GYMN-L Digest - 19 Nov 1995 to 20 Nov 1995 - Special
issue
There are 21 messages totalling 618
lines in this issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. Champs
2. Amy Chow article on WWW
3. Template
4. "E" Elements (2)
5. Article on Euro Juniors semi-final
6. Rulfova
7. Please repost AGI results (2)
8. Help!!
9. Atlanta Information
10. Kim Young/College
11. recent meets
(fwd)
12. No Subject
13. Where happened to them?
14. Sergei Grinkov
dies (2)
15. peachtree Invite in Atlanta
16. slight
correction
17. AGI: That Nutty
Announcer
18. Lighter fluid (ie The Book)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 19 Nov 1995 23:01:34
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Champs
Women's World AA Champions who have not won an Olympic Gold:
78 Mukhina*
81
Bicherova*
83 Yurtchenko*
85
Omeliantchik*
87 Dobre
91
Zmeskal
93 & 94 Miller
95 Podkopayeva*
* = Never competed in the Olympic Games
Obviously the list is more extensive as far as
event winners go, and off the
top of my head I
can't name winners prior to 68 but Gorovorskaya (sp?),
Latynina (both USSR)
and Caslavska (TCH) pretty much dominated
everything
since the 50's.
The last two
World Champs have not retired (with Zmeskal still yet
to compete
since her "come back" over a
year ago).
The depth of the Soviet team was incredible, noting so many
consecutive World
Champs who
could not even MAKE the Olympic team. Omeliantchik
won three
golds in 85
but could only make alternate in 88 (as well as 84)!
To sum it up, Turisheva, Kim, Shushunova, and Boginskaya have won world
championships
and Olympic gold medals.
Amanda
PS It was Nelli Kim who won in 79 (20 or so *and* married!)
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 00:14:24
-0800
From: ***@LELAND.STANFORD.EDU
Subject:
Amy Chow article on WWW
For those of you who are interested and have
web access, the Palo Alto
Weekly did an article on Amy Chow, who attends a
private school in Palo
Alto, in their Nov. 8 issue. I just happened to see the paper on
the
kitchen counter and then remembered that the
paper is also available on
the web. I have no idea what the ratio of
web-linked to non-web-linked
subscribers is, so if
there's interest, I can post or privately email the
text
if I can get permission from the Weekly (which actually comes out
twice a week).
Please let me know (BY EMAIL) if you would like to see
the article but can't access the web.
The URL
is:
http://www.service.com/PAW/morgue/cover/1995_Nov_8.COVER08.html
...which reminds me, I didn't mention that this was their cover
story!
-Patrick
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 12:29:10
--100
From: ***@SI.HHS.NL
Subject:
Template
Hello ther we're a club from Capelle a/d IJssel
(near Rotterdam) in Holland. My
request is if
anyone has a scoring template for some spreadsheet program. I
know I can find
one on this webpage, but for some strange reason I can't reach
the thing. If
you would have such a template would you contact me ,
because we
would
like to use this for one of our contests in the region (near
Rotterdam)..:-)
Greetings from Holland.
RICHARD !!
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 08:17:08
-0500
From: ***@EAGLE.LHUP.EDU
Subject:
Re: "E" Elements
Julie
> I was wondering if someone
could list for what moves are "E" moves,
> most
notedly on the floor exercise.
I would look
in the FIG Code of Points available through USA Gymnastics.
There are both
E acro as well as gym (dance) elements.
>
>
I know that a triple twist and a double layout are both "E"
moves,
> but what is that value of a tucked
full-in, a piked full-in, a double
> twist, etc.?
Does adding a whip before these moves add value?
Combinations
give a female gymnast bonus points (up to .2 in FIG
and up
to .3 in the JO Program) depending on the
combination.
How
> about adding a punch front, before
or after?
See above.
>
> Also, what bar
moves/releases/and dismounts are "E" moves?
>
See
above.
> (This is a lot to ask, but any answers would be welcome!)
>
>
Katie
>
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 08:48:07
-0500
From: ***@YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: "E" Elements
> Combinations give a female
gymnast bonus points (up to .2 in FIG and up
> to .3 in the JO Program) depending on the combination.
