GYMN-L Digest - 17 Nov 1995 to 18 Nov 1995 - Special
issue
There are 5 messages totalling 536 lines in this issue.
Topics
in this special issue:
1.
<No subject given>
2.
IBM Atlanta Gymnastics Invitational - Quotes and Comments
3. Atlanta Invitational
4. Olympic Veneus
5. IBM AGI - commentary, day 2, part 1
of 2
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Date: Fri, 17 Nov 1995 23:30:53
-0500
From: ***@PIPELINE.COM
Subject:
<No subject given>
Cc:
Subject: Re: IBM AGI
commentary part 2
>Other notable skills included Begue's Kim salto
(reverse hecht release
into
>front somi, catching on the same side of the bar as the
release), which
>notched her only a 9.575
How
times have changed!
Btw, what did those who went think of the format
(split over 2 nights)? I
can't imagine I'd like it as much as a traditional
meet.
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 1995 22:21:26
-0800
From: ***@ENG.SUN.COM
Subject:
IBM Atlanta Gymnastics Invitational - Quotes and Comments
Not sure if
the finals scores have made it in from Rachele (the list
is
acting funny.) I won't give away
the results in this post.
All good things must come to an end. But it's a pity, especially
when it comes to gymnastics meets!
Geo is dog
tired. Never had a chance to
recover from jet lag. Just
imagine how the athletes must feel at these things. I mean they have
to
practice and compete. All I did was
scrounge for free pins and
drink way too much
Powerade (tm).
Sure you care about all that. But what about this: This meet was in
the
gymnastics venue for the 26th Olympiad!
That's what it's all
about. Though the stands were only half full
and the pace of the meet
was oh-so-slow-my-god-somebody-slap-me,
you couldn't help but feel the
fever coming
on. Come July Atlanta will trade
November chill for Southern
heat and
humidity.
In the meantime ACOG has a few bugs to work out of the
system, but
that's what dress rehearsals are for,
so we won't fault them for
certain meet
peculiarities.
Many of the gymnasts hadn't competed in an arena so big
before. A few
that had competed in Barcelona commented how competing in
this meet
pumped them up, knowing it was
"Olympic Soil", so to speak.
It's kind
of crazy. Why are the Olympics so much larger than
life? And,
gymnastically
speaking, why doesn't this fever carry over to other
events?
The
crowd was kind of quiet. This was
especially true Thursday night,
although Friday
was at least a little peppier. This
might have had
something to do with the slow pace
of the meet. Yet it probably had
at
least as much to do with many of the spectators
not being very
knowledgeable about
gymnastics. Even though only half
full, roughly
17,000 people showed up each night. There probably aren't that many
people in a metropolitan area the size of Atlanta that could
be called
fanatic about gymnastics. Some truly difficult skills weren't
applauded the way you'd think they might be. And the crowd didn't get
into the women's music the way it tends to do at these kind
of
shindigs.
But you can't fault a crowd
for not being as crazy as your average
Gymner. In fact if I ran into a gymnastics crowd
as crazy as you guys
I'd probably hoof it out of there before the police arrived!
(jk!)
But, however quiet the crowd was, and
no matter the glitches, sitting
there you couldn't
help but imagine what it will be like come July.
All those seats
packed. Tension you can cut with a
knife. Some
gymnasts trying to shake it off, to not
think about it and just
hit their sets, others
thriving under the pressure.
Routines are so
incredibly short but they
take so much energy. It's so easy
to screw
up, to be a perpetual film clip which
personifies "the agony of
defeat". Did I already mention I had jet lag?
;^)
At any rate here are a few quotes from gymnasts, coaches,
etc. Some
were
fed to us, and some I got the old-fashioned way: by asking or
eavesdropping.
TRAINING
DAYS QUOTES
Masayoshi Maeda (JPN) Re: How he thinks how he will perform.
Everyone
here is so strong. I'm not sure.
Re: The Japanese men's team and the
1996 Olympic Games.
There is hope for us to
get a medal. I'd love to be
back.
Masanori Suzuki (JPN) Re: Competing in the Georgia
Dome
This is the biggest arena I've ever competed in. It will be more
difficult
because the roof is so high.
Re: How the IBM Invitational will prepare
him for the 1996 Olympic
Games:
I can get used to the arena and
the equipment, because they will use
the same
equipment next year that is here for this competition.
