chow 9.712
3.
Dawes
9.687
3. Moceanu 9.687
5. Arnold 9.675
6.
Thompson 9.650
7.
Pickens 9.512
8. Strug 9.475
9. Kulikowski 9.450
10. Ingram 9.325
11. Tomasek
9.275
12. Bhardwaj 9.237
13. Flammer
8.987
14. Teft 8.862
Balance
Beam
Beam was perhaps the most interesting
event of the night for two
reasons. One, Moceanu's routine was outstanding, and since it was
the
last routine of the night, everyone saw it.
One judge (Judy Schalk)
even
gave her a ten. I don't think there was even a slight bobble in
the entire routine.
The other notable item about the beam competition
is
the cartwheel -- almost everyone is trying to do it "the Karolyi
way", with
leaving the second leg raised at the end of the cartwheel.
No one even came
close to Moceanu, however, as her free leg was
held
higher, longer, and without a quiver. Very
few of the others could
even manage to hold their
free leg above hip level, and the ones who
did
immediately lowered the free leg.
(An interesting side note, by
the way,
about the men's competition: Mark Booth of Stanford does his
floor ex compulsory cartwheels in the same way, by holding
the free
leg up for a second.)
Also,
Miller introduced a new stylization to the cartwheel -- or at
least I had not noticed it before. Whoever knew that some many points
of a cartwheel could be highlighted? Certainly not me. She began by
raising
her left leg high, on releve (which everyone does),
but then
put her left leg down, moved into an
arabesque position with her right
leg directly
behind her, then reached out with her arms and went into
the
cartwheel, and then ended with her left leg raised (briefly).
The beam
mount is a thief vault, which is supposed to resemble a thief
leaping over a gate in his escape (or something colorful
like that).
The gymnast runs to the beam and mounts by jumping almost over
the
beam like a hurdler. Almost all gymnasts go through this
motion
directly to a back support on beam (body
straight up and down, hands
behind you on the
beam, arms straight). Amy Chow was
different
because she first brought her legs up to
a V-seat position and then
lowered to a front
support. I was told once that this
is how the
mount is supposed to be done, but she
is the first person that I have
ever seen actually
do it that way.
Other noticeable items on beam were Strug's Valdez pass across the
beam,
which really flowed well. Unfortunately her leaps were very
conservative.
Fellow Colorado Aerial Kulikowski had a really
smooth
beam routine for her best score of her
refreshingly consistent night.
1. Moceanu 9.900
2. Miller 9.775
3. Kulikowski 9.662
4. Dawes 9.575
4. Strug 9.575
6.
Thompson 9.512
7.
Chow
9.475
8. Teft 9.387
9.
Ingram 9.337
10.
Tomasek
9.325
11. Arnold
9.250
12. Pickens
9.237
13. Bhardwaj 9.225
14. Flammer
9.150
Floor
If Miller's floor routine had been the
last routine of the night, she
certainly would
have received the same recognition and applause as
Moceanu
did for her beam routine. Miller's
floor was outstanding, so
much so that in the
press conference she was asked by a reporter, "Is
that
the best floor routine you can do?" and she replied, "Well,
obviously I still have one tenth to go." Everyone laughed; the
reporters are really liking Miller now. Her ability to look
reporters
in the eye, and to give her own answer
to their leading questions, is
perhaps some of the
best PR that the women's program could ask for
right
now.
Moceanu's floor was good but not as
clean, I thought, as her routine
at USA Nationals.
As a whole, the USA girls are really pretty clean
with
this compulsory, and I don't notice nearly as much stylization
with this routine as with, say, the beam routine. I did not see what
happened with Bhardwaj's routine
(8.762) but for Pickens, I did see
her almost fall
on the pirrouetting handstand in the corner.
Other
than that, the routines were all similar,
the only distinguishable
differences being in the
clarity of the execution, which was fairly
well
reflected in the scores, and the gymnast's ability to stay with
the music.
1. Miller 9.900
2. Moceanu
9.862
3. Strug 9.812
4.
Dawes
9.700
5. Kulikowski 9.625
6. Teft 9.600
7.
Ingram 9.575
8.
