GYMN-L Digest - 26 Nov 1995 - Special issue
There
are 8 messages totalling 1915 lines in this issue.
Topics in this
special issue:
1. training
2.
MEDIA: Gym & UK tv
3. DTB Cup (Part Two)
4. World Gymnastics Challenge - TV
Coverage
5. Jana (Hana?)
Rulfova's Beam move
6. What
is?
7. 1994 NCAA's and Alabama
people
8. FAQ
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 11:53:01
-0500
From: ***@MV.MV.COM
Subject:
training
In
light of the discussion recently about gymnast eligibility and
age for olympics, I have the following thought and
question.
The programs which I have seen recently tend to like the
girls
young and train them and move them up as fast
as the girls can handle it.
This brings us alot of young level 10 and
elite's. My question is what
is the difference if any between these programs and those
which produce
gymnasts who are willing and able to
compete in college.
I am
wondering if alot of girls who could have competed in
college
are being burnt out physically or mentally before they get
there? For
example, the average age of retirement at our gym is 15,
after
a year or 2 of level 10. Is it the
gymnasts, the program, or just
natural fall out
from a difficult and demanding sport?
Any
input from college gymnasts, and coaches etc. which
can help
shed some light on this phenomena would
be appreciated.
Curious,
Maria
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 16:00:52
GMT
From: ***@ACHILLES.DEMON.CO.UK
Subject:
MEDIA: Gym & UK tv
Three
small developments that may be of interest to UK Gymn-ers.
1)
Carlton (London ITV) are airing the first of a series of half-hour
Oxford
Scientific Film productions on "The mechanics of sport" this
thursday p.m.. (7.30 in London; check
other areas). The first of these
is dealing
with athletics but I understand one of the subsequent ones
features gymnastics. Oxford Scientific Films are a company
who
specialise in ultra-slow-mo filming that
they've previously used in
nature films. Here
they're using it to show how the human body adapts
to
the mechanical demands of various sports.
2) My spies tell me that
although it's 99% certain the BBC will host-
broadcast
next spring's Birmingham european championships, this doesn't
necessarily mean there's going to be much UK coverage shown.
Their
attitude, I'm told, is along the lines of
"well, as it's taking place
here I suppose
we've got to send cameras, but that doesn't mean *we've*
actually
got to schedule much of it". In other words, business as
usual.
The pictures may come from BBC cameras, but the chances are
you'll need
eurosport to actually get to see more
than half an hour of them on your
tv.
3)
There's one addition to the list of potential outlets for gymnastics
coverage that I gave last month, although I present it
heavily hedged
with riders and healthy-warnings.
There's
a new-ish cable-only channel called "Live TV". (Yes. I know that
means 95% of people can't get it anyway.) It was run by the
ludicrous
Janet Street-Porter, is now under ex-Sun editor Kelvin McKenzie
and is
owned by the Mirror Group. It broadcasts
mainly celebrity chat & movie
clips: imagine
MTV without the music and you're about there. Basically,
it's
dross.
So why am I wasting time on it?
Because McKenzie
himself knows it's dross (heck, he edited the Sun,
right?)
and has decided sports are the way to
build it up. His problem: no money.
So they're actively hunting for any
sports no-one else has bought-up and
which it's
total of half a dozen cameras can cover. Last month it picked up
the Rugby League world cup matches the BBC (typically)
decided it couldn't
be bothered to actually
broadcast, and a week or so back showed live coverage
of
the UK figure-skating championships. My information is that it as
*actively* looking for any other sporting events that are
"on the market"
and aren't asking much for
rights.
My conclusion: if you're involved in organising a meet (or
know those who are)
give Live tv a ring (their
offices are in Canary Wharf). They may be interested.
Specifically, I would
suggest someone gives whoever is involved in organising
marketing
at BAGA (if using the words "organising" and "marketing" in
the
same sentence as "BAGA" aren't an
obvious contradiction) a shake, wake them
gently
out of their decade-long snooze and suggest they pitch the rights to
coverage of their next national championships to Kelvin's
boys. I mean, it's
clear by now no-one else is
interested. The BBC is only going to do europeans
on suffrance.
BTW, Live tv
are so cash-strapped, don't be surprised if they ask *you* to
do the commentary!
...Hey! Sherwin! It could be
your big break at last!!!
--
Frances
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 14:50:27
-0500
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
DTB Cup (Part Two)
DTB Cup 1995
(Part Two)
============
Stuttgart, Germany 24/25 November, 1995
I discovered what the proper name is
for the "head-to-head" final.
They call it "Winners'
Final".
Mens Parallel Bars
------------------
1.
Huang Liping
(CHN)
9.700
2. Vitaly Scherbo (BLR) 9.675
3.
Alexei Nemov
(RUS)
9.625
4. Rustam Charipov (UKR) 9.612
5.
Marius Toba
(GER)
9.450
6. Ivan Ivankov
(BLR)
9.275
7. Sergei Kharkov (RUS) 9.250
8.
Valeri Belenki (GER) 9.150
Winners'
Final:
1. Huang Liping
(CHN)
9.750
2. Vitaly Scherbo (BLR) 9.400
I
thought Scherbo was struggling during his routine but it just
showed how much I knew about this apparatus as he qualified
for
the winners final.
Sergei Kharkov is
still competing under the Russian flag...
Ivankov's dissapointing run
continued .He was going well on the
bars but had
to put a hand down upon landing the double piked
back
dismount.
Womens Vault
------------
Winners'
Final:
1. Gina Gogean
(ROM)
9.687
2. Lavinia Milosovici (ROM) 9.675
Don't know
what happened during the "normal" final.
Gina gained
"revenge" on Lavinia after Lavinia beat her yesterday
on floor by the minimal of margins. Gina was laughing after
her
first vault when Octavian Belu passed by her
and must have said
something pretty funny. (Hard
to imagine but still... <g>)
Mens Floor
----------
Winners'
final:
1. Jordan Jovtchev (BUL) 9.662
2.
Vitaly Scherbo (BLR) 9.637
Womens
Beam
-----------
1. Lilia Podkopayeva (UKR) 9.837
2. Gina
Gogean
(ROM) 9.712
3. Lavinia
Milosovici (ROM) 9.687
4.
Dina Kochetkova
(RUS)
9.650
5. Oksana Chusovitina (UZB) 9.400
6. Nadja
Ziehfreund (GER) 9.037
7.
Rufina Kreibich
(GER)
8.637
8. Adrienn Nyeste (HUN) 8.412
Winners'
Final:
1. Lilia Podkopayeva (UKR) 9.850
2. Gina
Gogean
(ROM)
9.787
Gina didn't do her flick series anymore after the
recent disasters
on that particular skill. She now
opted to do flick into back layout
to land on two
feet instead. Pods' routines was clean and won the
title
with ease. Gina was certainly upbeat today and smiled a lot
for a change. (I think that she had really tried to smile a
lot more
these days) Gina performed a
full-twsiting double tuck dismount,
unlike her
normal plain double tuck.
Mens High Bar
-------------
1.
Aljaz Pegan
(SLO)
9.725
2. Andreas Wecker (GER) 9.700
3.
Vitaly Scherbo (BLR) 9.687
4.
Huang Liping
(CHN)
9.662
5. Krasimir Dounev (BUL) 9.500
6.
Ivan Ivankov
(BLR)
9.487
7. Sergei Kharkov (RUS) 9.075
8.
Zoltan Supola (HUN) 8.575
Winners'
Final:
1. Andreas Wecker (GER) 9.750
2.
Aljaz Pegan
(SLO)
9.737
A very strong field this... all the routines are
spectacular. Here
are what I saw of them:
Kharkov:
The most spectacular of them all. Kovac; One arm Tkatchev;
and then the series of Tkatchev, piked Tkatchev, piked
Tkatchev,
Geinger. He fell on the Geinger which
was why he only got 9.075.
Dounev: He included a special six element
series: piked Tkatchev,
Tkatchev, Tkatchev, hop full,
hop full, Geinger. But he regrasped
the Geinger very close to the bar and nearly lost the swing.
Anyway
there was a big deduction and he only
scored 9.500.
Wecker: No elements in series but he did do two Kovacs
as well as
a Tkatchev. Plus a well landed
full-twisting double layout.
Scherbo: one arm Tkatchev; one arm
Tkatchev into Geinger. Full-
twisting double
layout dismount.
Huang: A piked Kovac! And also a one arm Tkatchev
into Geinger. Full
twisting double layout
dismount. I thought he should have scored
higher.
Pegan:
The Pegan salto (Gaylord with half twist); series of Tkatchev,
Tkatchev,
Geinger. And a triple back dismount (a step on
landing
though)
Ivankov: Kovac; piked
Tkatchev; double twisting double layout
dismount.
