GYMN-L Digest - 24 Oct 1995 to 25 Oct 1995 - Special issue

There are 18 messages totalling 509 lines in this issue.

Topics in this special issue:

  1. Elfi Schlegel (3)
  2. Questions (2)
  3. FIG Code
  4. More Elfi
  5. Canadian Women (not Schelgel)
  6. Joanna Bodak (rythmic gym) and eating disorder
  7. A letter I think you should read. -Reply
  8. What happened to monica! (2)
  9. EURATHLON
 10. Atlanta Pre-Olympics (from USA Today)
 11. Eating disorders...  my 2 cents...
 12. Nude Gymnastics comp!!
 13. Commentators, in general
 14. TV Commentators

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 01:29:13 -0400
From:    ***@CAPITALNET.COM
Subject: Elfi Schlegel

Michele wrote:
>Per your question about Elfie Schlagel, yes, she was a gymnast for Canada.
> Maybe some of our Canadian subscribers could supply more info about her, but
>I have a tape of the 1986 NCAA Women's Nationals, and I believe Elfie was a
>medalist on bars (yes, she went to college in the USA--I don't remember
>where, and the tape is in the annals of VCR junk...)(Utah won the team comp
>that year, BTW).  I share your disbelief with her remarks.  I guess her momma
>never taught her that if she didn't have anything nice to say she shouldn't
>say anything at all.:)

Elfi Schlegel is from Etobicoke, Ontario.  She has two sisters and parents
of German heritage.  She trained at Xoces Eagles School of Gymnastics (now
"rolled into" Gymnastics Mississauga) and was coached by Geoff and Mary Lea
Palmer.  The Palmers also coached Janine Rankin. Her first National and
Commonwealth Games championship victories came in 1978.  She also won a
bronze medal on vault at the 1980 World Cup.  These successes were all in
Canada, of course, but she also had a wealth of international experience.
She would have captained the Canadian team for the 1980 Olympics which we
boycotted.  She also put in a good effort but was unsuccessful in making
the 1984 team.

She went to university in Florida where she studied broadcasting.  Since
her successful NCAA career, most Canadian gymnasts have followed her lead
to U.S. schools.  She has been and remains one of Canada's few role models
in gymnastics.

She is 31 years old, single, and currently works for NBC. In recent years,
she has been seen commentating on gymnastics for CBC, TSN, and NBC.  She
will be covering the Breeders Cup (horse racing or equestrian?) and of
course, gymnastics at the '96 Olympics for NBC.

There is a tribute to her in the February 1995 issue of Ontario Gymnast.
I'll have to get permission from OGF to reprint it.

Regards,

Grace

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 11:16:10 +0200
From:    ***@INFOCOM.KIEV.UA
Subject: Re: Questions

>
>1) When some people talk of a backhandspring am I to take it they mean a back
> flip?
>
>Sarah:)
>

Yes, a backhandspring is the American term for the Brittish
back flip.
And the American back flip, is the Brittish back sumi (SP?).

jason

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 09:20:01 GMT
From:    ***@ACHILLES.DEMON.CO.UK
Subject: Elfi Schlegel

> Per your question about Elfie Schlagel, yes, she was a gymnast for Canada.
>  Maybe some of our Canadian subscribers could supply more info about her,

Not Canadian, I'm afraid, but I'll give it a go.

First up, her name's spelt the way I've got it in the "Subject" line. Elfi
without an "e" and Schlegel with two of them (just like the Schlegel sisters
in E.M. Forster's "Howard's End": there! I knew A-level English Literature
would come in handy somewhen!).

It so happens she won one of the first gymnastics competitions I ever saw:
something called the "Hunt" International at Wembley Arena in London in '81.
It was Canada/UK womens and USSR/UK mens...UK lost both, natch!

Elfi was AA champion at the Commonwealth Games in '78 and medalled (bronze?
vault?) at a World Cup in her native Toronto ('80?). Her club was something
called the Xoces-Eagles, which is certainly one of the stranger ones I've
heard. (Does it still exist? Anyone?) At least it's a change from the
250 Dynamos, I suppose.

> I have a tape of the 1986 NCAA Women's Nationals, and I believe Elfie was a
> medalist on bars

I think that was always her best event.