A
gymnast can get up to 0.3 bonus for combinations in
FIG, and there are
certain combinations that by
themselves are worth the full 0.3.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 13:33:57
GMT
From: ***@M4-ARTS.BHAM.AC.UK
Subject:
Article on Euro Juniors semi-final
Just a note about the European
Junior Championships semi-finals, the
results of
which I think Sherwin has posted (the Russians won, big
time).
Anyway,
I thought you might like to hear a British journalist (Mike
Rowbottom)'s point of view, as gym is so rarely covered in
the press
over here. The article appeared last week in a
daily national
"quality" paper called
"The Independent". It's
called
"Demonstration of waif power" and has a fantastic
(B&W) picture of
Julia Korostelova in the
middle of a side-somersault on beam.
(Am I
right in thinking that's also called
an Arabian? Or is that
something else?)
The
article is basically about the dominance of the Russian team,
with a quote from Alexandre Kirjashov (Russian juniors' coach) saying
that Elena Prudonova and Eugenia Kuznetsova will be picked for the
Atlanta team in his
opinion, because they are good all-rounders.
The writer points out that the
code of points has changed a lot in
the last 15
years and that Korbut's routines would have had
difficulty making it into the top 10 today. Interestingly,
he says:
"The dominance of the waifs has raised inevitable
suggestions that
some competitors are having
puberty delayed by illegal chemical means
- allegations
that are strongly denied."
but doesn't
really say anything else about this topic.
He notes the
success of the Russian
scouting program and says that potential
champions'
parents are assessed to determine how the kids will turn
out
physically. Kirjashov
says, "For the first two years, we don't
push
them to do difficult things. The
important thing is that they
must love gymnastics
for itself." There is predictable mention of
the
social & economic problems in Russia and that 800 gyms have
closed, although Kirjashov says
they are on the point of rebuilding.
The article finishes with a
comment that you might expect a "burn-
out"
rate equivalent to tennis (Capriati, Jaeger) with the kind of
pressures that gymnasts are under, but that in fact, most
drop-outs
will have dropped by the time they reach
the top level.
If anyone wants a copy of it, mail me privately.
Bex
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 13:43:30 GMT
From: ***@M4-ARTS.BHAM.AC.UK
Subject:
Rulfova
Isn't a Rulfova
just a full-twisting Korbut flick on beam?
Bex
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 10:18:23
EST
From: ***@EOS.NCSU.EDU
Subject:
Please repost AGI results
If anyone could, I would greatly appreciate
someone reposting or
emailing me the AGI
results. Stoopid
me got trigger happy with the
delete key.
Thanks
in advance,
--Brent
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 15:53:08
+0000
From: "***@WLV.AC.UK
Subject:
Help!!
Hiya y'all! I've
been a little eavesdropper of gymn for nigh on
18 months now - rather rude of me not to
introduce myself. My
name is
Vic and I am a student in England.
All I would like to know is whether
anyone knows of any mailers
concerning Track & Field athletics? (my No. 1 passion in
life -
No. 2 being
gymnastics!) Refs for any Web pages would also be
useful.
I'd
be ever so greatful if anyone could help me out
Thanks
Vic
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 10:59:21
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
Please repost AGI results
The results are available on the Gymn WWW page
(http://rainbow.rmii.com/~rachele/gymnhome.html). If someone does not
have WWW access and needs the AGI results resent, please
email me and
I will send them to you.
No need to repost to Gymn and clutter
everyone's mailbox!
Rachele
|
|
If anyone could, I would greatly appreciate someone reposting or
| emailing me the AGI results. Stoopid me got
trigger happy with the
| delete key.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 15:38:52
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Atlanta Information
> so my assumption
is that they took the standings from 1994 World
Championships >and
predicted who the top 12 teams would be as they issued the
ivitations to the >countries
before Sabae, but the invitation did say that
they were inviting the top 2 >finishers on their team at Sabae.
Well, like almost all the info provided to
the press/public at the
pre-Olympics this is
totally wrong. Since the invite was scheduled so close
to
the '95 Worlds ACOG, with the help of the USAG, decided to invite only the
top 9 countries from the '94 Dortmund team Worlds and not
the actual 12
Olympic qualifiers from Sabae.
