GYMN-L Digest - 8 Apr 1995 to 9 Apr 1995

 

There are 17 messages totalling 564 lines in this issue.

 

Topics of the day:

 

  1. Central region results

  2. TV coverage in South Africa (2)

  3. SA Open Metropolitan Life Cup

  4. Eastern Regionals (Men)

  5. Code Ideas (2)

  6. values of skills, etc on floor

  7. FIG

  8. The Age Limit & Mina Kim

  9. ages (4)

 10. African Championships

 11. Eastern Regionals clarification

 12. Dom in USA Weekend

 

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Date:    Sat, 8 Apr 1995 22:57:10 EDT

From:    ***@PRODIGY.COM

Subject: Central region results

 

Here goes nothing.  I attended the NCAA central region

Championships today and it was great.  Here are the results

for those of you that can't live without them.  Oh---first

some notes.  Kim Kelly crashed on bars during warmups and

did not complete them during the finals.  Bars was the down

fall for more than a few gymnasts, some very "nasty"

spills.Beam was also a down fall for at tleast two teams.  3

10's were handed out, all on vault. One for Kim Kelly's pike

double front handspring--at least that is what it looked

like to me.  As I have stated in the past, techincal names

are not my field.

Here are the results.

Vault

7th    9.925   Merit Booth--UA/Chasity Junkin--UA

4th    9.95    Wendy Lahucik-ISU/Heather Kabnick--UM/Beth

Wymer--UM

1st    10.00   Kim Kelly--UA/Jennifer Wood--LSU/Wendy

Marshall--UM

 

UB

7th    9.8    Stephanie Woods--UA/Adia Canovas--LSU/Kristy

Savoie--LSU/Beth Wymer--UM

5th   9.825   Meredith Willard--UA/Wood--LSU

1st   9.85    Larrisa Lowing--LSU/Syreeta Barnett--LSU/Kim

Bonaventura--UA/Bench

 

BB

7th   9.85   Wendy Marshall

4th   9.875  Murphy--UA/McAdams--UA/Bonaventura--UA

3rd   9.925  Kelly--UA

1st   9.95   Woods--UA/Wymer--UM

 

 

FX

 

6th   9.775   McCloskey--LSU/Kelly--UA

5th   9.8     Junkin--UA

2nd   9.825   Murphy--UA/Kabnick--UM/Marshall--UM

1st   9.85    Wood--LSU

 

AA

3rd  39.25    Wendy Marshall --UM

2nd  39.35    Beth Wymer   UM

1st  39.475   Jennifer Wood  LSU

Teams

7th   188.90   Southeast Missouri

6th   189.45   Northern Illinios

5th   189.6    University Illinios-Chicago

4th   189.875  Illinios State

3rd   195.075  Louisiana State

2nd   195.725  University of Michigan

1st   196.675  University of Alabama

 

that is it!!!  Talk to you later.

Deb

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 12:07:07 +0200

From:    ***@MAIL.LSS.CO.ZA

Subject: TV coverage in South Africa

 

The last gym we saw on TV was in October last year - African Championships.

We were supposed to see the Dortmund Worlds but it was cancelled because of

golf! :( The only gym we have seen on TV this year is the SA Open which

we saw yesterday.

Compared to us, you, in America, seem to see lots of gymnastics.(Nadia

goes home, Peachtree Classic) I can't say this is true but that is the

way it seems. :)

 

Helen.

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 12:56:38 +0200

From:    ***@MAIL.LSS.CO.ZA

Subject: SA Open Metropolitan Life Cup

 

Results-Men

                         FX     PH    Rings  Vault   PB     HB    Total

Cristian Brezeanu  IND* 9.150  8.800  8.550  9.450  8.400  8.300  52.650

Anton Goldman      RSA  8.850  8.400  8.900  8.750  8.800  8.900  52.600

Jeff Lavallee      USA  8.350  8.000  8.950  9.250  8.500  9.350  52.400

Alexey Sinkevitch  BLR  9.000  9.150  8.400  8.500  8.550  8.550  52.150

Johan van Heerden  RSA  8.650  8.400  7.950  8.900  8.300  8.800  51.000

Adrian Steyn       RSA  7.750  7.750  7.950  9.050  8.000  8.800  50.000

Yacine Othmani     ALG  8.100  8.300  8.000  8.850  8.550  8.150  49.950

Athol Myhill       RSA  7.850  8.200  8.350  8.800  8.700  8.450  49.650

 

* Individual-Romanian born now living in South Africa.

