GYMN-L Digest - 22 Sep 1995 to 23 Sep 1995 - Special
issue
There are 15 messages totalling 525
lines in this issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. Rhythmic Worlds - AA (Individual and
Groups) (Day Three)
2.
Gymnastics in media (fwd)
3. NPL Spot
4. NPR
5. cost of
nationals trip (2)
6. Triplecast and old tapes
7. All Africa Games: Various Event
Finals
8. NPR and intro
9. Trials....
10. Good Coaching Strategy, etc.
11. Olympic Festival (2)
12. How to Order Transcripts (was Re: NPR
Spot)
13. Rick Newman
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 05:39:05
-0400
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Rhythmic Worlds - AA (Individual and Groups) (Day Three)
Rhythmic
World Championships 1995
=================================
Vienna,
Austria
19-24 September 1995
Day Three - AA Competition (part one)
-------------------------------------
Individual
All-Around:
Current Standings after two apparatus:
=1.
Larissa Lukianenko
(BLR)
19.900
=1. Maria Petrova
(BUL)
19.900
=1. Ekaterina Serebrianskaya (UKR) 19.900
4. Jana Batyrchina
(RUS)
19.850
5. Elena Vitrichenko
(UKR)
19.800
6. Amina Zaripova
(RUS) 19.700
7. Diana Popova
(BUL)
19.525
8.
Magdalena Brzeska
(GER)
19.350
9. Eva
Serrano
(FRA)
19.150
10. Eugenia Pavlina
(BLR)
19.050
11. Almudena Cid
Tostado (ESP) 19.025
12.
Alina Stoica
(ROM)
19.000
13. Katia Pietrosanti
(ITA)
18.950
14. Irene Germini
(ITA)
18.800
15. Maria Pangalou
(GRE)
18.750
16. Miho Yamada
(JPN)
18.725
(Jessica Davis of USA is currently 25th with
18.250)
An exciting meet so far with the top three all scoring
9.950s
in all their exercises, thus making a three
way tie for the
lead with all three on 19.900
points. And these big guns of
rhythmic gymnastics
are at it again. The competition will
continue
tomorrow.
DSF did an interview with Jana Batyrchina,
but the German
presenter asked the questions in
German and Jana replied in
Russian and they were
translated back into German by translator.
(In other words, I have
no idea what they were talking about)
Groups All-Around
:
Current standings after one apparatus each:
1. Bulgaria 19.775
2. Spain
19.650
3. Belarus 19.550
4. Italy
19.400
5. France 19.350
6. China
19.325
=7. Ukraine 19.250
=7.
Germany 19.250
Big shock of the
day as tournament favourites Russia is down at
13th
place out of 16 with only 18.725 for their hoop exercise!
It was a messy
routine capped by a rolling hoop outside the area
and
the Russians are bitterly disappointed about their
performance.
This leaves the Bulgarians favourite to take the
AA
gold when this competition continues
tomorrow.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 09:33:29
-0400
From: ***@UMICH.EDU
Subject:
Gymnastics in media (fwd)
I remember on
Twenty one Jump street threre was an epidsoe about steriods
in school. It
started out with a girl doing the floor exercise. After
the
competition she had a nose bleed. She then fainted and died. The girl
who caught her had blood on her hands. Hoffs followed
a girl who was
preparing to go to the regionals
and then to the nationals. The girl was
working on
beam. Her coach was very demanding.
She said the girl had
the potential to go to the
Olympics. If I remember correctly
the girl
was taking steriods
to either stop the pain or to work
harder. A
football
player was also taking steriods and the big guy on
the show was
following him. Well anyways the
football player was to be an All-American
and was
going to go to collage, he got mad at his little brother who
looked up to him and almost killed him ( Steriod
effects) .The guy used so
much steriods that he died of an
heart attack. The girl began to have
nosebleeds
but still went on the regionals. I believe that she was
sideline
by the coach after she found out of about her steriod
use. I
think
it was after she fell of or got hurt.
---------- Forwarded
message ----------
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 1995 22:39:46 -0600
From: ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
Gymnastics in media
Just surprised that gymnastics, though highly
popular with viewing at OG
and as small article
feed in the newsprint, never makes it into entertainment.
Anyone know of a
time when a child on a television show was depicted as
being
a gymnast? A movie? (Other than American Anthem).
Jeff
P.S.
This team to Sabae- I don't know why anyone is
guessing about who
will
make it to AA. Given a perfect outing, maybe you could speculate. BUt
we know that everyone can
be less than perfect at times. Look at Shannon
at
Dortmund on bars.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 10:23:09
-0400
From: ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU
Subject:
NPL Spot
Wish I'd heard that piece on Dynamo! But if many of you are thinking
the
same thing, I know that tapes of "All
Things Considered" can be purchased. I've
lost
all the relevant phone numbers now, but all you have to do is call your
local public radio station and explain what you want. They
should be able to
give you the number of where to
call. If I remember right, you just need to
specify
the date and name of the show. They'll either send you the whole show
or, for a higher price, just the segment you're interested
in.