Flammer 9.512
9. Thompson 9.475
10. Chow 9.462
11. Arnold 9.425
12. Tomasek
9.412
13. Pickens
9.037
14. Bhardwaj 8.762
# # #
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 10:47:17
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
USA World Team Trials: Men's Compulsories event scores
1995 World Team
Trials
Standings after Men's compulsories
Frank Erwin Center, UT
campus
Austin, TX
8 September 1995
Event scores from
compulsories
Floor Exercise
---------------
1. Bryan
9.450
2. Roethlisberger 9.425
3. Simons
9.400
3. Lynch
9.400
5. Hanks
9.375
6. McCain
9.350
7. Bagiu
9.325
8. Wilson
9.300
9. Moran
9.275
10. Stein
9.250
10. Macready 9.250
10.
Yee
9.250
13. Kieffer 9.225
14.
Umphrey 9.100
15.
Booth
8.925
16. Waller
8.800
Pommel Horse
---------------
1. Bagiu
9.250
2. Stein
8.850
2. Yee
8.850
4. Roethlisberger 8.775
5. Kieffer
8.725
6. Wilson
8.625
6. Lynch
8.625
8. McCain
8.400
9. Waller
8.350
9. Booth
8.350
11. Bryan
8.175
12. Moran
8.125
13. Macready 8.100
14.
Simons
7.825
15. Umphrey 7.250
15.
Hanks
7.250
Still Rings
---------------
1. Simons
9.500
2. Roethlisberger 9.487
3. Wilson
9.375
4. Stein
9.225
5. Umphrey
9.150
5. McCain
9.150
7. Waller
9.125
8. Moran
9.025
8. Kieffer
9.025
10. Bryan
9.000
11. Bagiu
8.900
12. Lynch
8.875
13. Macready 8.850
14.
Yee
8.800
15. Booth
8.550
16. Hanks
8.275
Vault
---------------
1. McCain
9.725
2. Booth
9.650
3. Bagiu
9.600
3. Wilson
9.600
5. Umphrey 9.575
5. Yee
9.575
7. Stein
9.562
8. Waller
9.525
9. Macready 9.500
9.
Lynch
9.500
11. Hanks
9.475
12. Roethlisberger 9.425
13. Moran
9.400
13. Simons
9.400
15. Bryan
9.375
16. Kieffer 9.300
Parallel
Bars
----------------
1. Macready 9.375
2.
Bagiu
9.300
3. Roethlisberger 9.175
3. McCain
9.175
5. Waller
9.100
6. Umphrey
9.075
6. Simons
9.075
8. Booth
9.050
9. Stein 9.025
11. Yee
9.000
12. Wilson
8.975
13. Keiffer 8.925
13.
Hanks
8.925
15. Bryan
8.750
16. Moran
8.550
High Bar
-----------------
1. Bagiu
9.650
2. Macready 9.525
3.
Roethlisberger 9.500
4. Wilson
9.425
5. Bryan
9.300
5. Simons
9.300
7. Lynch
9.275
8. Yee
9.175
8. Waller
9.175
10. Booth
9.075
11. Kieffer 9.050
11.
Stein
9.050
11. Moran
9.050
14. Hanks
8.850
15. McCain
8.750
16. Umphrey 8.675
#
# #
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 22:16:10
+0200
From: ***@MICRONET.IT
Subject:
Re: '95 Intl. Jr. Champs.
>1995 Intl. Junior Champs.
>August
30-31, 1995
>Yokohama, Japan
>
>R:
>1. Ferratti(?)
(ITA) 9.55
The right name is: Massimiliano Ferretti (Ita), gold medalist in
rings at
1994 European jr
Ch in Prague.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 16:36:59
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Italy vs Russia (men), Italy vs
Russia vs Spain (women)
I have brief scores
from these two dual meets:
Italy vs. Russia
Porto San Giorgio
(Italy) July 15-16th
1) Russia 562.825 (compulsories 278.325, optionals 284.500)
2) Italia A points 561.025
(280.800, 280.225)
3) Italia B points 542.100 (274.000, 228.100)
I
only have the top two scores:
1.
9.875 by
Yuri Chechi (Italia A) on Rings
2. 9.800 by Aleksei
Nemov (Russia) on High Bar
Italy -
Russia - Spain (Female)
Porto San Giorgio (Italy) August 11-12th
1
Russia 385.325 (compulsories 191.250, optionals
194.075)
2 Spain
380.775 (189.025, 191.750)
3
Italy 376.150 (188.125, 188.025)
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 16:02:44
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
USA World Team Trials: Men's Team
1995 World Team Trials
Standings
after Men's optionals
Frank Erwin Center, UT
campus
Austin, TX
9 September 1995
Scores are weighted 40%
Nationals, 60% Trials.
