GYMN-L Digest - 25 Jul 1996 - Special issue
There
are 16 messages totalling 630 lines in this
issue.
Topics in this special issue:
1. GYMN-L Digest - 24 Jul 1996 - Special
issue
2. What did he say?
3. Quick Comments (was EEUROSPORT
VIEWERS)
4. General
thoughts
5. To all
Non-Americans...
6. To
NBC
7. NEJM gym article
8. Coverage and crowd...
9. The US Crowds
10. tapes
(2)
11. Kerri
12. Olympic Questions...
13. <No subject given>
14. The crowd at Georgia Dome (fwd) (fwd) (fwd)
15. Day and Date
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 16:59:55
+0700
From: ***@SERVER.INDO.NET.ID
Subject:
Re: GYMN-L Digest - 24 Jul 1996 - Special issue
At 21:56 24/7/96
-0400, you wrote:
>
>Does anyone have complete coverage of
the women's optional team competition
>including
awarding of medals/playing of national anthem? If so, please
>email
me privately. I would like to copy it, I will be willing to pay for
>postage.
Greetings,
Oh
man, I have the same request. Please -any body- help me !
I
use PAL and Beta system.
Regards,
Dayan.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 06:30:21
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
What did he say?
Bela Karolyi
is such a liar! While we all sat in
our livingrooms on Tuesday
night,
we saw him yell to Kerri, "Kerri -- listen to me -- you can do
it!"
(Perfectly acceptable words for a coach to tell
his athelete). Then in two
separate
interviews he makes it sound like he had a five minute conversation
with her to determine whether or not she felt she was able
to perform a
second vault. He said (and I quote loosly),
"I asked her ,'Kerri, can you do
it? Are you good
to do another vault?' and she said, 'yes, yes! I can do
it!'"
What
a bunch of crap! We all saw Kerri
nodding in agreement to his words
"You can do it!" Is he a little paranoid about his media
image? Maybe he
believes what others say about his attitude toward his
gymnasts. He is so
two-faced! I
always took the criticism of Bela with a grain of
salt,
considering everyone deserves the benefit of
the doubt, but his guilty
conscience is showing
through.
I have no doubt in my mind that he remembers it his way --
freeing him of the
guilt he would otherwise feel
for encouraging her to perform the vault.
He
can't see that her injury is not his
fault. Kerri alone knows her
limit.
Bela's
pain threshhold must be a great deal lower than his
gymnasts if he
can't even tolerate the *idea* of a
media lashing.
JMO
Vanessa
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 05:47:14
-0400
From: ***@CYKICK.ECLIPSE.NET
Subject:
Quick Comments (was EEUROSPORT VIEWERS)
Jeff writes (in part):
>According
to cetate's WWW page
(http://www.pi.net/~cetate/at_eurosport.html)
>they
are showing the womens' AA alive.
I thought
I'd use this to segue into a comment I wanted to post yesterday.
For those
who missed it, the European broadcasters doubled their rights $
to the IOC for getting gymnastics coverage live OVER
THERE. However,
individual event finals will be shown live here in the
US.
Did anyone watch or tape MSNBC last night? I saw an item in one of the NY
papers that Katie Couric was scheduled to hold a roundtable
to discuss
women's gymnastics on "InterNight" last night. Cathy Rigby and Erica
Stokes were scheduled to participate. We taped it - no guarantee when
I'll
finally have tie to watch it.
Actually,
Tuesday's Team finals reminded me of the US men in 1984, crows
atmosphere-wise.
That's it for now...
Helena
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 08:05:49
-0400
From: ***@GARDEN.NET
Subject:
General thoughts
Some random thoughts on what we've seen so far:
Amanda
Borden should definitely get the "Classiest US
Gymnest" award. It was
so great to see her cheering on
the others, and
congratulating every one at the end of
their
routines. During Shannon's FX, just before her
dismount,
you could see Amanda behind her yelling
out
encouragement. Classy lady! (yes, LADY, I am so
sick of John
Tesh and his "little girls").