> (yes, she went to college in the USA--I don't remember
> where,

Florida, according to GYMN's records.

> I share your disbelief with her remarks.  I guess her momma
> never taught her that if she didn't have anything nice to say she shouldn't
> say anything at all.:)

This isn't the first time her commentating's been attacked on GYMN. It
surprised me before and it surprises me now. Having heard & seen a fair bit
of US-originated coverage, I'd rate her the best not the worst. She *knows*
what she's talking about, she avoids hyperbole and her criticisms always
contain a "because".

Good commentating - at least in my book - involves shutting up and letting
the pictures speak for themselves *until you have useful information to add*.
Too much of what we get to hear is repetition of what's obvious - yes, we
can see she's just mounted the beam; yes, we've grasped it's four inches
wide - or baseless, unreasoned cheerleading/abuse. Elfi is a lot less prone
to this than most.

Face it. Scoring in gymnastics is at least as much a process of being
marked down for mistakes/omissions of content/weaknesses of form as upwards
for the quality of content. Someone listening to Elfi will at least emerge
with some idea what these were and why the final score was as it was. This
aids understanding of gymnastics. Showering praise right, left and centre
doesn't.

--
Frances

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 08:19:11 -0400
From:    ***@EAGLE.LHUP.EDU
Subject: Re: FIG Code

Jennifer:

Most coaches and all optionally rated judges have a copy of the code of
points.  It is the bible of gymnastics.  You may obtain a copy from the
USAG office.  Remember, there are updates annually and changes for the
USAG Junior Olympic Program.

I hope this answers your question.

Julie


> Date sent:  24-OCT-1995 16:31:34
>
> Anyhow, I mentioned the idea of posting the partial code I have
> to see if it would be of help. Someone informed me this afternoon
> that some on the list have a full code. Anyway that can be put on the
> GYMN homepage? I would like to see the whole thing, though I don't
> know how much work it would entail.
>

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 08:27:44 -0400
From:    ***@YALE.EDU
Subject: More Elfi

This is a vague and distant memory for me, but unless I'm really making
something up, I saw Elfi compete at Pan Am Games in San Juan in 1979.  I
seem to remember that she was quite the darling of the Games and
contributed to a boom in gymnastics in Puerto Rico for the next few years.

:)
Adriana

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 07:58:43 -0500
From:    ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject: Canadian Women (not Schelgel)

Date sent:  25-OCT-1995 07:55:55

All the talk on Elfi has made me curious. Back in 1978, Lyn Moran
published a book called "The Young Gymnasts." She focused basically
on four athletes in the Canadian section. Karen Kelsall, Elfi,
Monica Goeremann (sp) and Sherry Hawco. Although I know about Elfi
anf Hawco (who died of cancer a few years back), I'm curious to
know about Kelsall and Goeremann. I know Goeremann won the 1979
Pan Ams all-around, and Kelsall always managed to catch the cameras
with that spectacular scale of hers. :)

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 09:22:48 EDT
From:    ***@BIOMED.QUEENSU.CA
Subject: Joanna Bodak (rythmic gym) and eating disorder

I have noticed an interest about rythmic gymnastics in the mailing list
recently.
Is anybody interested in hearing about Joanna Bodak, Polish rythmic gymnast
who placed 8th (or was it 7th) in Barcelona?  I taught in Poland for 1 1/2
year and became great friends with her (I was her English teacher for one).
If anybody is interested, please let me know and I'll write something about her.

About eating disorder;
I think that eating disorder is a serious problem and it is more present in
a sport where young girls perform in thight fitting clothing such as figure
skating and gymnastics.  This does not mean that gymnastics is a "bad"
sport, and there is no need to be defensive about it.  Why don't we
recognize the problem and deal with it instead of trying to pretend that it
doesn't exist.  And yes, other sports have that problem too but that does
not make it OK; eating disorder is still medically and psychologically
destroying for a young girl (and for anybody else for that matter, but it's
worse for a female teenager) and the self estime of these young athletes is
not worth sacrifying in order to defend gymnastics.  Gymnastics is a
wonderful sport teaching self-discipline, hard work, friendship, and other
beautiful character builder but it isn't perfect.  So let's get our head out
of the sand and fix the problem!