Koji Sotomuna
(Men's coach - JPN) Re: His team's chances in the 1996
Olympic Games:
I'm
not sure yet. I think the US team
is getting stronger. We have
to watch out for them, and we will try our best.
Elena
Grosheva (RUS) Re: The Georgia Dome:
My foot is killing me, so at this
point I don't really like anything
including
gymnastics, competing, and the Georgia Dome. It is always
very
hard for me to train when I am injured.
It is something I have
to work on.
Rozalia
Galieva (RUS) Re: Competing again:
I like it. I was getting bored when I wasn't
competing. It did take
me awhile to get back in shape, only now do I feel like I am
in good
form again. I am also very happy to be competing for
Russia. I
couldn't
compete in the recent World Championships because my Russian
citizenship wasn't official yet. I very much want to compete for
Russia next summer.
DAY ONE:
Rozalia
Galieva (RUS) Re: Scores:
I should have scored higher on bars. My routine is worth a 10.0 no
matter what and they only scored it from a 9.90. I am satisfied with
my performance, but I still feel like I can do better.
Mohini
Bhardwaj (USA) Re: Not having much time to prepare for meet:
It felt
great. I'm just really excited to
be here.
Jair Lynch (USA) Re: First night's performance:
Tonight
was a pretty good performance for me.
I set out to try some
new skills, fine-tune
some old ones, and I think I accomplished that.
I was the first victim of
the floor, the first result. I hope
I'm not
remembered for that. But that's the luck of the draw. You've got to
take
the good with the bad.
On the venue:
This is a great
venue. But the crowd doesn't know
enought about
gymnastics yet. We - and the federation - are going to
have to
educate them in this next year. By next summer we want everyone to
know what a good triple back is. There was a little apprehension
tonight when to cheer, when not to cheer. I haven't been to a
gymnastics competition here in Atlanta in eight or nine
years so it's
no fault of the crowd. They just don't know. I'm sure they'll
embrace
it next year.
Vitaly Rudnitsky (BLR):
Vitaly was pleased with
his performance on Day one. Winning
two
medals (FX and PH):
I was very happy
to come in here and do so well. It
is always a
change to compete on a podium. I think the equipment is very nice,
although the mats are new and they are a bit hard. I like this venue
very
much and I think it will be a great place next year. We are
going
on an Olympic Village tour on Saturday and I am really looking
forward to that.
Peter Kormann (Men's Coach, USA)
Re: the prospects for the men's 1996
Olympic team:
I think some of
the guys here will definitely make the team. These are
our
best guys.
Re: the Olympic venue:
It's exciting to be in the
Olympic venue. To compete here and
win
medals is really special. Atlanta will be the most exciting
sporting
event in the history of the world. We've been waiting for this moment
for a long time.
Mohini Bhardwaj (USA) Re: Her gold
medal vault performance:
No (I wasn't surprised), actually I thought
my vaults were fairly
good. I was having trouble this weekend but I
can usually pull it
together for an event.
Re:
the IBM Invitational:
This is a good practice meet. The venue is huge. I like it. When an
arena
is bigger, you end up knowing more people are there. This is
kind
of like a practice meet for the Olympics.
It motivates me a lot
since this is where
I'll be, hopefully.
Re: Day two:
I hope to hit both my
routines and do well. I have two
new tumbling
passes in my floor routine.
Kip
Simons (USA) Re: the venue:
It gives you the chills. As the meet started any you're
seeing
Atlanta 1996. Especially
when the flag was going up. It made
me want
to go home and work really hard and come
back next year. It was
awesome just being out there tonight. It's definitely a motivation.
Re:
the U.S. Men's gymnastics program:
We're making huge strides in the
right direction. The question is,
do
we have time to get ready for Atlanta.
Re:
Day One's performance:
I got such a renewed energy from being
here. It's just amazing. It
seems
like the people of Atlanta are really psyched about what's about
to happen.
Alexandra Marinescu (ROM) Re: Competing
in the Georgia Dome:
It's a nice arena, bit it was a little cold and I
had a muscle problem
because of it. I had to concentrate hard not to think
about the cold.
It's important though to be here and compete in the Olympic
arena. I
think
it will be an advantage.
