GYMN-L Digest - 9 Aug 1995 to 10 Aug 1995
There
are 19 messages totalling 596 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. Define "Great" (2)
2. Great Gymnast (3)
3. mary
lou
4. MLR and other stuff
5. Re[2]: Define "Great"
6. Jaycie
Phelps (3)
7. 1990 JR Team
Europeans
8. HOW ON
EARTH....
9. GYMNers going to U.S. Nationals
10. Great gymnasts and Mary Lou
11. My WWW page
12. Level 1-4 Routines?
13. Russian Champs.
14. See Ya in
NOLA
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 13:01:50
+1000
From: ***@STUDENT.GU.EDU.AU
Subject:
Re: Define "Great"
Since this was probably meant for me,
I'll reply, even though someone
wanted this
discussion to end.
>
Tell me, what defines a
"great" gymnast?
A great gymnast, has difficult rountines, with good technique & form,
flow, polish, originality and artistry. Personality displayed before or
after a routine has NOTHING to do with what defines a great
gymnast.
I'm sorry, but any non-American (or the 23 who aren't biased
;) can tell
you that Retton
is not artistic. Nor were her
routines polished or
flowing. Her chuncky
body type may have given her power, but at the
expense
of proper line, essential to this sport, which was painfully
obvious in her UB & BB routines.
> I, personally, believe
Mary Lou was a great gymnast because she not only
> had
world class routines but also added that special "something," which
in
> her case was her personality and charisma.
Personality
displayed before or after a routine has NOTHING to do with
being a great gymnast.
Neither does demeanor. How
you act in a press
conference or presentation
ceremony in no way reflects on your gymnastics
ability. Personality should win fans not
medals! Try and keep in mind,
this is a physical sport, not a facial one (or at least not
until the
Code of Points gives smiling a value :)
> Gymnastics is very
much a subjective sport, and that charisma carried her
> part of the way.
Since when does grin equal
greatness? It doesn't. Nor
does
different equal deserving (I'm hinting at Mitova fans
here ;)
>
Is she any less of a gymnast because of that?
Yes. If you are implying that a bubly personality gained her extra
points,
or extra fans which convinced the judges to give her extra
points.
Michelle
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 9 Aug 1995 23:34:47
-0600
From: ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
Great Gymnast
I think that a current gymnast who has greatness would
be Lillia Podkopeva.
she has talent, argueably the best
form on earth, and difficulty. She
shines
brightest on FX, but if you look at her on other events, you see
that she has it all to be a great gymnast. (Look at her layouted yurchenko
half and compare it to others who pike in around!)
Other
past greats include Boginskya (though she's still
current!) for her
artistry and grace, Dobre, who just had too short a career(!), Szabo,
for not only her
abilities but her mental toughness in situations under
incredible
pressure (standing for 25 minutes in hostile territory [i.e.,
Pauli Pavillion] as the last competitor on FX in '84 wating for the
power to come
back on and then hitting for a 10 is proof of her greatness
in my book), Julianna McNamara and
Ma Yahong (too great bar gymnast who had
the best form on the event), Natalia Shaposhnikova
(best split leaps EVER, and
lotsof
talent that we missed because of the boycott), and the one and only
Oksana Omelinetchik, who withouth a
doubt made the sport look effortless,
introduced
combination tumbling to the world, and would have been know
as one of the best gymnasts of the 1980's instead of the one
who tied
Shushunova in '85. She was great to watch and her '85 FX is still a
classic
to view.
Males, I would say Bilozerchev is the greatest I've seen in a long time.
He
has unbelievable strength and power. Yet
another gymnast who we were
robbed of not seeing
in '84.
Oh yes, must add Olga Mostepanova
to the list above. She was great and like
someone
said previously: Probably the most ripped-off gymnast in history.
I only
saw her in FX in '83, but that was enough to impress this judge.
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 01:22:07
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: mary lou
Hi. I'm new to this group but would like to
add a vote for my all-time
favorite gymnast, Ludmilla Toureschiva (sp?). She was
just about the last of
the old-time gymnasts. That was before women's gymnastics
became a child's
sport. I thought she had such grace and dignity
about her.