Supola:
Fell on his second Tkatchev in his series. also sat on
his
triple back dismount.
That is all
from the DTB Cup. The mens field was certainly much
stronger
than that of the womens. Maybe I think the womens field
lack
the Americans and Chinese (and only one Russian), whereas the
mens field have gymnasts from nearly every country.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 14:59:31
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
World Gymnastics Challenge - TV Coverage
Just wanted to those of you
in the Pacific NW know that the World Gymnastics
Challenge is scheduled to
be broadcast next Saturday, Dec. 2nd at noon on the
Vancouver
(BC) station. (I think it's
sometimes channel 2, although I have
Viacom basic cable and get it as
channel 54 - in the Seattle area)
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 15:31:46
-0600
From: ***@ZEPHYR.MEDCHEM.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
Jana (Hana?) Rulfova's Beam move
OKay, I was by my library on the
otherside of campus and I looked through
the IG's
since this is bugging me alot. I looked up the 1981 Madrid
Women's
Europeans and I was right that Rulfova competed and did do
a KOrbut on bars, but not on beam!!!! I think this was the
July or Aug 1981
IG. The next issue had the coverage of the first Ennia
Gold Cup and Rulfova
competed in that meet, as
well. Here they said she did a Korbut on flip
on
beam (ff straddle down), but no talk of the full twisting version.
So, I
have no idea where she first did this move. Maybe it was in the 1983
Europeans?
She didn't compete in Zagreb in 1982, did she? I thought it was
Labakova
and two others?
Jeff
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 12:43:32
UTC-0800
From: ***@CS.UBC.CA
Subject:
Re: What is?
a German giant is a over grip
giant with your arms behind you.
You stoop your legs between your hands
like a jam to inverts
but you are moving the other
direction and your sholders never dislocate.
A Xiou Ruizhi is a
Tkatchov, front where you stay on the same
side of
the bar and catch the bar in undergrip
Chris
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 15:19:44 -0600
From: ***@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU
Subject:
1994 NCAA's and Alabama people
Hi. I'm watching a copy of the 1994
NCAA's that I got from a friend, and
it does not
identify the athletes. Now, for the most part, I've gotten
everyone picked out, including the individual competitors,
but there
are still three individuals that I can't
identify. Can someone tell me
with which team
April Polito of Penn State, Robin Ewing of Kentucky
and
Shelly Staumbaugh of Kent State were competing with? Thanks.
Jenny
:-)P
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Nov 1995 21:50:39
GMT
From: ***@CLOUD9.NET
Subject:
FAQ
Attached, for your reading pleasure, is the latest draft
of Gymn's FAQ. For
those who are interested in doing so, please read through it
and send me
your corrections and/or comments.
Thanks!
Debbie
:)
Gymn's FAQ for Artistic Gymnastics
Section A: Athletes
- Why are the gymnasts so
young and why do they retire so
early?
- Why do little kids move away from
home to train?
- Is there a ranking system?
- Why didn't <famous
gymnast> compete at...?
- Whatever happened to...?
- Who's who in
the gymnastics world?
- How do I send fan mail/get an autograph?
- How
does a gymnast become an "elite"?
Section B:
Competitions
- What are the more prestigious meets?
- What is Olympic
Order?
- How does a gymnast know when to start his/her routine?
- What
is podium training?
- What are compulsories?
- How do they pick the
Olympics/Worlds team?
- What are the upcoming competitions? How do I get
tickets?
Section C:
Scoring/Judging
- What is the Code of Points?
- How are gymnasts
scored?
- Are the gymnasts required to do any specific moves?
- What is
a "start value"? What is
"bonus"?
- What deductions do judges take?
- What is
Competition 1A, etc.?
- Why is the Code revised every four years?
-
What is the highest rank for a judge, and how do they get
it?
- So-and-so was over/underscored. Why?
- Do gymnasts submit a routine
ahead of time to a judge?
- How do judges remember what a gymnast has done
when he
scores
a routine?
Section D:
Technical Elements
- About this section.
- How are the moves
named?
- Basics.
- Vault.
- Uneven bars and high bar.
- Balance
beam.
- Dance.
- Tumbling.
- Pommel Horse.
- Rings.
-
Parallel bars.
Section E:
History
- How did gymnastics begin?
- Who was the first
to...?
- Who are the current champions?
- Who are the former
champions?
Section F:
Other
- What is the IOC? (FIG, USOC, USAG, USGF, NCAA, AAU?)
-
How do I get tickets to...?
- Why don't gymnasts really compete as a team,
all at
once...?
-
What is rhythmic gymnastics?
- How do I get involved?
- What do
gymnasts wear?
- What is the chalk for?
Section G: References
- Are there any good
gymnastics resources on the Net...?
- Are there any good publications to
subscribe to?
[A.1] Why are the gymnasts so young and
why do they retire
so early?
Teenagers
are most successful in women's gymnastics around
the
age of 16 -- a gymnast usually reaches her maximum
combination
of flexibility, strength and aerobic activity.
There are certainly
exceptions (Kelly Garrison (USA) was 21
at the '88
Olympics). Strength is a more
predominant factor
in men's gymnastics, which is
why the prime age for men's
gymnastics is higher,
around 23 or 24.
The current FIG rule is that a gymnast must be 15 by
the end
of the calendar year to compete in an
Olympics or Worlds
(exception: usually in the
pre-Olympic year, gymnasts can
compete if they
turn 14 by year's end -- this allows
potential
Olympians to gain international experience).
However, beginning with the
1997 Worlds, gymnasts will need
to be 16 by the
end of the calendar year.
[A.2] Why do little kids move away from
home to train?
Often a gymnast, or a parent of a gymnast, will feel
that
s/he cannot get the proper training at a club
in his/her
hometown, and so will transfer to a
reputable gym to get
"better"
coaching. Each coach has a
different style and
many gymnasts will transfer in
hopes of finding the right
environment. Gymnasts who constantly transfer from
gym to
gym are called "club
hoppers."
[A.3] Is there a ranking system?
A
gymnast's ranking is determined by his/her placement at a
Championships or Olympics (USA, Worlds, etc.). If a gymnast
above
him/her retires, then the gymnast moves up in the
rankings. Rankings are not cherished in gymnastics
the way
they are in other sports, like tennis, and
are not used for
"seeding" at
competitions.
[A.4] Why didn't <famous gymnast>
compete at <competition>?
There are too many competitions and
too many gymnasts for
all of them to compete at
every international invitational.
Also, gymnasts often need to take time
off from their
competition
schedule to heal injuries, train new skills, and
rebuild
mentally.
[A.5]
Whatever happened to...?
Bela Karolyi --
"Retired" in 1992 but came out of retirement
to
coach Zmeskal, Boginskaya and other potential Olympians.
Nadia
Comaneci -- defected from Romania in November 1989;
does public appearances and exhibitions; has her own
leotard
line (Milano International); engaged to
Bart Conner.
Mary Lou Retton -- motivational speaker; living in
Houston;
recently had a baby.
Svetlana
Boginskaya and Kim Zmeskal -- both live in
Houston, TX, and
are training for their common goal of
comebacks in
the '96 Olympics. Boginskaya
trains at
Brown's Central; Zmeskal trains at Karolyi's.
Vitaly Scherbo -- Still training and competing. Lives with
his
wife and daughter in Johnstown, PA.
[A.6] Who's who in the gymnastics
world?
Bela Karolyi -- One of the most successful and
controversial
coaches in gymnastics history. He coached Nadia Comaneci,
Mary Lou
Retton, and Kim Zmeskal, who have all won either a
Worlds
or Olympics. Very
controversial for his flamboyant
promotion of his
gymnasts, and strict coaching style.
Nadia Comaneci -- Romanian gymnast
who made history by
scoring the first Olympic 10.0
(she actually received 7
perfect scores at the '76
Olympics). She is also the
only
female gymnast ever to win 3 consecutive
European
championship all-around titles.
Olga
Korbut -- The "pixie" who stole everyone's heart at the
Munich Olympics in 1972. Together with Nadia, she brought
women's gymnastics into the TV spotlight in the 70's.
Kim
Zmeskal -- First American all-around World champion
(1991), and three-time
US champion (1990-92). She was
America's
most decorated female gymnast at the time, was
very
popular -- and still is.
Shannon Miller -- Two-time all-around World
champion (1993-
94). The most
decorated US gymnast, having won medals in
every
major international from 1991 through 1994. Trains at
Dynamo
Gymnastics in Oklahoma.
Svetlana Boginskaya -- Known for her
gymnastics beauty and
artistry; 1989 all-around
World champion; two-time all-
around European
champion. Most popular for her
innovative
floor routines.