Re: The all-around competition:
The
overall is the most important. I am
looking forward to tomorrow
because it is my best
day and the beam is my best event.
Re: Problem with her vault:
I
don't know exactly what happened. There was some kind of mistake.
There
was a wrong code given for the vault.
Vitaly Rudnitski (BLR) Re: Day
one's competition:
My biggest challenge going into today's competition
was working the new
apparatus. I haven't competed on this brand
before. It is different
that what I am used to in competition and training. But I know it's
what
will be used in the Olympics.
I was proud of my execution on my
events. Tonight, I wouldn't do
anything differently.
Tomorrow I will try to do the same thing.
Nobody can help me win
all-around, except me. I plan to do
my best.
Re: the cold temperature:
I am not bothered by the
cold. It is colder at home.
Re:
the 1996 Belarus team:
Unless I am hurt, I feel that I will be a
member of our team. I am on
our national team and am the one who is chosen most to
travel to
internation competitions. Of course, nothing is definite, but I
think
I will be here.
DAY TWO:
Oliver Walter (GER) Re:
the Georgia Dome
The venue is really gigantic. It has giant dimensions. I don't often
do
gymnastics in places like this. It
is not too big. It will be a
good venue for the 1996 Olympic Games. It was too cold on the first
day of training but okay for the competition. I'm not sure what the
summer will be like - I'm a little afraid to find out.
I
was fine with the lighting but I could imagine how other might have
problems. (ga - There were many bright point source lights, kind
of
like a football stadium. Then too there was the translucent
ceiling.)
Kip Simons (USA):
The venue is awesome. It's the biggest crowd I've ever
competed in
front of. It was amazing to have 14,000 or 15,000
people here and
still see all the empty
seats. I can't imagine what it will
be like
next summer when it is sold out.
I
had no problem with the lighting.
A building this
size take a long time to warm up.
They did a good
job. The first day of practice was a little
chilly but once it warmed
up it was fine. Tonight was perfectly normal.
I'm
not concerned (about competing in the same venue as the basketball
competition during the 1996 Olympic Games). Maybe I'll get to sneak
over and watch some basketball. I think it will be exciting.
The
team had nothing but good things to say about the venue and the
competition.
Next summer when I come back, I will have a feeling of
comfort - I've been here before, and the venue was good to
me.
I wasn't disappointed at all (about my performance on the
parallel
bars). This was supposed to be a down time for
me, when I could work
on tricks. Then I was selected to come here and I
couldn't put my
work on trick difficulty on
hold. The routine cased me a little
bit
of a problem, but I'm not concerned at
all. I'm more concerned about
increasing my difficulty, especially in parallel bars which
is a weak
event for me. Even though I struggled a little, it was
good for me to
do those tricks.
Jair Lynch
(USA)
- More energy tonight than Thursday night from crowd.
-
Crowd still a little hesitant to involve itself in the meet.
- It's up
to the gymnastics community to educate them (Atlanta) about
gymnastics
during the two upcoming meets next year before the Olympics.
- Very
pleased with his performance - he hit six for six.
- Thinks Stanford
will win the BIG GAME against CAL (Wake up, Jair!
"It's alright it's alright it's
alright...")
Blaine Wilson (USA)
- Knew his standing
into final rotation.
- It put a little extra pressure on him. But he "LOVES
pressure".
(Said
this with a big smile.)
- Didn't do all of what he had been planning
to on high bar. Has been
working on a
four-release series. But didn't
perform it tonight.
- Free Georgia Dome ACOG pin to the person that
comes closest to
guessing what Kip told me his new four-release combo
is. Email to me
with your
guess.
Special Quotes of the Meet:
"He is not Peter
Vidmar! He is Bart
Conner!"
-Nadia
Correcting the announcer who mistakenly
introduced Bart as Peter during
the awards ceremony.
"Sit
down, Bart!"
-Rachele Harless
Her view blocked by Bart during FX on day
one
Speaking of Bart, let me tell you
he's the nicest guy that's never too
busy to talk
about gymanstics. We had a nice
conversation in which he
cleared up my confusion
between the two high bar skills the Ono and
the
full pirouette.
Yours in Gymnastics,
-George
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 1995 22:56:04
-10
From: ***@ALOHA.NET
Subject:
Atlanta Invitational
To George, Rachel and other Gymners who attended
this invitational,
how was the demonstration of
RSG by the US group and what was the
crowd's
reaction. I'm willing to bet it was
the same --lethargic
perhaps?