Was
it me, or did Shannon Miller look relatively miserable
most of the evening? She did *not* look happy to be
there.
Back to the team spirit thing, my best friend complained
that he thought all of the American ladies were
"mean" to
each other. I told him he
should have seen them four
years ago! BTW, what is it with those semi-hugs
they
give each other??? Is that the gymnastics
equivalent of
air-kissing???
Thought it
was very funny at the end of the medal
ceremony
when everyone stepped down, and Shannon
was
standing there with Kerri, with this look on her face
like:
"Uh, guys, I can't get her down myself. . . ."
Have
mentioned the possible rudeness of the US
audience
at the Georgia dome to non-gymnastics
following
friends, and they didn't seem to think there
was
anything wrong with the behavior -- a combination
of
excitement and patriotism.
I spent what seemed like the whole day
yesterday
trying to explain to people that Kerri Strug did *not*
need to do the
second vault for the US to win.
John Tesh --
<sigh>. Okay, we all know
that there
are FOUR things going on at once,
really, you don't
have to tell us any more. And learn the names of
the moves, please. I keep wondering if all of the
general viewers out there think that it's strange that
all of the "Release Moves" look so different. . .
.(as
in, look how high
she gets on this Release Move).
"Plausibly live": I'm
convinced this is an evil plot
designed to keep me
from sleeping this week. But,
let's face it, NBC
is out to make money on this
thing, and this is
the way to do it. They got a 30
share on Tuesday
night -- that is HUGE. And if I
get too
frustrated, I just go check out the web site.
Can't wait 'till
tonight!!!!!
(Wow. I wrote a lot there. Sorry!)
Liz
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 08:17:21
-0400
From: ***@MINDSPRING.COM
Subject:
To all Non-Americans...
To all Non-Americans, and for that matter,
Americans who are judging the
U.S. response to foreign competitors by what
they see on NBC
I'd like to see first of all that I cheered everyone
(and that's
difficult when there are 4 events
going on at the same time) - didn't
you hear me, I
was only 10 rows from the top?
You saw one round of 3 televised by
NBC. The rounds with no Americans
saw all atheletes getting very enthusiastic cheering.
Khorkina, you wouldn't have been able to tell from the
coverage,
finished her beam routine 4 seconds
before Dawes finished her floor -
that's why most
eyes were not on her, it was timing. The other team
members
received applause, and Khorkina received a very warm
response in
all her other efforts, and very often
felt very loved by the crowd.
Keep two things in mind. The first is
that the American press has hyped
Shannon and Moceanu
to death the last two years, so you had a sell-out
crowd
that came (to that round) to cheer them. Also, you can't compete
the cheering to other sports where you don't have to try and
watch 4
people at once.
I agree that the
crowd was too loud, but I cheered for all athletes, and
louder
for all my favorites: Borden, Marinescu, Boginskaya, etc.
[the
other] Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 08:24:22
-0400
From: ***@MINDSPRING.COM
Subject:
To NBC
Dear NBC big-brothers,
Since
you ARE monitoring this traffic, I want to be perfectly clear.
1. Your
coverage could be much, much better
2. You could show other routines in the
time it takes to show athletes
waiting for their scores, and then bounce back
and show the one-
second response to their score and not the 3 minutes of
waiting
3. You COULD keep the other cameras running, and sell each event
to
the
cable companies as pay-per-view (much more limited exposure if
you do it
by event, or even event round, than the last fiasco)
4. John Tesh is a weenie. I'm sure he appeals to the mass
population
as an entertainment personality, but is this or is this not
a
sporting
event as opposed to a variety show? He's like Dick Clark
on American
Bandstand.
5. NO coverage of rounds 1 and 2 in the women's team optionals? Almost
NO coverage of the other teams in
round 3 - you can sit there
smugly and say we don't understand 'the
business' and write an
e-mail thanking people for their support, but the fact is
that
sports
fans are NOT getting what they want or deserve, and you just
happen to
be in a monopoly position and we can't do a damn thing
about
it.