 

 Sinkevitch was the favourite but falls and stombles on landings kept him

out of the medals. His floor and pommel routines were clean and neat. He is

more supple than most male gymnasts.

 Cristian Brezeanu showed great difficulty on all apparatus'.Floor-full

twisting double layout; layout, layout, layout-full (front)and double

layout (hands down). On vault he showed a double twisting Tsukahara with

a good landing. Unfortunately he missed his Tcatchev on bar but still

managed to hang on to first place.

 Anton Goldman had a great competition and finished just .05 behind Brezeanu.

 Jeff Lavallee struggled with all his landings but showed a great HB routine

with a high level of difficulty including high consecutive Tcatchevs.

 One of the commentators remarked on pommel horse that one of the

gymnasts *lost his legs* :)

 

 Individual-Women

                         V     UB     BB     FX    Total

Elena Piskun      BLR  9.700  9.700  9.600  9.875  38.875

Elena Savko       BLR  9.375  9.300  8.600  9.325  36.800

Jennie Cox        GBR  9.300  8.925  9.175  9.300  36.700

Ashley Kever      USA  9.125  8.850  8.925  9.350  36.250

Joanne West       RSA  9.400  9.350  8.175  8.825  35.750

Heidi Oosthuizen  RSA  9.125  9.000  8.975  8.475  35.575

Jeanine Saville   RSA  8.850  8.550  8.950  9.025  35.375

Ilse Roets        RSA  8.900  8.550  8.150  8.300  33.900

 

 Elena Piskun thrilled the crowd with difficult skills thrown gracefully

and without flaws, as she returned to South Africa. She was the favourite

from the beginning and won the hearts of the South African public as she

finished two points ahead of her countryman and the rest of the field.

 Piskun nailed a beautiful full twisting Yurchenko on boyh attempts.On

bar she performed hop full,hop full, Deltchev which sailed high above the bar

and finished gracefully with a double layout. On beam she did a triple

fic with a full turn in the last one, a flic twist and a double pike

dismount. Her floor routine entertained the crowd and earned a standing

ovation. The tumbles were as follows: 1-whip to triple twist 2-2&1/2

twist immediate layout front and 3-handspring 1&1/2 twisting layout front.

 The other Belarussian girl, Elena Savko, showed a nice bar routine. The

cast to handstand slip grip, backstraddle handstand, stalder, hecht was a

great combo and the high double tuck finished it all off.

 The 14 year old British girl, Jennie Cox, also impressed with lovely

style, neat routines and long,flowing arms and hands. It's clear in her

dance that she is coached by an Eastern European. (Adrian Stan-Romania)

 Unfortunately all the local girls were plagued by falls and unnessecary

errors. :(

 

Phew! I am glad that's over with!

Helen.

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 07:24:19 -0600

From:    ***@RMII.COM

Subject: Eastern Regionals (Men)

 

1995 NCAA Men's Gymnastics East Regional

Saturday, April 8, 1995

University Park, PA

attendance 1112

 

The following qualified from the East to NCAA Nationals.

 

1. Penn State, 229.50 (38.725, 38.550, 38.750, 36.950, 38.275, 38.250)

2. Iowa, 229.375 (39.025, 37.900, 38.425, 37.200, 38.425, 38.400)

3. Ohio State, 228.975 (38.000, 38.500, 38.725, 37.200, 38.200, 38.350)

4. Temple, 228.125 (38.800, 37.700, 38.000, 37.100, 37.875, 38.650)

5. Univ. of Minnesota, 227.300 (38.350, 36.575, 38.700, 37.625, 38.000, 38.050)

6. Univ. of Illinois-Chicago, 224.050 (38.600, 36.900, 37.500, 36.850, 37.100,

 37.100)

 

ALL-AROUND

Brian Yee, 58.250, Univ. of Minnesota

Danny Akerman, 57.025, Temple

Steve Marshall, 56.700, Army

 

FLOOR EXERCISE

Brian Winkler, 9.925, Michigan

Shannon Welker, 9.875, Illinois-Chic

Darin Gerlach, 9.850, Temple

 

POMMEL HORSE

Jeremiah Landry, 9.875, Illinois

Jeff Kraft, 9.750, Western Michigan

Chase Penny , 9.700, Illinois-Chic

 