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 17 Nov 1995 22:59:43
-10
From: ***@ALOHA.NET
Subject:
Olympic Veneus
Speaking of the Olympics, does anyone know if the RSG
Olympic Venue
in the University of Georgia-Athens
is air conditioned? I really
would hate to be sweltering while watching the
competition.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 18 Nov 1995 10:03:00
MST
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
IBM AGI - commentary, day 2, part 1 of 2
IBM Atlanta Gymnastics
Invitational
Georgia Dome, Atlanta, USA
16-17 November 1995
Day
2 of competition - Alexandre and Alexandra extend their leads to win the
All-Around
The
second day of competition at the pre-Olympics was significantly better
than the first.
The meet was about an hour less in duration: Thursday night
they scheduled 30 seconds between gymnasts; Friday they only
allotted 10,
which was still ample, except when
going from men's vault to women's beam --
frustratingly,
I constantly missed beam mounts. The crowd was three times
the size of the day prior (14982 vs 5921); and there were no
obvious gaffes
or other signs of mass
confusion. Still a few wrinkles,
but the improvement
from day 1 to day 2 was
noteworthy.
Regarding the two-day format of the meet that Mara asked
about --
personally, it did not bother me. Since this is what event finals are
often
like, I guess it did not strike me as
strange. I don't know what the
gymnasts thought about it. If they competed all events on one day,
with
this format (one gymnast at a time), then the
meet would have lasted over 6
hours, and I don't
know about the rest of you, but I could never take that.
Today, I'll
start off my commentary with the women.
The field was really
strong -- most of the
gymnasts did quite well and those who didn't were
mostly
capable of much better. I was
really impressed by the sheer variety
of skills in
the meet over the course of the two days... remember when
*everyone* vaulted Yurchenko-full on vault, dismounted beam
with a double
tuck, did a Tkatchev on bars, and
threw a full-in, double salto, and an
"optional"
pass on floor? (Well, floor was
never as standard as the others,
but nonetheless,
go with me on this one.)
In the warmups before the competition,
Svetlana Boguinskaya pulled her
hamstring and so
was unable to compete in today's events. What a shame, as
one friend put it, "I missed watching her sashay around
the floor."
Marinescu clearly won the women's competition, with a
meet-high score of
9.787 on the beam (ff, layout, ff,
layout; ff, ff, full-in dismount).
I
unfortunately caught only glimpses of her
beam routine, but judging by the
reaction from the
crowd and press row, and her score, it seems that it must
have been fantastic.
Her floor was secure, with sufficient dance and strong
tumbling: whip through to full-in; front handspring 1.5
twist; front
handspring, front double twist, punch
front (neat!); and triple twist
dismount. Debbie got some great shots of Marinescu
from day 1 (and probably
day 2, though I haven't
seen those), and we'll put those up on the Gymn WWW
pages
soon.
Roza Galieva climbed from fourth place yesterday to second
overall with the
highest score on floor, a 9.687,
which I thought was low for her routine.
She began with an outstanding double
layout mount and finished with a piked
full-in
(preceded by a long wait in the corner, a bit low on the landing),
packing two front tumbling runs in between. The only complaint I really had
was that her leaps were lacking in amplitude (particularly
her sequence
between her two front tumbling
runs). Roza showed strong ankles on
beam
with a very aggressive routine including a
ff, layout, ff, layout pass and a
Rulfova (full-twisting
back handspring swingdown).
Piskoun's beam (9.387) did not go
as well as she would have liked; while she
competed
all of her difficult skills (her ff, full twisting back was landed
solid as a rock), she lost her balance on a ff, straddle
leap. She managed
to hold onto the beam to prevent
her fall to the ground, enabling her to
also hold
onto third place overall. Oh
yeah, I should mention that she
threw a
full-twisting backhandspring. =)
She twisted all her passes on
floor for a 9.662 to
tie Grosheva for third; probably her coolest pass was
her
2.5 twist punch front laid out.
Jumping six places on Friday night to
fourth overall, Grosheva showed a
variety of
skills on balance beam for a 9.575.