Forgive me if this is a tired old theme, but how do you
feel about where the
sport has gone? Have any of you read Joan Ryan's book on
gymnastics and
figure skating, Pretty Girls in
Little Boxes? Although I love the
sport, I'm
not at all sure that it is a healthy
one right now. It wins alright, but at
what cost?
Leigh
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 01:46:54
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Great Gymnast
I think Lilia is also the greatest gymnast in the
world! She has a much
different style than anyone
else which is interesting!
Emily
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 02:28:12
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
MLR and other stuff
Well,I
must agree that Mary Lou was not one of gymnastic's
"greatest
stars."Szabo
should have won,*EVEN* with her disaterous
bar routine in the
team competition.Mary
Lou was great on vault(she didn't deserve a 10 on ANY
of
the vaults she did in Pauley Pavilion) and floor(that double
layout!WOWSERS!) but was weak on bars(form breaks out the wazoo) and beam.The
judging at that meet
was a joke,not just for the Americans but for everyone.I
mean,how
the heck did Simona Pauca
get the bronze medal with her *CRAP*(and
there is
no other word to describe it.Sorry you Pauca fans.) gymnastics?!?!Or
even made the Romainian team,for that matter.Too bad Agache ate it during
team.
Tracee Talavera.Now *THERE'S* a gymnast.She has to be the coolest
gymnast
ever to come out of the United States.Yurchenko full on vault(got ripped with
a 9.9,stuck both cold)hidorff and yaeger on bars,original beam(flaired on
balance beam before
baitova),and great choreography on
floor(unfortunately
Jennifer Sey had harder
tumbling passes than Tracee did...but let's rise
above that)In my opinion she and Julianne are *overall*
better gymnasts than
Mary Lou.Let's not forget
the ultra-talented Michelle Dussere.It's
unfortunate that she had so many setbacks(injuries and
growth) because I
thought she was going to kick
some butt in the following years.At least she
got to stunt
double for Janet Jones in the award winning "American
Anthem."Isn't Becky Cameron the gutsiest gymnast
you've ever seen? ;-)
As far as Mosteponova
being underrated,I have to disagree.She was overrated
*AND* overscored.Watch '83 worlds if you don't believe me.She cracked her
heel on her
Tkatchev *EVERY* time and took two steps on her
landings on most
of the other events.End
result.. mostly 9.9's and the silver
medal.PUH-LEEZE.Beautiful dance
and cool second pass though(full twisting
front
handspring stepout thru to double twist)Had '84
been
non-boycotted,Shusunova
or Yurchenko *SHOULD HAVE* won although I think
the
judges would have found a way to make Mary Lou
the victor.
Just my usual ramblings,
Billy
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 11:46:00 -0400
From: ***@CCMAIL.ORL.MMC.COM
Subject:
Re[2]: Define "Great"
>
Personality displayed before or after a routine has NOTHING to do with
>
being a great gymnast. Neither does demeanor. How you act in a press
> conference or presentation ceremony in no way reflects on
your
> gymnastics ability. Personality should win fans not
medals! Try and
> keep in mind, this is a physical sport, not a facial one (or
at least
> not until the Code of Points gives
smiling a value :)
I disagree. The question wasn't what makes a high
scoring gymnast, but what
makes a great gymnast
(unless you conisider high scores the only criteria
for
greatness). My definition of "a great
gymnast" or a "great" anything is someone
who
I would be proud to have my children emulate. Darryl Strawberry is an
"exceptional" baseball player, but I would not rank him
as great. Tanya Harding
was an
"exceptional" skater, but not great.
"Greatness"
is inextricably linked to the person. I consider Eddie "The
Eagle"
Edwards to be a "great" ski jumper.
No he wasn't "exceptional", but his
determination,
attitude, and yes his personality were unmistakeable.
I
would include in my list of "great" gymnasts:
Kathy Rigby : Maybe not exceptional, and mostly forgotten (except
for her
commercials), but she was dedicated to
gymnastics when it was relegated to the
back room
of the local YMCA, and occasionally allowed to use the gym when no one
was using the basketball court.
Olga Korbutt :
Her daring moves added a new excitement and interest into
gymnastics.
Nadia :
and yes, Mary Lou (in the US) : Like her or not, MLR and he
bubbly personality
contributed greatly to the
popularization of the sport in this country.