Vitaly Scherbo
-- One of the most successful male gymnasts
ever,
having won six out of a possible seven gold medals at
the
'92 Olympics. 1993
all-around World champion.
Not
known for his shyness, he has been
called the "Charles
Barkley of gymnastics."
Daniela
Silivas -- Always the bridesmaid, but never the
bride. Very popular Romanian gymnast who
"never won the big
one but should
have." 1987
all-around European champion.
Dmitri Bilozerchev -- 1983
all-around World champion at the
astonishing age
of 16. Only weeks prior to the 1985
World
championships, he was in a car crash which
broke his leg in
40 places.
Doctors were about to amputate until they
realized
he was the world champion. They
were able to save
the leg, and Bilozerchev
returned to win the 1987 World
championships in
one of the greatest comebacks in the
history of
the sport.
Steve Nunno -- Coach of Shannon Miller, two-time World
champion.
Considered by some to be the "new Bela," as he is
also a controversial coach with a strict style.
[A.7] How do I send
fan mail/get an autograph?
If you know the gymnast's federation's or
gym club's
address, it's best to send your fan
mail or request for an
autograph to the gymnast,
in care of the federation or club.
The most common are listed below; for a
complete list, check
out the following
directory:
ftp://ftp.cac.psu.edu/pub/gymn/Addresses/
If you
don't know the federation of club's address, you can
just
send the letter to your country's federation, who will
then
forward it to the gymnast. Be
patient in your response
as gymnasts are very
busy!
Federations
-----------
Belarussian Gymnastics
Federation
Kirov Street, 8/2
220600 Minsk
Belarus
Chinese
Gymnastics Federation
Rue Tiyukuan 9
Beijing
People's Republic of
China
Romanian Gymnastics Federation
Str. Vasile Conta 16
Bucharest
Romania
Russian
Gymnastics Federation
Lujnetskaya Nabereynaya 8
119270 Moscow
Russia
Ukrainian
Gymnastics Federation
Esplanadnaya Street 42
252023 Kiev
Ukraine
USA
Gymnastics
Pan American Plaza, Suite 300
Indianapolis, IN 46225
USA
Cincinnati
Gymnastics Academy
Port Union Road
Fairfield, OH 45014
Dynamo
Gymnastics
P.O. Box 270535
Oklahoma City, OK 73137
Hill's
Angels
Lindbergh Drive
Gaithersburg, MD 20879
Karolyi's
Gymnastics
Bamwood
Houston, TX 77090
[A.8] How does a gymnast become an
"elite"?
In the US, the gymnastics system is divided into
"levels,"
the top one being
"elite." For the girls,
there are levels
1-10, National Elite, and then the big cheese, the
International
Elite (along with many age group subdivisions
of
those levels). For the boys, the
levels go from Class 6
to Class 1, then the Elite
levels. A gymnast progresses
through the levels by demonstrating his/her
accomplishment
at his/her current level; the
accomplishment is measured
through testing at the
lower levels and meet scores at the
higher
levels. Most countries have a
similar "level" system
for classifying
their gymnasts.
[B.1] What are the most prestigious
meets?
To win the Olympics is the ultimate dream of many top
gymnasts. World championships is right behind that,
and
just as high up there with some people. For the European
countries,
European championships are very high on the list,
because
most of the top gymnasts come from Europe.
The
equivalent other continental
championships (Asian Games, Pan
Am Games, etc.) are certainly big meets but not as
prestigious. There are many international
invitationals
that are highly regarded, too: the Chunichi Cup in Japan
and the DTB Cup in Germany are probably the two biggest
ones.
[B.2] What is Olympic Order?
A
defined order in which the gymnasts usually compete their
events. Here
they are, with their common abbreviations in
parentheses:
Men
Women
--------------------------------------------
Floor
Exercise (FX) Vault
(V)
Pommel Horse (PH)
Uneven Bars (UB)
Still Rings (SR or R) Balance Beam
(B)
Vault (VT)
Floor Exercise (FX)
Parallel Bars (PB)
High Bar (HB)
[B.3] How does a
gymnast know when to start his/her
routine?
The
head judge will signal the gymnast -- usually with a
green
flag, wave of the hand, or light -- when the judges
are
ready for the gymnast to begin his/her routine. The
gymnast
returns this signal by presenting him/herself to the
judges
by raising one or both arms. At
small meets, a judge
will often just raise his/her
hand or nod to the gymnast as
a signal to
begin.
[B.4]
What is podium training?
At most international meets,
the competition apparatus is
raised off the floor
and set on podiums. Thus, when
the
gymnasts are practicing on this raised
competition
equipment, it's called podium
training. Podium training is
usually well defined with each team assigned to a time
slot,
organizers leading the gymnasts from event
to event, and
even team leotards designed just for
the purpose of podium
training.
[B.5] What are
compulsories?
Compulsories are routines that have been defined before
an
event, that every gymnast must perform at the
meet. The
same
compulsory is used for four years and changes after
every
Olympics. Compulsories will be dropped
internationally after the 1996 Olympics. Most countries use
compulsories for their younger kids, though, and so
compulsories will certainly continue to exist in the
gymnastics world in some fashion.
[B.6] How do they
pick the Olympic/Worlds teams?
Each country is different. Usually, the teams are either
hand picked or selected through competition results (or
a
bit of both). In the US, the selection procedure
has
historically been to use a combination of
scores at national
championships and an Olympic/World
Trials; the procedure is
determined by a committee
and then the procedures must be
submitted to the
USOC for approval before they are
finalized.
[B.7] What are the
upcoming competitions? How do I
get
tickets?
Check out the Gym Calendar
for full details on competitions:
ftp://ftp.cac.psu.edu/pub/Gymn/Calendar
In
the US, tickets are usually sold through Ticketmaster in
the
city of the competition. You can
also call USAG for
information
(317-237-5050).
[C.1] What is the Code of Points?
The
Code of Points is the criteria for each event which
has
been set out by the Federation Internationale
de Gymnastique
(FIG). These
rules cover all aspects of a gymnast's
performance,
and include both the compulsory and optional
exercises. The Code assigns values of difficulty
ranging
from A to E, and demonstrates the
requirements of each move
with illustrations (such
as the angle of handstand that a
gymnast must
reach on bars). The Code also has
rules for
how one qualifies to become a judge, the
various categories
of judges, seating arrangements
for judges at competitions,
and the specific
functions of the judges. The Code
also
requires "norms of conduct" for
both gymnasts and coaches.
[C.2] How are gymnasts scored?
Compulsory
Exercises: All compulsory exercises
begin with a
start value of 10 points, with
deductions taken for any
errors or falls which may
occur during the routine.
Optional Exercises (Women): With the exception of vault,
where each vault is assigned a value, all women's
routines
are scored from 9.40 points. A gymnast can earn an
additional 0.6 points by showing special combinations
and/or
extra D- or E-rated elements, for a maximum
start value of
10.
Optional Exercises (Men): Men's routines start from a value
of 9.0. Since a
D-element is required, performing one will
automatically
raise the start value to 9.1. If a
D-element
is not performed, there is a 0.1
deduction (for a start
value of 8.9). The extra 1.0 point
can be earned by
performing E-rated elements and
special connections.
[C.3] Are the gymnasts required to do
any specific moves?
Some of the apparatus have required elements which will
incur
deductions if not completed in the optional routine.
Here are some of the
requirements:
Beam:
full turn on 1 leg
gymnastic-acrobatic series
one leap with great amplitude
Pommels: scissors
High
Bar:
inverted giant swings
Rings:
swing to handstand
press to handstand
Floor (W): gymnastic-acrobatic
series
one tumbling pass with a double salto
Floor (M): one-legged
balance
minimum of 2 gymnastic-acrobatic series
[C.4] What is a
start value? What is bonus?
Women:
All
routines start from a 9.40 (except for vault).
Value Parts (A=0.2,
B=0.4, C=0.6, D=0.8) 3.00
points
Combination (construction of the exercise) 2.00 points
Execution
4.40 points
Bonus Points
0.60 points
-----------
10.00 points
If a gymnast attempts to earn bonus points by
performing an
extra D- or E-rated element but
falls or has a break worth
0.2 or more, then she does not receive the bonus
points.
Men:
Except for vault, all men's routines are scored
from 9.0.
The gymnast can earn bonus points by performing extra D- and
E-rated
elements. Each extra D element is
worth 0.1; each
extra E element is worth 0.2 each
for a total of 1.0:
Difficulty (A=0.1, B=0.2, C=0.4, D=0.6) 2.40
points
Combination (3 per event @ 0.4 each)
1.20 points
Presentation
5.40 points
Bonus Points
1.00 points
Men's vaults have the following ratings
A=8.6
C=9.2
E=9.8
B=8.9
D=9.5
and the gymnast can receive up
to 0.2 bonus for distance
(0.1 for over 3.5 meters; 0.2
for over 4.0 meters).