Beth
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 11:57:57
-0400
From: ***@PHOENIX.PRINCETON.EDU
Subject:
NPR
My dad said he heard a long segment about the Book on NPR in July
(didn't
tell what sort of reviews there were) as
well as something about
Dominique Moceanu when
she won Nationals. Seems like this
radio station
is doing well paying attention to
gymnastics. Just wish we could
find
out when these things would be broadcast
beforehand. If anyone finds
out
how to get copies of these segments, please
post the info:-)
Thanks,
Emily
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 12:38:30
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: cost of nationals trip
>Tickets this year for both men's &
women's sessions were about
>$100 for one person.
I went to
nationals this year too and I thought that the ticket prices were
way too high.
Because the arena was too big for a gymnastics meet, the
lighting was really bad, and the gymnastics was kinda bad, too.
Patsy
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 12:08:28
-0600
From: ***@STUDENTS.UIUC.EDU
Subject:
Triplecast and old tapes
I am looking for
tapes of women's artistic gymnastic competitions before
1988--esp the 1987 worlds or 1985
worlds. And I am positively
desperate
for the 1989 worlds or 1989 (90?)
European champs with Svetlana. I am
also
missing the 1991 worlds with Kim Zmeskal which I would appreciate. I only
have
access to US VHS format, but I can copy tapes and mail them back or
will pay for postage, etc. I am willing to trade for anything I
have which
includes every single minute of the
1992 women's artistic *Triplecast*
coverage, lots of ESPN gym meets (Budget, invitationals, etc.).
I have
most stuff post-1988, except the
above mentioned ones. Let me know
if you
can help via email, at
jconway@uiuc.edu.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 11:47:13
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
All Africa Games: Various Event Finals
All Africa Games
Harare
The
results across Reuters has been spotty, but I do have these
results:
Men's Floor exercise:
1.
Karim Otmani (Algeria)
8.975 points
2. Raduf Abdelkerim (Egypt)
8.875
3. Cristian Brezeanu (South Africa) 8.850
4. Abdeloiahab
Mammeri (Algeria) 8.675
5. Peter Ojo (Nigeria)
8.650
6. Kenneth Ikani (Nigeria) 8.575
6.
Dewald Laubscher (South
Africa) 8.575
8.
Ahmed Rabie (Egypt)
8.450
Women's rhythmic:
Rope category:
1. Lina Monir (Egypt)
8.550 points
2. Marwa Abdelmoneim (Egypt)
8.300
3. Cheryl Phillips (South Africa) 8.150
4.
Lauren Falk (Zimbabwe)
7.950
5. Danielle de Wet (Namibia)
7.650
6. Chido Mombeshora
(Zimbabwe)
7.600
7. Varela Lizandra (Cape
Verde)
7.550
8. Madere Smith (South Africa)
7.525
Hoop category:
1. Sherine Abdelmoniem (Egypt)
8.700
2. Andrea Schermoly (South
Africa) 8.600
3.
Howaida Yousef (Egypt)
8.475
4. Lauren Falk (Zimbabwe)
8.050
5. Cheryl Phillips (South Africa) 7.850
6.
Thelma Ramos (Cape Verde)
7.800
7. Megan Robertson (Zimbabwe)
7.775
8. Anre van der Merwe (Namibia)
7.625
In the ball
category:
1. Howaida Yousef
(Egypt)
8.500
1. Michelle Cameron (South Africa) 8.500
3.
Andrea Schermoly(South Africa) 8.325
4.
Lina Monir (Egypt)
8.100
5. Lauren Falk (Zimbabwe)
7.925
6. Megan Robertson (Zimbabwe)
7.875
7. Thelma Ramos (Cape Verde)
7.400
8. Danielle de Wet (Namibia)
7.150
Apparently the All Africa Games are supposed to be
a sign of unity
among the African nations, but
they have been saddled with lots of
controversy. The gymnastics competition alone
included Egypt
complaining that a South African
gymnast's lacy sleeves were too sexy.
Also, Algeria disputed one of the
gold medals won by a South African.
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 12:25:44
-0600
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
Re: cost of nationals trip
Mayland
said:
| The nationals are definitely going to be held in Knoxville and then
the
| olympic trials
will be in Boston in mid-june.
Actually,
Trials are at the end of June (25-30).
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 13:54:06
-0600
From: ***@UIUC.EDU
Subject:
NPR and intro
I've been lurking for a couple of months now, and have
seen enough to
expect some flames over this
comment, but I can't resist. I'm a 28-year old
ex-gymnast
who follows the sport avidly. I have much to say about the
height/weight thing but some other time--as a 5'11"
female, at least my
growth doesn't appear to have
been stunted! I grew four inches during the
last
year I competed.