Anne

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 09:23:47 -0400
From:    ***@MOOSE.UVM.EDU
Subject: Re: Elfi Schlegel

About Elfi Schlegel's commentating.....I personally do not like that way
that she commentates. She seems to always focus on the bad things. It's
always a bobble here a balance check there or she or he does this
different. She talks all the way through the routines. Yes, I do think
that a little commentary is good during the routine, but she doesn't have
to comment on each step that the gymnast makes. Let us just enjoy the
routine while it's happening and when it's over then she can comment on
it. It also just seems that she never has anything nice to say about the
routines.


Jennifer

------------------------------

Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 10:38:46 -0400
From:    ***@ASTRO.OCIS.TEMPLE.EDU
Subject: Re: A letter I think you should read. -Reply

Kelly points out that the eating disorders problem isn't
just in gymnastics, and I agree thoroughly.  However,if
the numbers of people with eating disorders is higher in
gymnastics than in the population at large (of similar aged
girls), than gymnasts, coaches, and fans should be trying to
fix the problems that lead to those higher percentages.  I agree
that cheerleaders and wrestlers and models often have eating
disorders, but as an ex-gymnast, ex-coach, can current fan, I'm
better able to work on the problems in gymnastics than in other
sports or professions.

Ilene

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:49:19 -0400
From:    ***@MUSS.CIS.MCMASTER.CA
Subject: Re: Questions

> >Sarah:)
> >
>
> Yes, a backhandspring is the American term for the Brittish
> back flip.
> And the American back flip, is the Brittish back sumi (SP?).

Up here in the great white north, it's the back tuck, or in layout, the
back layout.....
Or maybe that was just my messed up region...
Sam>
> jason
>

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:52:28 -0400
From:    ***@MUSS.CIS.MCMASTER.CA
Subject: What happened to monica!

Does anyone know what ever happened to Monica Covacci (sp)
I think she was junior national champ in my day...
She's canadian, so all you canadian fanatics, if you could help, I'd sure
appreciate it!
Sam

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 17:58:33 -0700
From:    ***@MX.SARENET.ES
Subject: EURATHLON

This a message sended for Luis Sanzo (Vitoria-Spain).

In  1995, the European Union initiated for the first time the
EURATHLON  Programme with 700.000 Ecus.  The  object  of  the
Programme  was  to  promote sporting formation  and  sporting
activities  in  the  european context with  participation  of
institutions   -public  or  private-  of  at   least   threee
countries.

In   relation  with  this  programme,  he  has  two   general
questions:

1.    Do  somebody knows some experience in relation with the
  Eurathlon Programme in 1995 which involves gymnastics?

2.    Have  you ideas about activities of interest  that  the
  gymnastic  clubs  of Europe could promote  to  take  profit
  from this programme?

If you have interest in these questions, you can contact with
Luis Sanzo sending your adress through the base post.

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:36:59 -0600
From:    ***@HARRIER.SASKNET.SK.CA
Subject: Re: What happened to monica!

>Does anyone know what ever happened to Monica Covacci (sp)


Monica Covacci was one of Canada's top gymnasts for many years.
She was the Canadian Senior champion in 1985 at age 13, won
again in '87, was 2nd in '89 (close battle with Lori Strong),
and 5th (?) in 1990.  She competed in the '87 & '89 World
Championships and was the top Canadian at the '88 Olympics.

If I recall correctly, she competed compulsories only at 1990
Elite Canada (December) and I believe retired early in the
1991 season.

Last I heard, she got married a couple of years ago and
had a baby.  She is now Monica Covacci-Gray.

Sorry I don't have more definite information.

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 14:40:45 -0500
From:    ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject: Atlanta Pre-Olympics (from USA Today)

Date sent:  25-OCT-1995 14:39:59

According to USA Today, the US men's delegation to the Pre-Olympic
event will be Mihai Bagiu and Blaine Wilson. No women's delegation
has been decided as of yet.

------------------------------

Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 17:55:35 -0400
From:    ***@GOOFY.UMD.EDU
Subject: Re: Eating disorders...  my 2 cents...

>However,if the numbers of people with eating disorders is higher in
>gymnastics than in the population at large (of similar aged
>girls), than gymnasts, coaches, and fans should be trying to
>fix the problems that lead to those higher percentages.