[C.5] What deductions do judges
take?
The FIG has set out a Table for General Faults. Small
faults
receive up to 0.15 points' deduction; medium faults
receive
up to 0.3 points' deduction; large faults result in
deductions
worth more than 0.3 points and may lead to an
invalid
exercise. Following are some of the
more common
faults seen:
Slight hop upon
dismount
0.05 points
Poor foot form
0.10 points
One step upon dismount
0.10 points
Leg separation (each time)
0.15 points
Insufficient split position (when required) 0.15
points
Bent arms in support/bent knees
0.20 points
Insufficient height in leaps
0.20 points
Two steps upon dismount
0.20 points
Lack of diversified composition
0.20 points
Insufficient use of entire apparatus
0.20 points
Grasping apparatus to avoid falling
0.30 points
Three steps upon dismount
0.30 points
Fall on one or both hands, knees or hips 0.50 points
[C.6] What is Competition
1A, etc.?
Competition 1A is also known as the compulsory
exercises.
Every gymnast performs the same routines on each apparatus.
These
routines are created by various member nations of the
FIG and test the
gymnast's mastery of basic elements and
combinations. The compulsory exercises are
usually
performed only at Olympics, Worlds or
national
championships. The FIG has decided to discontinue
this
portion of the competition after the 1996
Olympics.
Competition 1B is also known as the team optionals. This
portion
of the competition is usually held only during a
Worlds
or Olympics. The gymnasts
are allowed to show their
own
routines on each apparatus.
Competition II is also called the
all-around. The gymnasts
begin from a score of zero, and the gymnast with the
highest
score at the end of the competition
becomes the all-around
champion. There is usually a limit on the number
of
gymnasts from a country that may compete in the
all-around
competition.
Competition III
is also called the event finals.
The best 8
gymnasts on each event (no more
than 2 gymnasts per country
are allowed in each
final). The gymnasts begin from a
score
of zero, and the highest scorer wins. The vault final is
the exception:
each gymnast performs 2 different vaults,
and
the scores are averaged to arrive at the final score.
[C.7] Why is the
Code revised every four years?
The FIG revises the Code every 4 years
for several reasons.
One, gymnasts and coaches from the leading countries
are
able to meet the requirements of a new Code
fairly easily
after 4 years and would receive
excessively high scores if
the Code were not
adjusted to meet the level of the
gymnasts. Two, by regularly changing the
requirements, the
FIG tries to ensure that the sport will continue to
evolve.
[C.8]
What is the highest rank for a judge, and how do they
get there?
The highest judge's ranking is the FIG
Brevet. A beginning
judge will attend workshops run by his federation and
start
by judging at meets where beginning gymnasts
compete. As a
judge passes each test, he can move up and receive
certification to judge at higher level meets.
[C.9] So-and-so was
over/underscored. Why?
Because
gymnastics uses subjective judging, the results of a
competition
are sometimes disputed by the fans, federations,
and
coaches. Overscoring can be the
result of home
advantage, a gymnast's popularity,
judging bias, and other
factors. These same factors can likewise
contribute to
underscoring.
[C.10] Do gymnasts
submit a routine ahead of time to the
judges?
A
gymnast does not submit his routine in advance. The only
exception
is women's optional vault, where the gymnasts have
to
post the number of the vault they plan to perform.
If a gymnast has
invented a new element and would like to
receive
possible bonus points for it in a meet, s/he can
submit
the skill to the FIG beforehand. It
is evaluated and
rated by the FIG.
Judges
generally see a gymnast's routine prior to
competition,
however, because the judges attend podium
training. This is beneficial because a judge can
make note
of unusual combinations (or routines
that lack required
elements, etc.) and be certain to evaluate the routine
correctly during competition.
[C.11] How do judges
remember what a gymnast has done when
he scores a
routine?
The FIG has created a shorthand system so the judges can
easily "write down" a routine while it is being
performed.
>From there, the judge can quickly review and score a
routine.
[D.0] About this section.
This
section gives a VERY BRIEF guide to help a new
gymnastics
fan understand some of what they might see on TV.
We would like to assemble
a more technically detailed
glossary of
elements. Please note that skill
descriptions
are merely notes on how to recognize
the skill, NOT on how
to perform the skill!
[D.1] How are the
moves named?
Some elements are named after the gymnast who first
performed the element, while others are merely
descriptive
terms of the element performed. Examples of the former
include the Tsukahara vault, the Comaneci salto and the
Korbut
flic; examples of the latter include the aerial
cartwheel,
the double back somersault and the handstand.
[D.2] Basics
Here are some of
the most common terms used in naming
tricks:
Tuck: the gymnast brings his knees to his
chest; the legs
are bent.
Pike: the gymnast bends at the hips and brings
his legs to
his chest while keeping the legs
straight.
Layout: the
gymnast keeps his body completely stretched.
Arch: the legs are kept straight and the back
(spine) is
overextended so that the body position
takes on a convex
shape.
Split: one leg is extended straight in front of
the body;
the other is
extended straight behind the body, forming a
180-degree angle.
Straddle: similar to a split, with the legs
extended on
either side of the body (as opposed to
front/back).
Flip: a
somersault without the use of the hands.
Twist: turning movements defined by the number
of times the
gymnast completes a rotation around
the logitudinal axis.
When speaking of tumbling skills,
"flip" refers to rotation
around the
hip-to-hip axis of the body, and a "twist" refers
to rotation around the head-to-toe axis. Rotation around
the
front-to-back axis is unusual and referred to as a "side
somi."
Beginning and ending positions are used to determine
the number of twists.
Round-off: a cartwheel with both feet landing at
the same
time. Used by gymnasts to accelerate a
tumbling pass; most
elite gymnasts have the half
twist completed by the time his
hands hit the
ground.
Handspring: also
called a flic flac or a flip flop. A
gymnast
jumps from feet to hands to feet again.
Typically
follows a round-off in a back
tumbling pass on floor. The
"snapdown" from hands to feet can generate a lot of
power.
[D.3]
Vault
Women's vault is 4 feet high, 5 feet long and 14
inches
wide.
Men's vault is also 14 inches wide, but is 5 feet 3
inches long and 4 feet 6 inches high. Women vault
widthwise,
while the men vault lengthwise.
Both men and
women run down a carpeted
runway which is 80 feet long and
jump onto a
springboard in order to propel themselves onto
and
over the horse. The gymnast leaves
the board from both
feet and briefly touches the
horse with both hands (this is
called the
preflight). He then pushes off the
horse and
performs flips and/or twists in the air
before landing. As
this event lasts only seconds, the goal is to execute
the
vault in one fluid motion and land "like
a dart" with no
extra movements.
Skills
to look for:
- Cuervo:
handspring onto the horse, 1/2 twist off to
immediate
back somersault.
- Piked front 1/2: handspring onto the horse, piked
front
somersault off with 1/2 twist to land.
-
Tsukahara: 1/4 twist onto the
horse, 1/4 twist off to
immediate back
somersault.
- Yurchenko: round-off onto the springboard and flip flop
back onto the horse ("Yurchenko" refers to the
entry.)
[D.4]
Uneven Bars and High Bar
Uneven Bars: The upper bar is 7.6 feet (2.3 m) high,
the
lower bar is 5 feet (1.5 m) high, and the bars
are 8 feet
long. A gymnast moves from one bar to the
other using a
variety of skills (such as kips,
swings and saltos) in a
fluid motion and with good
form. Each exercise needs to
have at least 10 value parts and at least 3 bar
changes.
The dismounts contain saltos and/or twists and, like all
dismounts, should be landed cleanly. Grip changes add
difficulty
to elements. A gymnast is
determined to be
"facing" in a specific
direction by the gymnast's direction
in the hang
position.
High Bar: the
bar is 8.5 feet (2.5 m) high and 8 feet (2.44
m) long. Like women's uneven bars, high bar consists
of
continuous swinging moves, changes in direction
and grips,
and an exciting (and solid)
dismount.
Skills to look for:
- Cast to handstand: a gymnast in a front support swings
his legs back and out from the bar, lifting his body to
straighten at the shoulders, finishing in a handstand.
Usually
preceded by a kip, a move gymnasts use to go from a
hang
to a front support (hips by hands on the bar, gymnast
facing
up).
- Free hip: from a
handstand on the bar, the gymnast swings
down and
backwards with straight arms and a slightly piked
body
(hips are close to the bar), the momentum causing the
gymnast
to circle the bar. The gymnast
"opens" back up to a
handstand
position.