Just my
opinions.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 12:38:36
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Great Gymnast
I must add my vote for Lilia Podkapayeva
as one of the all time greats!
I
could watch her for 4 hours straight and
never get bored! :) She is
truly
*great* on every single event and she has
the form, difficulty AND
originality which many
others don't. The form and toe point on her Yurchenko
with a 1/2 blows my mind, and she is equally good at traditional entry
vaulting- - great piked handspring
front with a half. Lilia also has
an
amazing double front on floor, stalders on UB, flip flop Chen on beam - -
finally something different from the "standard"
flip flop to 2 or 3 layouts-
- and full-ins off
both bars and beam. IMO, she has
the perfect balance of
both power and grace. She just needs to learn how to
compete better in
pressure situations.
I admit her choreography on FX also needs
work, but she has sparkle and
personality that
shine through no matter what she's doing!
Btw, I disagree
with whoever said that
personality should not play a part in the judges'
scores. Sure, it's not a specific category, but
it all plays a part of being
able to relate to the
audience AND the judges!! If you
win over an audience,
the judges certainly aren't
going to forget it because more than likely they
enjoyed
it too! I see a tremendous diffference in the presentations (on FX
& BB) of
people like Oksana Omelianchik, Daniela Silivas, and Lilia
Podkopayeva compared to others who just seem
to go through the motions! If
your
personality, so to speak, shines through, I think it can definitely
affect the score in a positive way. Now if your talking about before or
after the performance, I agree with you. But, during the routine, that
"something special" can only enhance the
performance!
Also, I think we're leaving out one of the all time
greats- - '88 Olympic
Champ Elena Shushunova! First of all, she truly achieved
longevity. She was
at or near the top of the international gymnastics
world for 5 years ('83
Chunici (sp?) Cup to '88
Olympics) How many others have maintained that
level
for such a long period of time? Most people seem to max out between
2-3
years.
In terms of difficulty, I
think Elena truly advanced the sport of gymnastics!
(1 1/2 and double
twisting Yurchenkos on V, full-ins off UB before
many
others were doing them, she popularized the
full twisting back straddle down
on BB, and
performed the side one and three on FX - - tumbling out of it in
'87 and '88.
In addition, she displayed one of the
characteristics that I think truly
defines a
"great" gymnast: mental toughness. Jeff mentioned this with regard
to Szabo, which I agree with, but Shushunova displayed this toughness in
abundance too!!
She was such a ROCK!! Elena
may not have been the most
emotional or graceful
competitor, but, to me, this was just evidence of her
incredible
intensity- - a quality which I admire a lot! She was so
consistent
and could almost always be counted on for a clutch performance!
If you discount the Event Finals of the
'88 Games, (major breaks on both V &
FX) I think she could be
considered *one* of the
most consistent gymnasts
ever (also demonstrated by her longevity,
which I already mentioned).
IMO,
Elena Shushunova should never be
forgotten! :)
Amy
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 13:52:01
CDT
From: ***@PROCTR.CBA.UA.EDU
Subject:
Jaycie Phelps
For those of you who didn't
attend the U.S. Classic and are going to
Nationals in New Orleans, watch Jaycie. I was
so impressed with her
improvement. You can look at her and see the
confidence she has in
herself. She is really coming into her own. She beat Dom. All the
Cincinatti
girls looked great.
Wouldn't it
be neat if Gymn subscribers could get together
somewhere
for
a while, at Nationals, so everyone could meet. Just a thought.
Shawn
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 14:50:48
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
1990 JR Team Europeans
I was throwing out some old junk videos last
night and came across a very
flawed '90 Team
European Championships vid.Adding to Debbie's
scores...
Event Finals
Vault
Sylvia Mitova(9.45)
Tatiana Gutsu(9.662)
Klara Kudilkova(9.437)
Christina Espinosea(9.45)
Virginia Machado(9.237)
Snejana Hristekieva((.525)
Oksana Chusovitina(9.912)
Miroslava Jantekova(9.?)
Sylvia
Santiago(9.662)
Cecil Lyaudy(9.025)
Bars
Christina
Fraguas(9.9)
Sylvia
Mitova(9.75)
Martina
Kucharakova(9.175)
Angela Olsen(?)