RINGS

Kevin Schwartz, 9.850, UMASS

Dave Frank, 9.750, Temple

Chris Harrington 9.700, Minnesota

Royce Toni, 9.700, Michigan

 

VAULT

Colby Van Cleve 9.600, Minnesota

Ofri Porat, 9.600, Syracuse

Sebronzik Wright 9.575, William & Mary

 

PARALLEL BARS

Dave Frank, 9.675, Temple

Royce Toni, 9.675, Michigan

Brian Winkle, 9.500, Michigan

 

HIGH BAR

Carl Imhauser, 9.750, Temple

Dubie Bader, 9.750, Temple

Frank Ticknor, 9.650, Minnesota

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 10:02:29 -0400

From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU

Subject: Re: TV coverage in South Africa

 

On Sun, 9 Apr 1995, Helen Crewe wrote:

 

> The last gym we saw on TV was in October last year - African Championships.

 

You got to see the African Championships on TV?!  Cool!  Can you tell us

about it?

 

:)

Adriana

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 10:43:03 -0400

From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU

Subject: Code Ideas

 

I've been wanting to get in on this discussion, b/c it's one of my

favorites.  I've had something similar to what Amanda proposed in mind,

but only for skills above a C, i.e. the ones that get bonus points.

Which doesn't mean we couldn't have number ratings for A-C; we should

probably have them so meets with modified difficulty requirements could

work the same way.  But at the elite level, do we really care to

differentiate between A's, B's, and C's?  It would reduce the burden on

judges.

 

I don't think the idea of submitting a routine ahead of time

necessarily locks the gymnast into a routine.  It lets the judge have

something there already and simply note the changes.  I don't know about

the judges in figure skating, but don't the commentators already have the

program in front of them?  Or is it like in gymnastics, where we all just

know the routine because we've seen it before?  Anyway, if the

differentiation between skills is limited to D+ skills, I don't think the

judges -- or rather, the STC's -- will have to do much more adding than

they already have to do.  Well, on second thought, things might get

hairy with connection bonus.  I still have to think about that.  Btw,

another aspect of the women's Code that makes differentiation impossible

is that in connections, D's and E's count exactly the same.  So, for

example, whip to tucked full-in and whip to double layout get the same

connection bonus.  E skills exist only for extra D/E bonus (0.1 vs. 0.2).

 

As to the "magic" 10, I really don't think the pubic would riot if we got

rid of it.  People deal with diving just fine.  Make a big deal of the

execution score like they do.  Actually, I think a lot of people would

enjoy watching to see if the next gymnast can outdo the previous.

 

:)

Adriana

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 10:47:02 -0400

From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU

Subject: Re: values of skills, etc on floor

 

> > if you give each skill a differenbt number as some of you were doing you

> > will kill the judges-they cant possibly remember every number for every

> > skill-it will also take them much much more time-adrienne

> >

> 

>         Every skill already has a number (different than the value), and a

> special symbol used to identify it.  The symbols have to be memorized

> anyway.

> 

 

Every skill does have a number, but no one actually *knows* all of them.

Learning the shorthand symbols is easier than learning numbers.

 

:)

Adriana

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 10:47:53 -0400

From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU

Subject: Re: FIG

 

> dismount.  I was under the assumption that in order for a move to be in the

> FIG it had to have been performed and to my knowledge this move has not.  I

 

There are a few skills in the Code (the women's, anyway, and from your

post clearly the men's too) that haven't been performed (or performed

successfully, which is required to get a skill in the Code) and are listed

anyway.  In women's it's mostly (all?) vaults.  Don't ask me why.

 

:)

Adriana

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 11:32:25 -0400

From:    ***@AOL.COM

Subject: The Age Limit & Mina Kim

 

When I was editing commercials out of Peachtree and listening to the (mostly

inane) commentary, something did occur to me...

 

If Mina Kim is misses the Atlanta deadline by 2 weeks, she also misses the

new age limit for '97 Worlds by 2 weeks, and would not be eligible to try for

a Worlds team until 1999!

 

Mara

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 13:30:27 -0400

From:    ***@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU

Subject: ages

 

     The Romanians certainly weren't the only ones to raise gymnasts' ages to

make them eligible for competition. The Soviets did it too. YEARS later, like

in 1989 or 1990 or something, the Soviet press admitted that Bicherova was only

13 when she won the 1981 Worlds in Moscow! Which helps explain the longevity of

her career (she performed at '87 US-USSR). Also, I'm pretty sure Oksana

Omelianchik's birthdate was changed by a couple of days to make it look like

she was born in '69 instead of '70 so she would be eligible in '84. (She was

alternate for the alternate games). I think her REAL b-day is in Jan. '70, but

you'll often see it listed as late Dec. '69.