Steaming and depressed in ATLANTA (I live here and can't see it
all),
[the other] Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 07:09:21
MDT
From: ***@DEANS.HEALTH.UTAH.EDU
Subject:
NEJM gym article
The following article has been forwarded from a sportsmedicine
internet
group...
Tofler IR, Stryer
BK, Micheli LJ, Herman LR: Physical and emotional
problems of elite female gymnasts. New Eng J
Med
1996; 335: 281-3
Within the last 5 years, two US female Olympic level gymnasts
died from medical problems related to their sport, one
from
complications of anorexia nervosa and one
from a spinal injury
sustained in a vault. More than 2 million children and
adolescents
participate in competitive gymnastics
in the US each year.
The
development of a champion requires hard training,
stringent
coaching and, often, parental pressure.
Overtraining,
injuries and psychological
damage are common consequences.
Parents
and coaches experiencing success
vicariously risk "achievement by
proxy". Elite gymnasts begin training between
the ages of five and
seven and are often involved
in serious training regimens by age 10.
Intense, repetitive, high-impact events result in injuries to
every young gymnast.
The risk of injury increases with longer
practices,
increased degree of difficulty, and age-related
vulnerability
of the skeleton. Minor physical
insults to cartilage
may accumulate into permanent
injury or deformity, made worse by the
pressure to
compete while injured. Overtraining while injured can
result
in reflex sympathetic dystrophy, characterized by an
exaggerated
response of the sympathetic nervous system.
Gymnasts are at risk for nutritional, endocrine, and
psychiatric disorders, the 'female athlete triad' associated
with
substantial morbidity and mortality. While anorexia is reported in 1
per cent and bulimia in 3 percent of adolescents, they are
reported
to be between 15% and 62% in female
gymnasts. Unequivocal pressure
on female gymnasts to be thin and muscular encourages
atypical eating
behavior. Oblique or deliberate comments by
coaches, judges or
parents that the loss of a few
pounds will improve scores exacerbate
the
problem. Disordered eating and
intensive exercise may contribute
to primary and
secondary amenorrhea, and the emotional stress of
competition
may have further effects on menstrual function,
increasing
the risk of premature osteoporosis.
Adults are often seduced by dreams of Olympic gold, and the
young athlete may perceive her entire identity and
self-worth as
depending on her participation and
success. Highly organized
gymnastics programs can impede the athlete's ability to
think or act
independently. Pain, somatiform
disorders, and self-inflicted injury
may be the
only way to escape.
Elite gymnasts tend to be be extremely
obedient and
disciplined and to strive for adult
approval. The quest for
Olympic
success ensures that these girls may be
driven beyond their physical
and emotional
limits.
The
recently published report of the Female Athlete Triad
Task Force is a
modest start in monitoring the sport.
However, the
political and financial goals
of the governing bodies conflict with
the
protection of the athlete.
At
its best, elite gymnastics can provide a profound
experience
for the athletes. At its worst, the
sport can result in
serious life-threatening
physical and emotional disabilites. As role
models
for other children and adolescents, elite gymnasts offer
examples
of the very best, but the drive to be like them can be
harmful.
Talented youngsters at every level need support, not
crippling
injuries as they enter adulthood.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 14:36:00
0BS
From: ***@SHU.AC.UK
Subject:
Coverage and crowd...
In fairness, I don't think NBC overdid it too
much with coverage of the
American gymnasts. You'd expect it of any host
country. What was
unforgivable was that no thought seemed to go into what else
they showed.
It seemed to be
completely random, as if it would keep the rest of the
world
happy as long as they showed Scherbo and Nemov and a couple of others
in
the all-around. No Yuri Chechi on rings, and I can't believe they got as
far as the fourth rotation before they showed Voropaev, who at that point
was
in a medal place, and who they should have known was going to be in
contention from the beginning.
As for the crowd,
you would expect them to be biased, but when fantastic
routines
go completely unacknowledged it really is too much. I've not
noticed
this degree of bias in any other sport in Atlanta so far and I think
all that the predominantly American crowd in the Georgia
dome have done so
far is to show themselves up to
be completely ignorant. From the other
messages
I've read on the list, it seems as though the genuine fans of the
sport were all watching it at home on TV.