The reason being that the preperation involved
required knowing who was going to come long ahead of time
which would just
not have been possible
otherwise.
- Susan
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 16:58:36
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Kim Young/College
<Isn't the former Desert Devil Tiffany
Simpson???>
No, there were 2. Chapman and Simpson. Chapman dropped out
of elite
gymnastics after bad knee problems, and
then came back at a different gym, to
compete
level 9.
jessica
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 15:32:29
-0500
From: ***@PHOENIX.PRINCETON.EDU
Subject:
recent meets (fwd)
---------- Forwarded
message ----------
Is there any reason why the US chose to send
younger women to the past
two meets (Subway and
Pre-Olympics)? It seems that most
of the other
countries sent world team members
with excellent Olympic prospects. It
seems that if
the US had sent some of their Olympic hopefuls (Not that
I'm saying Teft isn't one) like Powell, Kulikowski,
or Moceanu (I realise
she pulled out)
then the team would be helped more in the next year
because the girls who will probably be on the Olympic team
would have gotten
more international
experience. Any reason for
this
decision? Its a shame Moceanu pulled out, because it would have been
great to see her compete with Marinescu.
-Emily
P.S. When is the next international
competition in which we might see
some of our
"young" national team members like the ones previously
mentioned? DTB
Cup? Chunichi?
Have the delegations been announced yet?
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 17:29:36
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
No Subject
Does anyone know of any other magazines beside IG and can
you give me their
addresses? Thanks.
Lauren
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 23:36:41
GMT
From: ***@IX.NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Where happened to them?
While we have been doing a lot of, "Where
are they now?" questions.
I
thought I would ask a few of my own.
1) Why did they
leave gymnastics?
2)
Where are they now?
Kristen McDermont (Parkettes
Gymnastics)
Anne Wynerowski (Spg?) (North Stars Gymnastics)
Amanda Urick (Karoly's)
Thanks
--
Bonnie
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 18:27:00
-0500
From: ***@YALE.EDU
Subject:
Sergei Grinkov dies
I know this isn't
gym-related, but many gym fans are ice skating
fans,
and this is such devastating news for sports
in general. Sergei Grinkov,
of the two-time
Olympic gold medalist figure skating pair Gordeyeva
&
Grinkov, died of a heart attack today while practicing in Lake
Placid.
Yelena Gordeyeva was his wife as well as
his figure skating partner, and
the couple also
had a daughter, Darya (who is 3 or 4 years old now). Don't
know
any more details about his death.
--Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 23:38:02
GMT
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Re: Sergei Grinkov dies
I can't believe it!
Oh dear......
Gordeeva/Grinkov are
due to compete
in a meet next month here in
London... very very sad news...
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 19 Nov 1995 00:02:56
-0500
From: ***@PHARM.MED.UPENN.EDU
Subject:
Re: peachtree Invite in Atlanta
>What
are the exact dates and are there tickets left?
There are plenty
of tickets left, these meets are big for the kids, but from
what they say, not huge in spectators (outside families) so
all are welcomed
and encouraged.
Feb 3
& 4 for women's
Feb 10 & 11 for men's
Doraville areana.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 19:36:38
-0500
From: ***@YALE.EDU
Subject:
slight correction
I meant Yekaterina, not
Yelena, Gordeyeva.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 19:42:31
-0400
From: ***@CAPITALNET.COM
Subject:
Re: AGI: That Nutty Announcer
We had similar musings with names at the
Subway World Gymnastics Challenge.
I was watching the rehearsal on the
Saturday night before the meet and
when Gene
Sutton saw me cringing over the way the Chinese names were being
announced, she asked me to help prep the announcer.
The
basic guide goes like: X = Sh, Q = Ch, I = Ee, and everything else
is
pretty well pronounced the way it's written. Chinese family names first.
Like my
Chinese name is supposed to Qiu Hua
(or Chiu Hua).
Then they asked for help with
the Russian and Romanian names.
Whoa- sorry
no help there other than
pronounce it the way it's written.
Apparently the
poor announcer had already
been told by various delegation folks several
different
pronounciations of names -- who knows what's
right?