- Gaylord:
release from a front swing to 1.5 forward
somersaults
over the bar. A Gaylord II is
released from a
back swing, begins with an
immediate half twist (so that the
gymnast is
facing "forward"), and then proceeds with the 1.5
forward somersault.
- Giant: a 360-degree swing around the bar
performed with
straight arms and body
position.
- Gienger:
release to back somersault and 1/2 twist in pike
position
to recatch.
- Jaeger:
release from a front swing to a front somersault
to
recatch on the same side of the bar.
Usually done
straddled.
-
Kovacs: release to 1.5 back somersault over the bar to
recatch. Usually a very dynamic move
characterized by the
opening of the gymnast out of
the tucked position.
- Pak salto:
from HB to LB, backward swing between the bars
with
a straight body to recatch LB.
- Stalder: 360-degree swing around the bar in a
straddle
pike position.
- Tkachev: also called a reverse hecht. Release to front
somersault
traveling backward over the bar in a
straddle/pike
position (sometimes pike or layout), then
recatching
the bar.
[D.5]
Balance Beam
The beam is 4 feet high (1.2m), 16 feet 3
inches (4.9m) long
and 4 inches (10cm) wide. Routines consist of a combination
of dance moves, flips, leaps, balances and turns. The
gymnast
strives to give the impression that she is
performing
on a much wider surface. A routine
must last at
least 70 seconds, but not longer than
90 seconds.
Skills to look for:
- Omelianchik: back dive with 3/4 twist
to handstand. More
commonly seen with a 1/4 twist.
- Flip flop, layout
step-out: flip
flops and layouts differ
on beam from
"normal" flight skills because of the nature of
the event. Flip
flops tend to have almost no flight in the
second
half of the skill, and layouts are not "true" layouts
because they do not reach the gymnast's shoulder
height.
- Korbut flic:
back dive to hands and swing down to finish
sitting
on B in a straddle position.
- Punch front: front somersault from a 2-foot
takeoff.
- Rulfova: Korbut
flic with a full twist.
[D.6] Dance
Many gymnasts
study ballet and other types of dance to
improve
their body position and movement.
Gymnasts who have
studied dance usually
display better form and fluidity
during their
routines than gymnasts with a weaker dance
background. Dance is a key aspect of balance beam
and
women's floor exercise.
Skills to
look for:
- Popa: a
full-twisting straddle jump.
- Switch leap: gymnast initiates the leap with a leg
raised
in front but "switches" the
position in the air, with that
leg moving to the
back of the split.
- Sheep jump, etc: all these leaps involve the gymnast
throwing her head back and thus not being able to spot
the
landing on beam. For a sheep jump, both legs and
thrown
back bent (and ultimately touch the
head). Ring leap: one
leg forward and straight, one leg back and bent. Yang Bo:
like
ring leap, but with both legs straight.
[D.7] Tumbling
The floor mat
is 40 feet (12m) square. Since both
gymnastic
and acrobatic skills are required on
some events, tumbling
is a major part of the
sport. By springing from one's
hands
or feet, the best gymnasts launch themselves
into the air
and perform multiple saltos and/or
twists before landing.
Currently, front tumbling is popular because the
Code has
given it a high value. Front tumbling is more difficult
than back tumbling, and was less common until the Code
started encouraging gymnasts to do it. The most popular
tumbling
passes tend to be "bounce back" passes which end
with the gymnast performing an immediate punch front to
reverse momentum and sometimes even tumbling back in
the
other direction.
Skills to look
for:
- Full-in: double somersault with a full twist in
the first
somersault. A full-out has
the twist on the second
somersault (coming
"out" of the skill) and a half-in
half-out
is, as it sounds, with the twist split between both
somersaults.
-
Rudi: 1.5 twisting flip in layout
position from a front
take-off.
- Triple
twist.
- Round-off, flip flop...
-
Double back/double layout
[D.8] Pommel Horse
The pommel horse
is 14 inches wide, 4 feet high (1.09 m) and
5 feet 4
inches (1.62 m) long. There a pair of rigid
handles
in the center of the horse which are about 17 inches
(43 cm) apart. These
handles are called the pommels.
The
horse is covered either with leather or
a synthetic fabric.
Since only the hands are allowed to touch the
horse,
exceptional strength, balance and endurance
are required for
this event. Elements are performed on both the horse
itself
and the pommels, using the entire length of
the horse. The
legs should be straight and the toes pointed. The top
gymnasts
usually precede their dismounts by performing
handstands
with twisting movements.
Skills to look for:
- Flairs: with alternating hand support, the legs
are
straight and straddled and circle the
body.
- Scissors: sideways
swinging of the body with straight
legs and arms,
alternating hand support and legs knifing up
and
down on the side of the horse.
[D.9] Rings
Two rings are
used; each one is suspended from a bar which
is 18
feet (5.48m) high. The rings are 8
inches in diameter
and are attached by 2 feet 3
inch (68.6cm) straps to wire
cables almost 18
inches (45.7cm) apart. The rings
are 8.5
feet (2.51m) off the mat. This event is also referred to as
the "still rings" because the gymnast's goal is to
keep the
rings from swinging as much as possible. Both circling and
strength
moves are performed. When
performing a strength
move, the gymnast is
required to hold the position for at
least two
seconds to demonstrate mastery of the skill.
Skills to look for:
-
Iron cross: arms straight and held
out at either side of
the body, which is also
straight.
- Maltese:
Resembles a horizontal cross, with the arms at
the
side of and closer to the body.
- L-cross: Iron cross, but with 90-degree bend at
hips and
straight legs.
- Planche: handstand with body parallel to the
floor. This
is
common on many events, actually, including parallel bars,
floor exercise (men), and balance beam.
[D.10]
Parallel Bars
The bars are 11.5 feet (3.4 m) long and 5 feet 7 inches
(1.7
m) high.
The width of the bars is adjustable from 16 to 20
inches. A routine combines swinging moves,
strength
elements and flight elements, performed
both above and below
the bars. Some gymnasts perform moves on the
outside of the
bars, as well. Like other routines, flow and rhythm
are
necessary for a good score.
Skills to
look for:
- Back toss:
from handstand, backward swing with brief hand
release
(while arms circle back) to recatch in handstand.
- Diamidov: from handstand, backward swing finishing
with
360-degree turn on 1 arm to return to handstand.
-
Healy: from handstand, forward
swing beginning with 360-
degree turn on 1 arm to
return to handstand.
- Stutz:
from handstand, forward swing and let go of the
bar,
perform a half-turn in the air and finish in a
handstand.
Peach
basket: a piked swing underneath
the bars to gain
momentum from which the gymnast
opens and releases to "pop"
above the
bars.
[E.1]
How did gymnastics begin?
The earliest evidence of
gymnastics can be found on frescoes
from the
Minoan civilization (2700-1400 BC), which depict
acrobats
leaping over the horns of a bull.
"Gymnastics" is derived
from the Greek word "gumnos" (naked)
and,
while gymnastics was never included in the ancient
Olympic Games, it was
regarded as training for other sports,
such as wrestling
and athletics. When the Games
were
abolished in 393 AD, there was a decline in
the
participation of many sports, including
gymnastics. For
several centuries, therefore, the sport was practiced
mainly
by acrobats performing their skills in
traveling circuses
and for royalty.
In
the 18th century, philosophers began to stress the
importance
of physical exercise, but it was not until
Frederic Louis Jahn recognized
the national importance of
gymnastics and turned
it into a means of the German
patriotic feeling
that gymnastics became popular throughout
Europe. Jahn, called the "father of
gymnastics," invented
various apparatus and
exercises, wrote a book called "Die
Deutsche Turnkunst" and
developed Turner (gymnastic)
societies in
Germany. By the late 1800's many
other
countries had formed their own gymnastics
societies, each of
which was organized on a
national level. Nicolas J.
Cuperus,
president of the Belgian Gymnastics Federation,
invited
delegates from several European gymnastics unions to
a
meeting held in conjunction with the Belgian gymnastics
festival
in 1881, and thus was born the European Gymnastics
Federation, or FEG
(renamed the Federation Internationale de
Gymnastique ("FIG") in
1921). Beginning in 1896 the FEG
met
every year or two, each time admitting more
countries as
members of the Federation.
The
early competitions featured both gymnastics exercises
(on
pommel horse, rings, parallel and high bars, for
example)
and athletic exercises (running, high jump, weight
lifting
and pole vaulting), and were held in outdoor arenas.
The athletic events
were abolished at the 1936 Olympic
Games, and were used for the last time
at the 1950 World
Championships.