Just a (British) point of view.
Claire.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 07:02:14
-0700
From: ***@IX.NETCOM.COM
Subject:
The US Crowds
I have to say, I knew that you guys couldn't
do
it. Instead of writing comments about the
wonderful job the Americans
did and how proud you
are of them, you all decided to complain-AGAIN. I
dpn't mean to be rude or hateful but I wish that you
guys would grow
up. The Olympics are about
cheering on your country and hoping that
they win
the gold. If I were in the crowd, I would cheer for the
Americans
as well. Don't even tell me that they didn't cheer for anyone
else at all because I know that they did. Maybe not as loud,
maybe not
as enthusiactly
but they did.
It's hard for me to understand you guys
sometimes.
It's hard for me to understand why you are always picking on
Moceanu or
whining about the US crowds. Why can't you just accept the
fact that the people who were sitting in those stands were
Americans
and they wanted to show their country
how proud they are of them. And I
am sorry to
those people who don't complain all of the time and who
choose
to be postive that I am taking up your time.
I can't believe that we are arguing during the
Olympic Games. I
can't believe that you guys aren't showing how proud
you
are of the US team. I can't belive that you have
found some way to
complain during one of the most hisorical sports events in history.
-Laura
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 16:59:28
+0700
From: ***@SERVER.INDO.NET.ID
Subject:
tapes
Greetings,
Artistic gymnastic is not popular in my
country. So I always find problem if
I loose one of international gymnastic
event. People in my country loves
football -US citizens call it Soccer- and badminton, but not
gymnastic.
And this time -the Olympic- gymnastic is out from TV
stations' list to
cover, so I will not have any documentation
about it. Is there somebody
inform me how to get
the copies of it -from preliminaries to finals-
especially
performs USA, Romania, Russia, ex-Soviet states and France ?
Thanks
and regards from Indonesia,
Dayan.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 16:59:07
+0700
From: ***@SERVER.INDO.NET.ID
Subject:
Kerri
Greetings, everybody !
What a Kerri ! That is why I like watching gymnasts, because every
time I
can learn about self determination and
strong motivation to win.
I do not know exactly about Kerrie's present
condition, but I will pray for
her, because she
had denied her existence and gave all to her country.
Congratulation
US citizens, you should be proud having her !!
Warm
regards from Indonesia,
Dayan.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 26 Jul 1996 00:29:40
+1000
From: ***@JCU.EDU.AU
Subject:
Re: tapes
Hi,
Does your VCR system use PAL,SECAM
or NTSC. I'm in Townsville , Australia
and while our coverage isn't great I'm getting copies of the
BBC coverage
which is pretty good, so if you use
PAL or are willing to covert then
email me
back
Regards
Sharyn
On Thu, 25 Jul
1996, Dayan wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> Artistic
gymnastic is not popular in my country. So I always find problem if
> I
loose one of international gymnastic event. People in my
country loves
> football -US citizens
call it Soccer- and badminton, but not gymnastic.
>
> And this
time -the Olympic- gymnastic is out from TV stations' list to
> cover, so I will not have any documentation about it. Is
there somebody
> inform me how to get the
copies of it -from preliminaries to finals-
> especially
performs USA, Romania, Russia, ex-Soviet states and France ?
>
>
>
Thanks and regards from Indonesia,
> Dayan.
>
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 15:37:29
+0100
From: ***@ACHILLES.DEMON.CO.UK
Subject:
Re: Olympic Questions...
>
>I would have liked to have seen the Romanians and Russians get their medals
>along with the Americans. I'm curious if they were congratulatory
towards
>the AMericans
or if they were ambivalent.
>
Led by Khorkhina,
the entire Russian team walked around the podium and
shook
each American by hand before stepping up to get their silvers. The
Romanians
followed suit, shaking hands with each American and each
Russian (the
latter more warmly, I thought) before getting their
bronzes.