Elena Grosheva: YEE-LEE-YAH-NAH GROW-SHEE-YAY-VAH,
GRAW-SHAV-HAH
Rozalia Galieva: ROZA-LEE-YAH (gets mixed up with Ji Liya) GAW-LEE-VAH
Lilia Podkopayeva:
LEE-LEE-YAH (gets mixed up with Ji Liya,...)
POSH-KA-PAY-HAY-VAH,..
Mirela Tugurlan: MEE-RAY-LAH SHOO-GER-LAN (like
Sugarland)
Shanyn MacEachern: MAH-KAK-RAN
So, the guy
practices over and over, sounds okay.
Lise Goertz ('76
Olympic
team member and now a brevet candidate)
does the French announcing with no
problem.
Come
showtime on Sunday, either the guy's hair has gone
completely white or they
replaced him with someone
else. I didn't want to stare. The
names come out
all mangled again.
The
final press release came out with "Huang Dong" instead of Huang Huadong.
Aiy-yah!
Grace
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 1995 20:21:25
-0500
From: ***@JUSTICE.USDOJ.GOV
Subject:
Lighter fluid (ie The Book)
If you are not
all too tired of the subject, I expect to get a
little
flamed here -- but wanted to register some deviant
opinions,
since the expressed point of view seems pretty uniform
and
I think dismisses the book too casually (warning -- quite long):
Having
heard so much about the book (Little Girls in Pretty
Boxes, for anyone
entering the discussion late) on this forum, I
decided
to read the thing and see what all the fuss was about. I
expected
to see, from the criticism I'd read, a great deal of
reasoning
from insufficient numbers: that
she'd simply found a
few people who'd had unhappy
experiences and concluded from that
that the whole
system is corrupt.
Well, there's some silliness in the book
(government monitoring
of gym coaches, for
example) and I agree that a lot of these
girls
probably would have had problems anyway and that a number
had sports parents from hell -- but she's also onto
something
important, just as the author of that
essay about Elena Moukhina
was. If it is true that Julissa
Gomez had technical problems
with the Yurchenko that made it dangerous for her to perform
it,
as everyone Ms. Ryan quotes seems to think,
then she shouldn't
have been doing it. That's a coaching responsibility. Moukhina
thinks she shouldn't have been doing her tumbling move,
either,
because she didn't have the power or the
technique (I forget
which was the problem in her
case). Freak accidents happen,
but
pressure that leads coaches and gymnasts to
push a girl to do a
trick that's beyond her skill
level (not that she can't do it
most of the time,
but that she can't do it without risking the
type
of fall that could produce a cervical fracture) indicates
that something is out of whack with the system.
Fourteen-year-olds
who have gotten that far (and I know both
gymnasts
were older, but those at risk are not) are by definition
risk-takers,
and they want to succeed: it is
part of the coach's
job to ensure that this
ambition is channeled in a way that
doesn't put
the kid at risk. And again -- at
inappropriate risk
-- not spotting someone who
should still be spotted. And
why
didn't the protective mat system show up
earlier (and how much of
the risk does that really
eliminate?). Now some kids are
going
to insist on a coach who doesn't hold them back;
but the rest of
us should not be endorsing such
coaches even when they get
results. We never see many of the kids who get
injured earlier
on.
And in both the Gomez
situation and the Moukhina one (more subtly
expressed in the latter article, I think), part of this
pressure
came from societal image-building that
drove everyone -- coaches,
parents, nation (fans),
and gymnast -- to take too many risks, to
set
aside the individual and create a symbol.
Whether of the
superiority of Soviet sport
and society, of a particular vision
of ideal
girls, or what, once so much is invested in the idea, it
is
predictable that some coaches, some parents, and some kids
will take things too far. And, as both pointed out, this is
particularly risky when we're dealing with child athletes in
a
sport that presents great risks (greatest cause
of spinal
injuries among athletes, I was told when
I injured my back in
1977 in a vaulting accident). Moukhina
didn't think the Soviet
system was
"brutal": she objected to
its failure to stop her from
doing something that
was too risky, indeed its encouragement of
her
taking a chance for the goal of national glory. The system
used
her for a symbolic statement and when she was injured
regarded
her as essentially disposable. Yes,
she was bitter:
but cervical spinal injuries are
devastating injuries and if the
way she described
what happened is accurate, the risk she was
taken
was treated far too cavalierly by everyone involved
(herself
included, at the time -- but coaches should be
protectors
here. A gymnast should be sure that
her coach will
only be
encouraging her to take appropriate risks.).