Women began performing in
gymnastics societies in the late
1800's. The first
international festival which included
female
participation was held in Luxembourg in 1909, and
exercises
included rhythmic, balletic and choreographic
routines. The Amsterdam Olympics of 1928 featured
the first
women's gymnastics competition; women
competed at the World
Championships for the first time at the 1934
Budapest
Worlds.
[E.2] Who was the first to...?
Being
the first to execute a gymnastics skill in
international
competition is an accomplishment highly
regarded
in the sport. Moves are often named
after the
gymnast who first performs them. Here is our list of "who
was the first to...?",
to the best of our knowledge:
Women
=====
Vault:
- Tsukahara
Ludmila Turischeva
(URS), '74 Worlds
- Full twist
on, full twist off
Olga Korbut (URS), '74 Worlds
-
Full-twisting tucked Tsukahara
Nelli Kim (URS), '76
Olympics
- Tucked front
Marta Egervari (HUN),
Maria Filatova (URS),
'76 Olympics
- Layout Tsukahara
Maria Filatova &
Natalia Shaposhnikova (URS),
'77 World Cup
- Full-twisting layout Tsukahara
Natalia Shaposhnikova
(URS), '78 Worlds
- Tucked
front with 1/2 twist
Christa Canary (USA),
'78 Worlds
- Cuervo
Christa Canary (USA),
'79 Worlds
- Tucked double
front
Choe
Jong Sil (PRK), '80 Olympics
-
Full twist on, front tuck off
Elena Davydova (URS),
'80 Olympics
- Layout
Yurchenko
Natalia Yurchenko (URS), '82 World Cup
- Full-twisting layout Yurchenko
Natalia Yurchenko
(URS), '82 World Cup
-
1.5-twisting layout Yurchenko
Elena Shushunova
(URS), '84 Olomouc
-
Double-twisting layout Yurchenko
Elena Gurova (URS),
'84 DTB Cup
- Yurchenko on, 1/2
twist to immediate layout front off
Snejana Hristakieva
(BUL), '92 Olympics
- Layout
front
Irina
Evdokimova (KAZ), '93 Worlds
-
1/4 on, 1/4 off to layout front salto
Jaycie Phelps (USA),
'94 Dortmund Worlds
Uneven Bars:
MOUNTS:
- Front salto over LB to sit on LB
Marta Egervari &
Krisztina Medveczky (HUN), '74 Worlds
- Jump to clear hip on HB to handstand
with 1/2 turn
Julianne McNamara (USA), '81 Worlds
- Round-off,
Arabian over LB to brief sit on LB
Michelle Goodwin
(USA), '81 Worlds
- Round-off,
tucked back somersault over LB to recatch LB
Birgit Senff (GDR),
'84 Olomouc
DISMOUNTS:
-
Toe on, 1/2 twist to tucked back
Nadia Comaneci (ROM),
'75 Europeans
- Tucked double
back
Nadia
Chatarova (BUL), '76 Olympics
-
Hecht to immediate full-twisting tucked
back
Natalia
Tereschenko (URS), '78 American Cup
-
Hecht, 1/2 twist to immediate tucked front
Ma Yanhong (CHN), '79
Worlds
- Double twisting
flyaway
Kathy Johnson (USA), '81 Worlds
- Tucked full-in
Maiko Morio (JPN), '83
Worlds
- Double Layout
Diana Dudeva (BUL),
'87 Worlds
- Tucked double
front
Lacramioara Filip (ROM), Sarah Mercer (GBR),
'89 Worlds
- Tucked full-out
Oksana Chusovitina
(URS), '91 Worlds
- Tucked
full-in full-out
Oksana Fabrichnova (RUS), '93 Worlds
ELEMENTS:
- FF from HB to recatch HB (Korbut)
Olga Korbut (URS), '72
Olympics
- Deltchev
Natalia Shaposhnikova
(URS), '77 World Cup
- Giant
swing
Natalia Shaposhnikova (URS), '77 World Cup
- Full-twisting Korbut
Elena Mukhina (URS),
'77 World Cup
- Back stalder to
handstand with full turn in handstand
Marcia Frederick
(USA), '78 Worlds
-
Tkachev
Elena Davydova (URS), '80 Olympics
- Tkachev to immediate Deltchev
Natalia Yurchenko
(URS), '83 Worlds
- Underswing
from HB with 1.5 twists and flight over LB to
hand on
LB (Strong)
Lori Strong (CAN), '89 Worlds
-
Swing forward on HB (facing out), counter salto forward
to
recatch in reverse grip (Kim)
Kim Gwang Suk (PRK),
'89 Worlds
- Def (full-twisting
Gienger)
Snejana Hristakieva (BUL), '91 Junior Europeans
- Gaylord I Salto
Mo Huilan (CHN), '94
Brisbane Worlds
Balance Beam:
MOUNTS:
- Press to handstand
Larissa Latynina &
Tamara Manina (URS), '62 Worlds
-
Front tuck
Stella Zacharova (URS), '79 World Cup
- RO, FF
Maxi Gnauck (GDR), '81
Europeans
- RO, full-twisting tucked back
Kelly Garrison (USA),
'85 Worlds
- RO, layout
Natalia Yurchenko
(URS), '85 Worlds
- RO,
full-twisting FF
Patricia Luconi (ITA), '87 Worlds
- Jump to 1-armed handstand
Janine Rankin (CAN),
'87 Worlds
- Front handspring
immediate tucked front
Anastasia Dzyundzyak
(UZB), '94 Asian Games
DISMOUNTS:
- Cartwheel, tucked back salto
Vera Caslvaska (TCH),
'62 Worlds
- Tucked front
Keiko Ikeda (JPN), '62
Worlds
- Cartwheel,
full-twisting layout
Vera Caslavska (TCH),
'68 Olympics
- Cartwheel,
double-twisting layout
Nadia Comaneci (ROM),
'75 Europeans
- Tucked double
back
Elena
Mukhina & Natalia Shaposhnikova (URS),
'77 World Cup
- Piked double back
Maria Filatova (URS),
'77 World Cup
- Full-twisting
tucked double back
Albina Shishova & Tatiana Frolova (URS), '83 Worlds
- Triple twist
Iva Cervenkova (TCH),
'83 Worlds
ELEMENTS:
-
Cartwheel
Eva Bosakova (TCH), '56 Olympics
- Flick flack
Erika Zuchold (GDR),
'66 Worlds
- Front
handspring
Karin Janz & Erika Zuchold (GER), Vera Caslavska (TCH),
'68 Olympics
- Tucked back salto
Olga Korbut (URS) and
Nancy Thies (USA), '72 Olympics
-
FF to swing down and straddle beam (Korbut)
Olga Korbut (URS), '72 Olympics
- Layout salto
Aurelia Dobre (ROM),
'74 Worlds
- Two consecutive
layout stepout saltos
Eugenia Golea (ROM),
'84 American Cup
- Tucked front
salto
Carola
Dombeck (GDR), '76 Olympics
-
Tucked side salto
Elena Davydova (URS),
'76 American Cup
- Side FF to
back hip circle under beam (Yurchenko loop)
Natalia Yurchenko
(URS), '79 Spartakiade
-
Full-twisting Korbut (Rulfova)
Jana Rulfova (TCH),
'81 Worlds
- Tucked back salto
with full twist (from RO)
Albina Shishova (URS),
'83 Worlds
- Tucked back salto
with full twist (from a stand)
Aleftina Priakhina
(URS), '86 Junior Europeans
-
Layout salto with full twist (from RO)
Olessia Dudnik (URS),
'89 American Cup
- Triple
pirouette (Okino)
Betty Okino (USA), '91 Worlds
Floor Exercise:
- Full-twisting back layout
Muriel Grossfeld
(USA), '60 Olympics
-
Double-twisting back layout
Zdenka Bujnackova
(TCH), Joan Moore (USA), & Ludmila
Turischeva (URS), '72
Olympics
- Full twisting front
layout
Margit Toth (HUN), '76 Olympics
- Tucked double back
Nadia Comaneci (ROM),
'76 American Cup
- Tucked full-in
Elena Mukhina (URS),
'78 Worlds
- Triple twisting
back layout
Maxi Gnauck (GDR), '79 Worlds
- Full-twisting back layout, punch
front
Heidi
Anderson (USA), '79 Moscow News
-
Double layout
Diana Dudeva (BUL),
'83 Worlds
- Double-twisting
back layout, punch front
Oksana Omelianchik
(URS), '85 Europeans
- 1 3/4
piked side salto
Elena Shushunova (URS), '85 Europeans
- Full-in,
full-out
Aleftina Priakhina (URS), '86 Junior Europeans
- Double front salto
Olga Strazheva (URS),
'86 Junior Europeans
- Double
back layout with full twist in 1st salto
Tatiana Tuzhikova (URS),
'87 Worlds
- Double full-in, back out
Tatiana Groshkova
(URS), '89 Chunichi Cup
-
Double back layout with full twist in 2nd salto
Oksana Chusovitina
(URS), '91 Worlds
- Double
front salto with 1/2 twist in 2nd salto
Lilia Podkopayeva
(UKR), '95 Worlds
MEN
===
Floor Exercise:
- Full twisting back layout
Nobuyuki Aihara,
Takashi Mitsukuri & Takashi Ono (JPN),
'60 Olympics
- Tucked double back
Lasse Laine (FIN), '67
Europeans
- Double twisting
back layout
Takashi Ono (JPN), '68 Olympics
- Triple twisting back layout
Eizo Kenmostu (JPN),
'70 Worlds
- Piked double
back
Nikolai
Andrianov (URS), '73 Europeans
-
Piked full-in
Vladimir Marchenko
(URS), '74 Riga Intl.