It was a moment of great dignity and
sportsmanship, the more so for the
way they had
been treated that night. I would like to think that it
might
have shamed some of the crowd. More likely though, they regarded
it the way NBC obviously did, when they left the scene on
the cutting-
room floor.
I would like to
applaud the clear majority of Americans on this list who
have
posted to condemn what has been going on in the Georgia Dome. Where
those of us posting from overseas ran the risk of being
dismissed as
anti-American (hilariously so in my
case; I remember how many rows I've
had over being
regarded as very pro-American), you ran the risk of being
condemned as "traitors" at a moment of national
triumph. I am also glad
to hear that parts of the
American media are beginning to tell it like
it
obviously was...especially to those of us who saw the unedited
coverage.
To those who still don't get it, ask
yourselves if you'd have liked to
have been in the
Russians shoes tuesday night. What was it someone
said?
They should have prepared themselves for it? Tell me how. By
walking
into the roughest bar in Dallas wearing a
49ers t-shirt? Most, though
not all, of their
girls were experienced internationals, used to
appearing
in big arenas overseas before big, but appreciative,
audiences.
Sadly, tuesday night was
Christians being fed to the lions
instead.
So
what?
So you guys were *hosts*, that's what. You arranged the party.
You sent
out the invitations. You said please
come. And, when they did, what
happened? You
shoved them in the corner and treated them with frosty
contempt.
Last
time I looked, the USOG web page is still featuring de Coubertin's
"not the winning but the taking part" line. Maybe
someone should replace
it with Al Davis.
"Just win baby."
--
Frances
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 11:11:40
-0400
From: ***@GNN.COM
Subject:
<No subject given>
Can anyone who was there or has non-NBC
coverage write a little something
about the
earlier rounds of the Womens Team competition? Bogi, Piskun,
France, China, Greece, etc? Or is there a web-site
I can go to?
Do people think the Womens
Team Gold/Kerri Strug story is going to be
gymnastics
Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan? By that I mean do you think this is
going to
create
a
greater interest and larger audience for gymnastics
in non-Olympic years, or is
it
all just going to blow
over? Could we see Worlds live in
prime time, scores of
exhibitions on TV? I think its
admirable that a lot of the U.S team wants to go
to
college this fall, but think of what they could do for the
popularity of
gymnastics
if they toured for a
year and rode the popularity wave.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 09:50:22
EDT
From: ***@UGA.CC.UGA.EDU
Subject:
Re: The crowd at Georgia Dome (fwd) (fwd) (fwd)
Ilene
said:
>
>>>I just wanted to say that I, too, am disgusted
with the crowd at the
>>>Georgia Dome and with NBC for turning
this into the "go USA" show.
>>>Whatever happened to the
Olympic spirit?
Beth said:
>>I'm sorry to say the Olympic
spirit ends about 1 second after the end
>>of
the Opening Ceremonies and everyone is very naive to think otherwise.
Orion
said:
>Am I the only one who's appaled by this statement? I find it viciously
>cynical. To say that the olympic spirit ends at the end of the opening
>ceremony? I find the olympics
to be a tremendous display of honor and
>sportsmanship
for almost everyone involved. I don't understand people who
>think that the olympics is
entirely a money-making or myopically patriotic
>venture.
If that's all you see when you watch athletes reaching their life
>goals who will never make money from their sport, then I
don't get it.
(snip)
>The world who compete
in these games, and I don't think I'm "very naive" to
>see the beauty in these people. Apparently some people truly
believe that
>the olympic
spirit only exists in the opening ceremony, which means that
>their idea of olympic spirit is
very different from mine.