She mounted with a punch
front directly
into a leap; included a ff layout, a side somi, and a Chen
(back tuck open swingdown); and planted a double tuck
dismount. Her floor
was fun, with a piked full-in
mount (step back, possibly out); a front
handspring
double twist (we're seeing more and more of these lately!); a
pass more often seen in men's gymnastics of front layout,
front layout (very
whippy), front layout full; and
a dismount of 2.5 twists. Her
ending
included a "slip and slide",
where she skidded on her stomach (this greatly
amused
George).
Liu Xuan, who was in second after day one, was unlucky to
slip off beam on a
Yang Bo leap, which was particularly unfortunately
seeing as she competed
several head-back leaps
successfully. This fall dropped her
to fifth place.
She was on the mark with her floor routine, though, with
her tumbling
consisting primarily of twisting
skills. She was one of *seven* gymnasts
bunched
in the 9.6 range on floor.
Had she not fallen on her beam mount
(layout on, I believe), Knijnik (6)
would have
finished the meet in third place.
Her beam was neverthless a
treat, with a
strong ff to three layout pass. Both finishing in the top ten,
the French girls, Begue (7) and Teza (9), had unique dance
on floor
(especially Teza) and difficulty on beam,
an apparatus where they took the
silver and bronze
medals. Teza threw an outrageous full-twisting
backhandspring *across*
the width of the beam, finishing with a back circle
around
the beam to front support. (It's a
Yurchenko loop with a full twist,
basically.) Begue bested her teammate (9.625 to
Teza's 9.6) with some
interesting combinations in
the beginning of the routine (I didn't catch the
combo
as I was watching Jovtchev's vault on instant replay, but perhaps
Susan or
Beth can clarify) -- twisting handsprings of some sort(?). She
also
threw a split leap immediate Rulfova.
Mohini Bhardwaj (8) mounted floor with
one of the best piked full-ins I've
seen in awhile
(huge!) but took several steps on her 2.5 twisting dismount
to score a 9.35. Her beam (9.50) was better with a ff to
three layouts, a
side somi, and a punch front, but
she took two hops on her dismount.
Teammate Katie Teft also scored a 9.5 on
beam with a couple small errors
(check on her
punch front; wobble after her straddle-1/2 [maybe 3/4]; and a
step on her double tuck), but her roundoff, layout layout
was great. This
must have been a frustrating meet
for Teft, who can score much higher on all
four
events.
Jumping seven places to finish in the top 10, Pacheco was one
with the beam-
literally. She included four "swing-down"
moves in her routine: a Korbut
onto the beam; a
ff, layout, Korbut pass; a Chen; and a really pretty
Rulfova
(9.387). I wonder if all of
this swinging-down is a coverup
indicating that
she cannot land her tumbling skills on beam? Her floor
(9.6) is
what pulled her up to tenth, however, with a piked full-in mount
and triple twist dismount with two front tumbling runs in
between.
The Japanese women (and men too, for that matter), fared much better today.
Hashiguchi (15) pulled in a
9.512 on beam and both of them tumbled four
passes
on floor. Both (Sugawara-14th) used a second pass (immediately after
the first pass) of three whips, ff, double twist punch
front.
Mirela Turgulan (12), like Teft, is a gymnast with much more to
offer than
the results at this meet might
indicate. Turgulan began floor with a whip
through
to full-in, but fell on her second pass of whip through to 2.5
twist. Her
triple twist dismount was spun the entire way around, however,
with a clean landing.
She almost fell off beam on her ff, layout, ff,
layout
pass. Turgulan appears to be a very
strong gymnast, however, and I
was
disappointed to not see her do well.
Ji Liya (17) fell off beam on her
mount but her leaps (straddle, especially)
were
very high off the beam. This world silver medalist on floor touched her
hands on her double layout mount, however and landed on her
head for her
full-in dismount. In the replay, it looked like her neck
took a real crunch
in the landing, but I did not
hear any reports of injury.
Sheremeta (11)
dropped out of the top ten
with a crooked and low full-in dismount off beam
and
problems on floor dropping her score to 9.012. Plaza (16) fell on her
floor mount ending in a punch front, and could score only an
8.712 for her
simple (compared to the competition)
beam routine.
Men's, next message (later tonight)
# # #
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End
of GYMN-L Digest - 17 Nov 1995 to 18 Nov 1995 - Special issue
*****************************************************************