Tatiana
Gutsu(9.925)
Sonia
Fraguas(9.95)
Snejana Hristikieva(9.65)
Miroslava Jantekova(8.95)
Jenny
Roland(9.7)
Oksana Chusovitina(9.925)
Beam
Angela
Olsen(9.475)
Tatiana Gutsu(9.775)
Maria de Tena(9.725)
Snejana Hristakieva(8.85)
pavla
Kinclova(9.675)
Jenny Roland(8.95)
Oksana
Chusovitina(9.925 HA!)
Elena Romero(9.1)
Silvia
Mitova(8.1
three falls)
Carriela Kuchikarova(9.175)
Floor
Snejana Hristikieva(8.3)
Tatiana Gutsu
(9.925)
Sylvia Santiago(9.8)
Virginia Machado(9.575)
Miroslava Jantekova(9.425)
Sylvia
Mitova(9.625)
Oksana
Chusovitina(10.00)
Christina Fraguas(9,975)
Jenny Roland(9.6)
Carrila Kuchikarova(9.6)
No major goings on during EF.For
the most part,everyone did
their 91-92
routines minus a trick or two.Spain was *GROSSLY* overscored.
I
watched three rotations of the team competition.The
sovs were heads above
everyone
else.Romania was a no show.Other
member of the soviet squal were
Dina Kochetkova,Natalia Kalinina,and someone I couldn't identify.
Any specific questions about the meet?
Later,
Billy
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 16:05:18
CST
From: ***@PROMEGA.COM
Subject:
Re: Jaycie Phelps
Good idea,
I am
planning on being in New Orleans myself and I would love to meet some ofthe
other people on the
list. I am leaving Sunday, but won't be able to access my
e-mail account after tomorrow. I know it's short notice, but
if we can suggest a
meeting place by tomorrow
afternoon, I'll be there.
Jenny
_
Wouldn't it be neat if Gymn subscribers could get together somewhere
for a while, at
Nationals, so everyone could meet. Just a thought.
Shawn
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 17:11:31
-0400
From: ***@NETINS.NET
Subject:
Re: Define "Great"
Maybe Mary Lou is not #1 but I believe
that any one at that level is great!!
Even if other countries were there
and Mary Lou still had the same profmance
she would have still placed high!! I am one of thoes kids how absolutly
admire any one at that level they are just amazing!! With the other
countries
there how many of them are going to have a surpurb preformance?
I
bet Mary Lou may have still gotten a
medal or not to much lower. There
was
not that many people missing!! The majority
was there. I just my opinion!!
Emily
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 16:44:04
-0600
From: ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
HOW ON EARTH....
Did we get into a discussion about MLR and the 1984
Olympics?
I hope that with the up coming nationals that we have a new topics.
Jeff
P.S. Since we
are on the 1984 topic. Imagine that the Soviets et al did not
boycott. What would be the fate of Bela
Karolyi? Would he still be the "great
coah of champions" if Mary
Lou hadn't won?
P.S.S. What was the reason why Mary Lou did not
compete in Budapest in 1983?
She was at Chunchi a
few weeks later? Did she miss trials or something? I
thought
that Dianne Durham was sick, but what was the deal with MLR?
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 17:03:58
-24000
From: ***@USAID.GOV
Subject:
GYMNers going to U.S. Nationals
I know this
is a shot in the dark, but I had to ask...
I unfortunately could not
manage the trip to U.S. Nationals this year. Is
there
anyone attending who will be videotaping routines? I know that
highlights
of the senior womens AA & EF will be
televised; I am interested
in seeing the performances of the juniors, as I expect
several girls from
Virginia---Alexis Brion, Gail Kachura, and Katie McFarland--to do well (I am
also curious to see the routines of a person I know to be on
GYMN). Any
coverage of the guys' meet would be a welcome plus as well,
since we stand a
better chance of getting ice tea
from the Devil than seeing any more than one
or
two of their routines during the telecast.
I realize it may not be
possible to do
this. I have been to some major
meets recently, and
videotaping was either
forbidden or required a release.