- Double
layout
Nikolai Andrianov (URS), '77 World Cup
- Double front salto
Jiri Tabak (TCH), '77
Europeans
- 1.5 twisting 1.5 side salto
Kurt Thomas (USA), '78
Worlds
- Triple back
Valery Lyukin (URS),
'87 Europeans
- Double twisting
front layout
Neil Thomas (GBR), '90 Europeans
Pommel Horse:
- Flairs
Kurt Thomas (USA), '76
Olympics
- Magyar Travel
Zoltan Magyar (HUN),
'76 Olympics
- Handstand in the
middle of a routine
Bart Conner (USA), Peter Vidmar (USA), Alexander
Ditiatin (URS), and
Yuri Korolev (URS), '82 World Cup
-
Flairs to handstand and back down to Flairs
Sven Tippelt (GDR),
'88 Olympics
- Tucked back
salto dismount
Lance Ringnald (USA), '88 Olympics
Rings:
- Tucked full-in dismount
Nikolai Andrianov (URS),
'73 Europeans
- Double back
layout dismount
Nikolai Andrianov (URS), '77 World Cup
- Triple back tucked dismount
Yuri Korolev (URS),
'81 Europeans
- Double back
salto to a hang (Guczoghy)
Gyorgy Guczoghy (HUN),
82 World Cup
- Double front
salto to a hang (Yamawaki)
Kyoji Yamawaki (JPN),
'84 Olympics
- Double front
salto with 1/2 twist dismount
Yuri Balabanov (URS),
'84 Olomouc
- Layout
Guczoghy
Paul O'Neill (USA), '92 Worlds
Vault:
- Handspring, 1/2 twist to tucked back
salto (Cuervo)
Jorge Cuervo (CUB), '73 University Games
- Cartwheel, layout side salto
Roberto Richards
(CUB), '80 Olympics
-
Handspring, double front salto
Ricardo Richards
(CUB), '80 Olympics
- Layout
Tsukahara with double twist
Artur Akopian (URS), '81
Worlds
- One-arm handspring to
front tucked salto
Laszlo Boda (HUN), '82 Junior Europeans
- Layout Cuervo with full twist
Lou Yun (CHN), '84
Olympics
- Handspring, front
salto with 1.5 twists
Sylvio Kroll (GDR), 85
Europeans
- Layout
Yurchenko
Li
Jing (CHN), '89 American Cup
Parallel Bars:
- Tucked double back
Mauno Nissinen (FIN),
'67 Europeans
- Piked double
back
Bodgan
Makuts (URS), '79 Worlds
- Backwards giant swing to double back salto between
the
bars
Koji
Sotomura (JPN), '81 Worlds
- Backwards giant swing with full twist
Yuri Balabanov (URS),
'84 Olomouc
High Bar:
ELEMENTS
- Back salto straddled and piked with 1/2
twist to recatch
Stoyan Deltchev (BUL), '77 Europeans
- Reverse Hecht over HB to recatch
(Tkachev)
Alexander Tkachev (URS), '77 Europeans
- Piked back salto with 1/2 twist to
recatch
Eberhard Gienger (FRG), '78 Worlds
- One-arm giant swing to Tkachev
Miguel Arroyo (CUB),
'79 Worlds
- Tucked double back
salto over bar to recatch
Kovacs (HUN), '79
Europeans
- Full-twisting
Gienger
Jacques Def (FRA), '81 Worlds
-
Tucked front salto over bar to recatch
Mitch Gaylord (USA),
'81 Worlds
- 2 consecutive
Tkachevs
Yuri Korolev (URS), '82 World Cup
- One-arm giant swing to Deltchev
(one-hand recatch)
Zsolt Borkai (HUN), '84 Olomouc
DISMOUNTS
- Double twisting back layout
Gerhard Dietrich
(GDR), '66 Worlds
- Piked
double back
Andrzej Szajna (POL) & Mitsuo Tsukahara (JPN),
'70 Worlds
- Tucked double back with full twist
Mitsuo Tsukahara
(JPN), '72 Olympics
- Tucked
triple back
Nikolai Andrianov (URS), '74 Worlds
- Double back layout
Nikolai Andrianov
(URS), '77 World Cup
- Double
back layout with full twist
Yuri Korolev (URS),
'81 Europeans
- Double twisting
double layout salto
Mas Watanabe (JPN), '83 Worlds
- Tucked triple back with full twist in
1st salto
Maik Belle (GDR), '87 Europeans
- Triple twisting double back layout
Alexander Fedorchenko
(KAZ), '95 Worlds
[E.3] Who are the current
champions?
Olympic:
Team: Men (EUN), Women (EUN)
AA: Vitaly Scherbo (EUN), Tatiana
Gutsu (EUN)
Women's events:
V: Lavinia Milosovici (ROM) and
Henrietta Onodi (HUN)
UB: Lu Li
(CHN)
B: Tatiana Lysennko
(EUN)
FX: Lavinia Milosovici
(ROM)
Men's events:
FX:
Li Xiaoshuang (CHN)
PH:
Vitaly Scherbo (EUN), and Pae Gil Su (PRK)
SR: Vitaly Scherbo (EUN)
V: Vitaly Scherbo (EUN)
PB: Vitaly Scherbo (EUN)
HB: Trent Dimas (USA)
World:
Team:
Men (CHN), Women (ROM)
AA: Li Xiaoshuang (CHN), Lilia Podkopayeva
(UKR)
Women's events:
V: Lilia Podkopayeva (UKR) and Simona Amanar
(ROM)
UB: Svetlana Khorkina (RUS)
B: Mo Huilan (CHN)
FX: Gina
Gogean (ROM)
Men's events:
FX: Vitaly Scherbo (BLR)
PH: Li
Donghua (SUI)
SR: Yuri Chechi (ITA)
V: Grigory Misutin (UKR) and Alexei
Nemov (RUS)
PB: Vitaly Scherbo (BLR)
HB: Andreas Wecker (GER)
European:
Team: Men (BLR), Women (ROM)
AA: Ivan Ivankov (BLR), Gina Gogean
(ROM)
Women's events:
V: Lavinia Milosovici (ROM)
UB: Svetlana Khorkina (RUS)
B: Gina Gogean (ROM)
FX: Lilia Podkopayeva (UKR)
Men's
events:
FX: Ivan Ivanov
(BUL)
PH: Marius Urzica
(ROM)
SR: Yuri Chechi
(ITA)
V: Vitaly Scherbo
(BLR)
PB: Alexei Nemov (RUS)
and Rustam Sharipov (UKR)
HB:
Aljaz Pegan (SLO)
USA:
AA: John Roethlisberger and Dominique
Moceanu
Women's events:
V:
Shannon Miller
UB: Dominique Dawes
B: Doni Thompson and Monica Flammer
FX:
Dominique Dawes
Men's events:
FX:Daniel
Stover
PH: Mark Sohn
SR: Paul O'Neill
V: David St.
Pierre
PB: John Roethlisberger
HB: John Roethlisberger
[E.4] Who are the
former champions?
These are just the most recent results. For more complete
results,
read the results files found at
ftp://ftp.cac.psu.edu/pub/Gymn/Gymnastics-Results
Olympic:
The
USSR women won the team title in every Olympic Games
in
which they took part. The exception is the '84 Olympics,
which the USSR boycotted. Romania captured the gold on this
occasion. Three
men's teams have won Olympic gold. Japan
has
won 5 times ('60, '64, '68, '72, and '76), and USSR 4
times
('52, '56, '80 and '88) and the USA once ('84).