I heard the NPR piece on gymnastics and while I thought
it was very fair
and well done, I am bothered by
some of the coaches' and gymnasts'
comments. For
example, I think it is Steve and not the interviewer who
mentions
that Marianna Webster's ranking has fallen from 6 to 15 this year,
and therefore her motivation and desire to work hard has to
be questioned.
Then there's a segment with Steve yelling at her and saying
that his
grandmother could vault better than that.
I have two problems with
this--first, that her
lower ranking somehow necessarily implies a
diminished
psychological effort, and second, that to remedy her slack
motivation comments like Steve's are appropriate. I think
Joan Ryan's book
was a model of shabby reporting
and obviously she chose her subjects very
carefully,
but her point about constant criticisms these girls/women hear
for eight hours a day during critical formative years is a
good one.
Coaches who teach by endless criticism (the best thing Steve ever
said
during the piece was "that wasn't too
bad" and "until the last pass, that
was
going to be a nice routine") can teach the gymnasts to devalue
themselves and their accomplishments which obviously carries
over into
other activities.
The NPR
reporter also said that as soon as Shannon was done with a trick,
she looked anxiously at Steve, got her comments, and then
"her face
dissolved into anguish" to
which Shannon replies that she just can't
tolerate
making mistakes and she gets upset about it. (Steve calls her the
"original chicken little", meaning that the sky falls as
soon as anything
goes wrong. I am not surprised
after spending so long with him that she
takes
mistakes pretty hard.) It cannot be healthy psychologically to spend
eight hours a day being anguished with yourself, with your
efforts never
being enough, even considering that
you are the reigning world champion.
When do these gymnasts get to feel
satisfied with themselves? It is true
that no one seemed very happy at the 92 games except perhaps
Wendy Bruce,
the Unified team, and isolated others
(including flashes of joy from Kim
Zmeskal, who
always seemed to enjoy competing even when it wasn't going
well, and Shannon after the all-around). Everybody else
seemed to have a
work face on, even after the
competition was over.
Jennie Thompson states the gymnastics is her
whole life. She prefers the
gym to school and
doesn't feel comfortable around her non-gymnast peers as
she
says they "ignore her." While perhaps such dedication is necessary
to
become a great champion at the world level, it
scares me to hear it.
Kristie Phillips once thought the same thing. Then
she *failed* in her
opinoin
at what was "her whole life". What are you left with when the
gymnastics is over, or when it doesn't go as well as you
want? Apparently
nothing. Kristie managed to build
another life for herself, but it appears
to have
been a nasty process. If your entire self-worth gets
tied up in one
activity, it seems that you are in
great danger if that activity doesn't
fulfill your
expectations, especially when you are so young that you don't
yet know that time heals your wounds and other interests
open up to you as
you get older and more
experienced. Jennie's mom said that their whole
family life had been sacrificed to Jennie's talent, and that
her son (16)
really resented it. No doubt. Is
being good at something really worth
damaging one
of your children because another wants to compete in
gymnastics.
The son lives with the father. Jennie's mother exists to help
with her training. By the way, she had some heel
malformation (I forget the
disease name) that kept
her out of nationals and world trials. She recently
had
surgery on it to put a screw in that should help.
The other thing that
bothered me was Steve's comments about how he teaches
and
the gymnasts perform. He expects no talking during workouts and no
input from the gymnasts themselves on any aspect of coaching
or performing.
I think this is extremely unhealthy. Women's voices are
devalued enough in
this society without teaching
adolescent females that whatever they have to
say
is irrelevant and they should silently listen. Needless to say, that
also teaches them to be silent when they are in pain, to
deny their own
thoughts and feelings about what
they are doing. No doubt that makes them
easier to
coach, and obviously there are examples of those who seem to
withstand such methods without ever letting their own sense
of themselves
be diminished. But it must
systematically undermine their self-esteem and
sense
of self-worth.
Given examples like Kelli Hill and Mary Lee Tracy who
IMHO show that such
coaching methods are not
necessary to produce great gymnasts, a critical
evaluation
of the methods seems reasonable. In the 92 trials, Tracy
congratulated
Amanda Borden on a good choice of vault and making a good
decision. Obviously having your own choices validated would
be far
healthier psychologically than to silently
accept all direction from a
dictatorial coach.
Joan Ryan goes too far and seems to hint that gymnastics
ought
to be abolished as a very high-level competitive sport. I think
there's nothing wrong with the sport per se, but certain
coaching methods
do seem to negatively influence
the social and psychological development of
the
gymnasts and appear to be worth some investigation. And I think
defenders of the sport would do better to acknowledge these
problems and
work on minimizing them than to
dismiss the criticisms as just bad
reporting. The
casual attitude Steve had when he said that *of course*
gymnasts
compete injured because you can't help when a competition is
scheduled really scares me. He didn't seem aware that these
were kids he
was dealing with, that lasting
problems could result, that teaching them to
deny
or ignore their pain also teaches them to ignore other feelings, etc.