Now obviously there's a
great deal of difference between people
in their
sense of how much risk is appropriate -- but we need to
do
everything we can to make sure decisions are uncoerced
and
intelligently made. A kid whose coach will ridicule her as
a
wimp if she doesn't try something, or who feels
she needs to go
to the olympics
because her parents have spent so much money on
her,
or that she's not a worthwhile person if her gymnastics is
not the best on her team, is at high risk for taking chances
she
will regret; and the system needs to be set up
to minimize those
pressures. [The key is will she regret it -- not
whether she
occasionally will need to be
encouraged to do something that
initially scares
her. Moukhina
would have felt a great deal less
regret if she
thought it was a freak accident rather than an
inappropriate
indifference to her safety. She
doesn't think
nobody should do the move: she doesn't think _she_ should have
been doing the move.]
Ryan is also right that we
need to reduce
the pressure to quit school, to eat
too little,
to work out too long (which increases
the risk of injury, and
which according to Ryan's
research, has little effect: 4
hours
or so is as good as 9, and does a lot less
damage to a growing
body). This is where rules might make some
sense: no more than
x hours a week (she suggests 20; I'd put it higher, and it
could
be variable to allow for occasional intense
training); minimum of x
hours of school a week;
maybe some regular checks for stress
fractures,
bone mass, etc. from a doctor not associated with the
gym,
and maybe nutritional checks, too.
You can't stop parents
from living through
their children -- but if we're conscious of
the
pressures that are often there, we can do something to
minimize
the number of kids who are adversely affected.
Finally, the eating
disorders discussion: whatever the
numbers
are (and her figures are not re
"disordered eating" alone, which
could
include munching out on doritos while cramming for a
test,
but were a comparison of women college
students, women collegiate
athletes in general,
and collegiate gymnasts; & indicated both that
gymnasts
had more problems and that the term was limited to those
who
vomited or used laxatives or other extreme means of getting
food back out of their bodies. No idea how often, no idea how
representative the study was: but there's something going on
here). Anyway --
whatever the numbers are, they are clearly
elevated. Certainly it's hard to know how much is
cause and
effect: do girls who are good at gymnastics have
personality
traits that put them at risk? But really her point is precisely
that: we know
that a lot of these kids are at risk, both because
the
survey numbers establish that, and because they are driven,
perfectionist, and highly controlled kids, whose growth
spurt
comes as they are peaking and which suddenly
makes it difficult
to do tricks they used to do,
and who face all the usual societal
pressures
about women's weight. Put these
kids under
stress that includes berating them
about their weight (which
Bela, at least, clearly
does, unless everyone who talked to Ryan
lied to
her) and trying to govern everything that goes into their
mouths, and they are more likely to develop eating
disorders, or
to develop more serious ones, than
they otherwise would be.
Mental disorders are a product of personality,
brain chemistry,
and the stress in the
environment: people under stress
are more
likely to succumb if they are
psychologically vulnerable; and the
nature of the
stressor shapes maladaptive responses.
Sure,
many girls survive the abuse, and
even thrive despite it -- but
that doesn't mean it
makes sense to endorse it. Too many
kids
will succumb, and very few of those who
thrive need to be told
they look like a pregnant
spider on a daily basis in order to be
motivated. Kelli Hill and the Forsters
(from what I hear from
you guys) prove that. But I think we
really
do need to be more vigilant about the abuses, rather than
defensive when they are pointed out, and to acknowledge that
a
disproportionate number of our best gymnasts in
the last decade
have been put through the Karolyi mill (Nunno doesn't
come
off better in the book). Even if most of the girls who went
there are glad they did, it's still an awfully big chance
to
take for any particular girl.
ok.
Sorry, very long-winded, I know; I'm pretty
sure I can at least
promise that this is just
about all I have to say on the
subject(s). And I apologize for my being wrong about
Gail
Kachura's age. I was sure
I'd heard that she was too young.
Flame away if you like.
--Ann.
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 19 Nov 1995 to 20 Nov 1995 - Special issue
*****************************************************************