But if someone can
manage it, and would be
willing to make a copy, I would be extremely
appreciative! Of course, I would gladly compensate an
individual for the
cost and effort involved.
ge
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 18:01:18
-0500
From: ***@VIPER.NET
Subject:
Re: Jaycie Phelps
She looked very well... I
think you ought to see even a better improvement since
the
U.S. Classic
Michele
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 19:13:39
-0500
From: ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject:
Great gymnasts and Mary Lou
Great Gymnasts:
I have to join
the gymn-l Lilia fan club. Her combined form and power are
awesome. I'm
surprised no one has mentioned Khorkina. Truth is, she
wasn't
one of my favorite gymnasts until Europeans this year, but she
really won me over there. Nadia and Olga both revolutionized the
sport and
were my idols, so I'd have to count
them. Laschenova, for her longevity.
Perhaps Boginskaya for the same reason. Ludmilla Tourescheva and Nelli Kim
were both great gymansts, and
probably Shushunova, Filatova,
and
Shaposhnikova.
As for the Americans,
two stand out brightest for me.
Shannon has every
bit of the toughness
others have talked about, and is one of the most
consistent
gymnasts I've ever seen. And does
anyone else remember Dianne
Durham.
Unbelievable power and good form. Also, I loved Kathy Johnson's
gymnastics. Her
grace and longevity make her a great, for me.
Mary Lou:
I
liked Mary Lou's gymnastics a lot, and I'd probably count her as a great
as well, but she and Zmeskal are
slightly lower on my list. What
disturbs
me about this discussion is that someone
(I don't remember who) used Mary
Lou's body type as
evidence of her lack of greatness.
"Chunky" gymnasts
can be every
bit as technically perfect as more slender gymnasts. There
lines
_do_ look different, but not wrong.
Mary Lou had a kind of power
that Khorkina or Shannon could never have because they don't
have the right
body type for it. That doesn't make their gymnastics less
great, just
different. Chusovitina
will never be elegant, but anyone who can do a full
twisting
double layout is amazing in my book (on floor at least).
Also, I think
the sport could use a few more "chunky" gymnasts to remind us
that thinner isn't always better.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 11 Aug 1995 00:14:15
BST
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
My WWW page
Hi folks,
I've set up my new home page on the WWW, it's got a few gym pictures
plus
other stuff. For those who can browse the Web, please drop in at:
http://www.geopages.com/Colosseum/1082/index.html
While
you're there please visit my Rhythmic European Cup page and my
British womens Nationals pages!
(Some of you may find
certain pictures missing on my pages but I can
assure
you that they're all there, it's just sometimes the site
does
not load them up properly. It's something out of my control)
Comments
are welcome!
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 18:01:10
-0700
From: ***@MCN.ORG
Subject:
Level 1-4 Routines?
Hi all,
My coach is looking for an
inexpensive way to get hold of the level 1-4 USGF
routines.
Does anyone know the easiest way to get them?
Thank You,
Orion
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 22:15:41
-0400
From: ***@PANIX.COM
Subject:
Russian Champs.
This week's _St. Petersburg Press_ has a short article
about the Russian
Champs., along with a small GIF
of Svetlana Khorkina (click on the picture
to get a bigger JPG).
The URL is:
http://www.spb.su/sppress/118/gymnast.html
Debbie
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 1995 22:24:01
-0400
From: ***@A1.CSOC.UMC.DUPONT.COM
Subject:
See Ya in NOLA
Well everyone, I'm getting
packed tonight for the trip west which
will
eventually lead me to Congress and US Nationals. I hope
that
I get the chance to meet some GYMNers while I am
there.
Since I may not have access to a computer between now and then,
I
thought I would offer the first suggestion for a
GYMN meeting in
New Orleans.
If anyone else is arriving early, I
will be at Jimmy Buffett's
Margeritaville Cafe on
Decatur St. at four o'clock Tuesday
afternoon. I'll definately
wear some kind of gymnastics t-shirt
so look
around. If no other gymnasts have
shown up by then, I'll
be the short one in the
crowd.
Gorden: I have tickets for the men's optionals. If
cameras are
allowed, I'll shoot some footage and
let you know when I return
home. I will also try to tape any other competions I get to see
while
we're there. No promises here
though.
Good luck to everyone competing, coaching, judging, presenting
and attending. Have a great time.
Jim
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 9 Aug 1995 to 10 Aug 1995
************************************************