The
NPR piece was fair. It presented both sides I think, but it amazes me
that Steve and his gymnasts seemed unaware of how
controversial some of
their comments appear to the
rest of us.
Jill Conway (jconway@.uiuc.edu)
UIUC
College of Medicine
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 12:22:02
-0700
From: ***@IX.NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Trials....
Hi!!!
When are the trials going to be on tv.???? Thanks!!! Bye!!!
Your
friends,
Margi and Mardi
:)
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 14:33:40
-0600
From: ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
Good Coaching Strategy, etc.
I have to agree with Jill about Kelli
Hill and Mary Lee Tracey. One of the
deepest
moments I have seen in gymnastics was when Dawes missed her vault
in Birmingham and she was ain
tears and Kelli said that she should be happy
because
she never thought that she would be that close to winning and she
should get back on the podium and wave to the crowd. Talk
about taking a
horrible situation and making the
best of it for her gymnast. She's great,
and I
wish that she would have been a coach for Sabae.
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 18:42:09
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Olympic Festival
>You could have a different Olympic sport
competed in a different city >each
weekend of
the month.
Actually they did something very much like that in 1990.
They called it the
"Olympic Cup" and over one
weekend different Int'l Olympic events were held
in
different cities around the country.
The gymnastics was held in Salt
Lake City, and despite about 2 people in the
audiance (the event was *very* poorly promoted) the
level of competition was
very high. For the Soviet
Union a very young Oksana Chusovitna and Rustam
Sharipov made their
first appearances in the US and both went home winners.
There was a 2
per country rule and most nations sent 2 athletes. There were
also representatives from East Germany (they competed as the
GDR until '91
Worlds), West Germany, Canada, Cuba, & Great Britian as well as 2 men and 2
women
from the USA (all World Champ team members from '89).
Unfortunately, I
think that the overall venture was a huge financial failure
and it never happened again which is a shame because it
would have been a
great addition to our thin Int'l
calander.
-Susan
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 18:53:25
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
How to Order Transcripts (was Re: NPR Spot)
For those of you on AOL
you can order NPR transcripts or tapes
for "All
Things Considered" online at keyword
"NPR."
Transcripts are $10 per program, plus $1.50 S&H.
Audio cassettes are $12.95
per program, plus $2.50
S&H. You order by either check or credit card. It
says
that they don't accept orders via e-mail but I'm sure that you could
order via regular mail. The information for check ordering
is as follows
(taken from the NPR area on AOL)
...
To order NPR tapes or transcripts by check or money order:
(i) print the form below
(ii)
fill out the form.
(iii) mail
it with your check/money order to:
NPR Tapes and Transcripts
635 Massacusetts Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20001
Make
your check payable to: NPR Tapes and Transcripts
NPR ORDER FORM
I) *PROGRAM INFORMATION*
Program
Name: ___________________________________________
Program Date (Month,
Day, Year): ________________________
Specific Subject or Topic:
______________________________
Format __ Tape ($12.95 + $2.50 S&H)
__ Transcript ($10 + $1.50 S&H)*
*NOTE: Cost for series tapes/transcripts may be
different. If you have
questions, please call NPR's Audience Services at
202-414-3232, M-F, 10-5 ET.
II) *MAILING INFORMATION*
Name:
___________________________________________________
Organization:
_____________________________________________
Street Address:
___________________________________________
City, State, Zip: ___________________________________________
Daytime
Phone: (___) ____-______
-posted by
Susan
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 22:42:37
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Rick Newman
If anyone knows Rick Newman at Dynamo Gymnastics have him drop Raija a line
at this
address.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 22:46:40
-0400
From: ***@NETCOM.COM
Subject:
Re: Olympic Festival
>>You could have
a different Olympic sport competed in a different =
city
>each
>>weekend of the month.
>Actually
they did something very much like that in 1990. They called it =
the
>"Olympic Cup" and over one weekend
different Int'l Olympic events were =
held
>in different cities around the country.
>
>The
gymnastics was held in Salt Lake City, and despite about 2 people =
in the
>audiance
(the event was *very* poorly promoted) the level of =
competition
was
I think the Olympic Cup still had a larger audience than this
year's =
men's USA-UKR. ;) From what I remember, wasn't the entire
competition =
set up as an informal "us v.
them" meet? The USA, CAN and
CUB formed an =
Americas team, competing against
the European team. But it *would*
have =
been nice if it had (1) received more
publicity and (2) become an annual =
event.
Debbie
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 22 Sep 1995 to 23 Sep 1995 - Special issue
*****************************************************************