I didn't mean to imply that I didn't believe
in the Olympic spirit .....
why
else would I stay up until 2:00 each night watching snippets of events
that I don't normally ever have any desire to watch just
because I admire
the desire/efforts/skills of the
athletes involved. Even though they
have
been criticized by some on the List, I enjoy
the fluff stories regarding
all of the athletes
(because I do watch so much of the Olympics I
unfortunately
have to watch some of them more more than
once!!). But
I also realize
that people have different ideas of what the "Olympic
Spirit"
means and I've found it irritating to read some of the comments
that have been expressed on the List the last few days. To some
fans,
excessive cheering for the USA team (especially if the team is in
contention for the Gold Medal for the first time) would be
considered
showing their olympic
spirt -- evidently to others it is not. I do
think
supporting the gymnastics team is a unique situation in that
in showing your appreciate for your home team, it might also
be seen
as not showing respect to the other team
because of the fact that
four events are going on
at the same time. Just out of curiousity,
is gymnastics the
only sport that has events going on at the same
time? The individual finals should be a much
more fair/appreciative
situation since they are
conducted one at a time (right?).
Also,
does anyone know if the size of the
crowd at the Georgia Dome is less
than, equal to
or more than attendance at past World/Olympic competitions?
I read the
posting about Bart Conner's comments regarding the crowd the
other night at the Georgia Dome and wondered if the size of
the crowd
and popularity of the sport since 1984
and the fact that it was the first
gold ever for
the women's team might have a little to do with the current
experience compared to what he "remembers" from
1984. I went back last night
and watched my brief snippets from 1984 and the crowd seemed
pretty loud
(and waving HUGE U.S. flags which were
banned from the Georgia Dome)
to me -- I wonder if
12 years might have decreased his memory of the
experience. :-)
:-) I
find it very hard to believe that Bart back
in
1984 would have made those same remarks regarding the crowd
support shown the other night to the women's team. When a team wins,
the
home advantage is always used as the reason why but unfortunately the
home advantage can also put so much pressure on the athletes
that they
falter under the expectations. With all of the
pressure/expectations
put on the U.S. girls the
other night, they came through and that IMO seems
to
have gotten lost in all of the "noise" on the List about the crowd
noise
at the Georgia Dome.
For 99%
of the athletes involved in the Olympics and the fans that
watch their performances, the Olympic spirit is alive and
well. Howeve,
IMO
it is the 1% which involves
medals/professionals that seems to get the
most
negative responses from fans/media regarding the lack of olympic
spirit.
As someone dear to my heart once said,
"If winning is not important, then
commander,
why keep score?" (Lt. Worf, Star Trek-The Second Generation).
Beth-
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 11:23:58
-0400
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: Day and Date
I know this has probably been discussed way too much
already, but with this
and several critical
articles in the local paper, I wanted to make one
comment.
Jennifer
writes:
>What Kerri
>did last night
was not abuse. It was her own decision, and at 18,
>she
is an adult, and capable of making them. I've seen track athletes
>do the same thing, athletes in other sports dig into
themselves
>like Kerri did last night and find
some personal reserve to keep
>going. Kerri did
this for herself, for the team, and had no regrets.
I strongly agree
that at the age of 18 (old enough to drive, vote, get
married,
serve in the armed forces), Kerri is certainly able to make her own
decisions.
Moreover, she is not the only one at these Olympics to make this
sort of decision.
In the cross country portion of the equestrian three day
event, an Australian rider fell at one of the obstacles,
breaking her
collarbone and several ribs. She then
remounted and completed the course,
ensuring that
Australia woud have enough riders complet
the course. She also
refused to take any pain medication that evening so she
wouldn't have a
positive drug test if the team
needed her to compete in the stadium jumping
phase
the next day. (Australia went on to
win the gold.) Kerri is simply
another example of a tough athlete making a gutsy decision
to help her team.
The fact that
she is less than five feet tall and a gymnast does not make
her less of adult (perhaps if John Tesh
would stop calling the gymnasts
"little
girls" and the newspaper would stop calling them "pony-tailed
pixies"
it would help people understand
that.)
Sarah
BTW, for those of you complaining about the gymn coverage - you should have
seen
the equestrian coverage (of course if you blinked you probably missed
it). The voiced
over intro began by saying "Every horse is different..."
(probably most of the general population could have told you
that) and
proceeded to worsen from there.
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 25 Jul 1996 - Special issue
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