No, no no!  Someone much smarter than I once said, and I'm paraphrasing,
"there are lies, damn lies, and statistics".  Now, I've been putting off
responding to the "eating disorder" thread until I got a chance to look at the
literature, but I feel that I have to chime in with all the numbers and
statistics that have been flying around.

One of the first lessons that one learns in a beginning statistics class is
that just because there happens to be a relationship between two variables, it
does not necessarily follow that there is a cause/effect relationship between
them.  For example, There is a .95+ relationship between committing a crime
and having drank milk as a child.  Therefore, should one conclude that
drinking milk leads to a life of crime?  Of course not!  What is not taken
into account is that of those that don't commit crimes there is also a .95+
correlation with drinking milk as a child.

O.K., what does this have to do with Gymnastics and eating disorders.  Well,
it was reported in the TASK FORCE ON USA GYMNASTICS RESPONSE TO THE FEMALE
ATHLETE TRIAD, preliminary Report, that "Gymnasts, especially elite level
gymnasts, tend to have personality traits including striving for perfection,
obsessive behavior and attention to detail..".  These variables all correlate
to adolescents who tend to have disordered eating problems.  Unfortunately, it
does not include the correlation itself.

So what can we glean from the above?  Well, if 1) a certain behavior or
personality trait is associated with eating disorders in the normal adolescent
population, and 2) gymnasts tend to attract those from the normal adolescent
population to the sport, then 3) there should be no wonder if there is a high
level of eating disorders in those who engage in the sport.  The fact that it
might be higher than the normal population is probably due to the fact that
gymnastics is self-selecting, that is, in order to do well, one needs the
attention to detail, the striving for perfection, etc.  I would expect that
any sport that requires these traits will attract individuals who would be at
risk for an eating disorder (for example, figure skating and ballet).

What this means is that while we have an obligation to educate our athletes,
coaches, parents, and judges on the possibility of eating disorders, we should
*not* accept a mea culpa position.  I firmly believe that gymnastics is not
the main or even major problem in regard to eating disorders.  The major
problem is society driven and would exist with or without gymnastics.

My .02!
--
Steve

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:42:58 -0400
From:    ***@MUSS.CIS.MCMASTER.CA
Subject: Re: Nude Gymnastics comp!!

Hahahahah, would we really reduce ourselves to that??? But seriously,
I've heard that a lot of ex-gymnasts have become strippers... A shame.

> > about an ad placed in a UK magazine about a nude gymnastics
>
> Just to be fair, has anyone seen a tape of
> nude female gymnastics available? Competition?
>

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:46:48 -0400
From:    ***@MUSS.CIS.MCMASTER.CA
Subject: Re: Commentators, in general

She won nationals I think in 1984, or was that the ontario cup?? I went
to both so long ago!
Sam

> Per your question about Elfie Schlagel, yes, she was a gymnast for Canada.
>  Maybe some of our Canadian subscribers could supply more info about her, but
> I have a tape of the 1986 NCAA Women's Nationals, and I believe Elfie was a
> medalist on bars (yes, she went to college in the USA--I don't remember
> where, and the tape is in the annals of VCR junk...)(Utah won the team comp
> that year, BTW).  I share your disbelief with her remarks.  I guess her momma
> never taught her that if she didn't have anything nice to say she shouldn't
> say anything at all.:)
>
> Just an FYI from your humble
>
> Michele in 'Joisey'
>

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Date:    Wed, 25 Oct 1995 19:04:17 -0400
From:    ***@AOL.COM
Subject: TV Commentators

Guys:

Let's not forget it's the commentators job at any gymnastics meet to pont out
why a particular athlete will win while another will not. Distinctions must
be made. And, like in the mind of the judges, mistakes often color the
scoring. As a result, inciteful commentary is often weighed to problems a
gymnast has on a particular event.

Gymnastics is not your child's piano recital. It's a competition and the
viewer needs to know why someone wins and why someone doesn't.

When someone performs an extraordinary skill or does something perticularly
well, Elfi Schlegel has offered plenty of positive commentary.

Sport commentary is too full of Polyannas both male and female.

David Michaels

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End of GYMN-L Digest - 24 Oct 1995 to 25 Oct 1995 - Special issue
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