At Trials, compulsories are weighted 60%,
and optionals are 40%.
1.
John Roethlisberger (Minnesota), 112.618
2. Blaine Wilson
(OSU), 110.888
3.
Mihai Bagiu (Gold Cup), 110.499
4.
Kip Simons (OSU),
109.644
5. Jair Lynch (Stanford), 109.404
6.
Josh Stein (Stanford),
109.040
7. John Macready (USOTC), 108.340
8. Brian Yee
(Minnesota),
108.260
9. Mark Booth (Stanford), 108.148
10. Rob Kieffer (Gold Cup), 108.120
11. Steve McCain
(UCLA), 108.120
12.
Casey Bryan (Oklahoma),
107.884
13. Chris Waller (UCLA), 107.850
14. Jarrod Hanks
(Oklahoma),
107.744
15. Mike Moran (Daggett's Gold Medal), 107.638
16.
Chainey Umphrey (UCLA), 89.518
Bill
Roth scratched due to shoulder injury.
Umphrey
only competed floor and rings today.
No reason was given for
his withdrawal from
the other apparatus.
# # #
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 16:40:02
-0700
From: ***@IX.NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Phelps Article
In the Cincinnati Enquirer there was an article about Jaycie Phelps so
we are going
to summarize it;
Here we go.....
Uses
a peppy pice of floor music from a movie about the
Olympics, The
Cutting Edge.
Has the Olympics
on her mind.
They told her height and weight.
Her next competition is
the World Team Trials.
They are upgrading her difficulty.
Jaycie and her mother, Cheryl, moved from Indianapolis, to
Arizona, to
Cincinnati looking
for a good coach. Her dad Jack and her brother,
Dennis, still live
Indianapolis but the family tries to get together on
the
weekends.
She practices 30-35 hours a week and has a strict diet.
Since
she training on a very rigorous schedule she dropped out of her
high school classes this year (Sophomore) and has private
classes.
"I'll miss school,"she said."But I'll still see my friends and go to
things like homecoming."
It says how Amanda a Jaycie support eachother and how
Amanda is like a
mom, confident, and partner.
"I
was so nervous for her during the all-around at Nationals," Borden
said. "But she did really well and I was proud of her.
It makes it a
little easier to do all this because
we share so much together."
-----
It has a picture of Jaycie doing the splits and Mary Lee Tracy pulling
her arms back. It is really neat :)
Bye!!!
Margi
and Mardi :)
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 19:19:41
-24000
From: ***@USAID.GOV
Subject:
New Book
Something I thought might be of interest:
I was in a
bookstore earlier today when my little sister showed me a new book
on gymnastics she found in the children's section. The name of the book is
"The
Young Gymnast---A Young Enthusiast's Guide to Gymnastics," and was
written by Joan Jackman, an
international judge, with a forward by Shannon
Miller. It seems to be aimed at young people who
are either thinking about
or just started
gymnastics; contents include
information on apparatus, basic
moves (rolls,
balances, handstands, cartwheels, flic flacs,
walkovers, etc.)
and also includes information on
rhythmic gymnastics and sports acro. As I
mentioned,
it seems aimed at younger readers, but what induced me to buy the
book was the excellent photography. All of the chapters include
demonstations by young
gymnasts--girls AND boys--who apparently belong to a
club
in Great Britain (where I suspect the book was originally published) and
are supplemented with color photos of international gymnasts
taken by, among
others, Eileen Langsley. A few of the well-known gymnast shown
are Liukin,
Mo Huilan, Annika Reeder, Gina Gogean,
and, of course, Shannon Miller.
It
retails for $15.95, and in my opinion
would be an excellent gift for a
youngster who is
just beginning to show an interest in gymnastics. If anyone
wants
further details just drop me an E-Mail.
Peace everyone
ge
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 1995 20:01:15
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Floor routines and choreography, NCAA difficiculty
In
a message dated 95-09-07 16:34:38 EDT, msammons@IX.NETCOM.COM writes:
>Isn't
it Dominique's new floor routine that she did in the US Champs?
I
thought it was, and I really liked it, too! :)
Dawn
------------------------------
End of GYMN-L
Digest - 8 Sep 1995 to 9 Sep 1995
***********************************************