AA (women,men)
--------------
1952: M. Gorokhovskaya (URS), V. Chukarin
(URS)
1956: L. Latynina (URS),
V. Chukarin (URS)
1960: L. Latynina
(URS), B. Shakhlin (URS)
1964:
V. Caslavska (TCH), Y. Endo (JPN)
1968: V. Caslavska (TCH), S. Kato (JPN)
1972: L. Turischev (URS), S. Kato (JPN)
1976: N. Comaneci (ROM), N. Andrianov
(URS)
1980: E. Davydova (URS),
A. Ditiatin (URS)
1984: M. Retton
(USA), K. Gushiken (JPN)
1988:
E. Shushunova (URS), V. Artemov (URS)
World (men team, women
team, men AA, women AA)
----------------------------------------------
1954:
URS; URS; V. Muratov (URS); G. Rudiko (URS)
1958: URS; URS; B. Shakhlin
(URS); L. Latynina (URS)
1962: JPN; URS; Y. Titov (URS), L. Latynina
(URS)
1966: JPN; TCH; M. Voronin (URS); V. Caslavska (TCH)
1970: JPN;
URS; E. Kenmostu (JPN); L. Turischeva (URS)
1974: JPN; URS; S. Kasamatsu
(JPN); L. Turischeva (URS)
1978: JPN; URS; N. Andrianov (URS); E. Mukhina
(URS)
1979: URS; ROM; A. Ditiatin (URS); N. Kim (URS)
1981: URS; URS;
Y. Korolev (URS); O. Bicherova (URS)
1983: CHN; URS; D. Bilozerchev (URS);
N. Yurchenko (URS)
1985: URS; URS; Y. Korolev (URS); E. Shushunova & O.
Omelianchik (URS)
1987: URS; ROM; D. Bilozerchev (URS); A. Dobre (ROM)
1989:
URS; URS; I. Korobchinsky (URS); S. Boginskaya (URS)
1991: URS; URS; G.
Misutin (URS); K. Zmeskal (USA)
1993: [no team]; V. Scherbo (BLR); S.
Miller (USA)
1994: CHN; ROM; I. Ivankov (BLR); S. Miller (USA)
Europeans
1955:
[no women]; B. Shakhlin (URS)
1957: L. Latynina (URS); J. Blume (ESP)
1959:
N. Kot (POL); Y. Titov (URS)
1961: L. Latynina (URS); M. Cerar (YUG)
1963:
M. Bilic (YUG); M. Cerar (YUG)
1965: V. Caslavska (TCH); F. Menichelli
(ITA)
1967: V. Caslavska (TCH); M. Voronin (URS)
1969: K. Janz (GDR);
M. Voronin (URS)
1971: L. Turischeva & T. Lazakovich (URS); V. Klimenko
(URS)
1973: L. Turischeva (URS); V. Klimenko (URS)
1975: N. Comaneci
(ROM); N. Andrianov (URS)
1977: N. Comaneci (ROM); V. Markelov (URS)
1979:
N. Comaneci (ROM); S. Deltchev (BUL)
1981: M. Gnauck (GDR); A. Tkachev
(URS)
1983: O. Bicherova (URS); D. Bilozerchev (URS)
1985: E.
Shushunova (URS); D. Bilozerchev (URS)
1987: D. Silivas (ROM); V. Lyukin
(URS)
1989: S. Boginskaya (URS); I. Korobchinsky (URS)
1990: S.
Boginskaya (URS); V. Mogilny (URS)
1992: T. Gutsu (UKR); I. Korobchinsky
(UKR)
[F.1]
What is the IOC? FIG? USOC? USAG? USGF? NCAA? AAU?
USAIGC?
CGA?....
All of these cryptic abbreviations
represent organizations
or "governing
bodies" in the sport of gymnastics.
IOC - International Olympic
Committee. President is Juan
Antonio
Samaranch. Headquarters are in
Switzerland.
Organizes the Olympics.
FIG - Federation
International de Gymnastique (International
Federation of
Gymnastics). President is
Yuri Titov.
Headquarters are in Moutier, Switzerland. International
governing
body for the sport of gymnastics.
USAG/USGF - "USA
Gymnastics" (operating name) or "US
Gymnastics
Federation (legal entity).
President is Kathy
Scanlan; Chair of the Board of Sandy Knapp. Headquarters
are
in Indianapolis, IN. National
governing body (NGB) for
gymnastics in the
USA. USAG is a member of both the
USOC
and the FIG.
NCAA
- National Collegiate Athletics Association. President
is
Cedric Dempsey. Headquarters are in
Kansas City, MO.
Governing organization for collegiate sport in the
USA.
AAU - Amateur Athletic Union. Headquarters are in
Indianapolis,
IN. Former national governing body
for the
sport of gymnastics in the USA. Presents the Sullivan Award
each year to the beat amateur athlete in the nation.
USAIGC - US Association of Independent Gymnastics Clubs.
CGA - Collegiate Gymnastics Association.
[F.2] How do I get
tickets to...?
Usually you can just call Ticketmaster for that city
and
they will have information. If in doubt, you can e-mail USA
Gymnastics
at usgf@delphi.com to request more information,
or
call them at (317-237-5050).
[F.3] Why don't gymnasts really compete
as a team, all at
once on the mat?
There
is another sport called "acrogymnastics" or "sports
acrobatics" in which gymnasts do compete with each
other on
the mat. Divisions are women's pair, women's
trio, men's
pair, men's
four, and mixed pairs (one man and one woman).
Acrogymnastics in the US is
governed by the US Sports
Acrobatics Federation. There are world championships held
for sports acrobatics but it is not yet an Olympic
sport.
It's quite popular, however, and is hoping to be a
demonstration sport soon. Sports acro also includes men's
and women's tumbling.
[F.4] What is rhythmic gymnastics?
Rhythmic
gymnastics is a sport that demands a high skill
level
in manipulating and controlling various apparatus
while
performing a routine on the floor mat.
Gymnasts (only
women participate in RSG)
are not allowed to flip or perform
acrobatic
elements but rather concentrate on expressing
their
choreography, demonstrating mastery of the apparatus
and
performing leaps, spins, rolls, and other elements.
There are five
apparatus (hoop, clubs, ribbon, rope, and
ball)
but only four are competed each year.
Gymnasts either
perform alone or in groups
or five. The group event will
be
added to the Olympics for the first time in
1996. Sometimes
artistic gymnasts will turn to rhythmic gymnastics in
favor
of the lower rate of injury in the rhythmic
version of the
sport.
[F.5] How do I get
involved?
To enroll in gymnastics classes, check your yellow pages
for
gymnastics schools. Good questions to ask the gym are
if
their instructors are USGF safety-certified,
what type of
insurance coverage they have, and
what programs they offer
(competitive,
recreational, etc.). Speak to
parents at the
gym for references.
[F.6] What do
gymnasts wear?
Yes, gymnasts do wear underwear, if you were
wondering.
Generally, in practice, girls wear tank leos
and biker
shorts. Men will wear short and a t-shirt (or
whatever is
handy). In competition, the women wear
long-sleeved
leotards, and men wear a jersey that
resembles a tank-top
leotard ("comp
top"), with either shorts or competition
pants,
depending on the event they are competing.
Some
gymnasts will wear special shoes; if
swinging bars or
competing on rings, they will
wear "grips" on their hands to
secure
their grip of the bar or ring. On
parallel bars, men
will wear tubes of fabric on
their upper arms to prevent
from ripping off the
skin (which happens when they catch a
double or
other flighty skill).
[F.7] What is the chalk for?
The
chalk that gymnasts rub on their hands and sometimes
feet
is magnesium carbonate. It absorbs
any sweat on the
hands and/or feet and enables the
gymnast to improve their
grasp of the bar and thus
their swing around it.
[G.1] Are there any gymnastics
resources on the Net?
Quite a few! Check out Gymn's web page,
http://rainbow.rmii.com/~rachele/gymnhome.html
for more information.
[G.2] Are there any good magazines to
subscribe to?
Magazines about the elite/international arena of
gymnastics
are:
Gym Stars
44
Fitzjohn's Avenue
London NW3 5LX
England
International
Gymnast
P.O Box 2450
Oceanside, CA 92051
USA
USA
Gymnastics
Pan American Plaza
Suite 300
Indianapolis, IN 46255
Other
magazine addresses can be found at
ftp://ftp.cac.psu.edu/pub/Gymn/Resources/Print/Descriptions
Copyright
(c) 1995 by Rachele Harless, Debbie Poe, all
rights
reserved. This FAQ may be posted to
any USENET
newsgroup, on-line service or BBS as
long as it is posted in
its entirety and includes
this copyright statement. This
FAQ
may not be distributed for financial gain.
This FAQ may
not be included in commercial
collections of compilations
without express
permission from the authors.
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 26 Nov 1995 - Special issue
**************************************************