     And of course, the North Koreans and Gim Gwang Suk are the most notorious

case. She was 15-16 for about 3 years! Does anyone know how old she REALLY is?

     Also, does anyone think that raising the age limit to 16 is going to

result in more age-falsifying of this kind? I wouldn't be surprised...

 

Beth

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 20:55:35 +0200

From:    ***@MAIL.LSS.CO.ZA

Subject: African Championships

 

 Well I'll tell you what I can remember. (I just taped over it for

yesterday's competition because I didn't have space on any other tapes -

bummer :< )

 I didn't see the rhythmic but I know Egypt won the team competition and

an Egyptian girl won the allround with a South African girl coming second.

 Womens AA:

The South African girls did extremely well taking the top three positions.

Heidi Oosthuizen 1st, Joanne West 2nd, Ilse Roets 3rd. The placings could

have been diffirent if the leading Morrocan gymnast, Naima El Rhouati, hadn't

injured an already sore ankle, as she was lying third after the first two

apparatus'.

 Mens AA:

I'm not sure who came where, but it was an Algerian guy, Yacine Othmani,

who took the top spot.

 Womens Team:

1st South Africa, 2nd Morroco, 3rd Egypt.

 Mens Team:

1st Algeria, 2nd South Africa, 3rd

 Womens Apparatus:

 Vault: 1st-Joanne West RSA 9.325, 2nd Rita Ghatas EGY 9.200, =3rd Karima

Sahlal MOR & Naima El Rhouati MOR 9.150

 Bar: 1st Joanne West RSA 9.250, 2nd Naima El Rhouati MOR 9.075, 3rd Mai

Mohammed EGY 8.700

 Beam: 1st Heidi Oosthuizen RSA 9.200, 2nd Karima Sahlal MOR 8.700, 3rd Ilse

Roets RSA 8.600

 Floor: 1st Joanne West RSA 8.900, 2nd Rita Ghatas EGY 8.750, 3rd Heidi

Oosthuizen RSA 8.700

 Mens Apparatus:

 Floor:

1st Kalid Sadir MOR 8.675

 Pommel Horse:

1st Yacine Othmani ALG 9.150

 Rings:

1st Driss Alaoui MOR 9.125

 Vault:

1st Kalid Sadir MOR 9.400

 Parralell Bars:

1st Adrian Steyn RSA 8.675

 High Bar:

1st Dewald Laubscher RSA 9.300

 

 Helen.

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 15:14:18 -0400

From:    ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU

Subject: Re: ages

 

>      Also, does anyone think that raising the age limit to 16 is going to

> result in more age-falsifying of this kind? I wouldn't be surprised...

 

Probably.  It isn't going to solve anything either, as far as protecting

young kids from whatever it is the change is supposed to protect them

from (too intensive training at too young an age or whatever),

and it's just going to mess up the careers of girls whose ages aren't

falsified.

 

:)

Adriana

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 13:12:58 -0600

From:    ***@RMII.COM

Subject: Eastern Regionals clarification

 

The top 3 of the six teams qualified to Nationals -- sorry for the

confusion.

 

Rachele

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 18:23:55 -0400

From:    ***@FIT.EDU

Subject: Re: ages

 

>      Also, does anyone think that raising the age limit to 16 is going to

> result in more age-falsifying of this kind? I wouldn't be surprised...

 

        I think it will definitely result in more age-falsifying!!

Coasches want their gymnasts to be able to compete when they're at their

best.  If a gymnast's birthday is a few days (or weeks) shy of the cut-off,

they'll change the date (especially if they know they can get away with it).

 

        The only country that might be more than a little wary of this

might be N. Korea. ;)

 

Laura :)

This is my 0.02.

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 15:56:31 -0700

From:    ***@DANA.UCC.NAU.EDU

Subject: Dom in USA Weekend

 

        there's a huge cover article in this weekend's USA Weekend, an

insert in many local Sunday newspapers.

        I liked the article, but there was a lot of comments on how she's

"hired an agent to find a way to make use of the great facial bone

structure and million-dollar smile she was born with." Which doesn't

sound too bad except the author (Del Giudice who lives in Jenkinstown,

PA) makes a big deal about her body during the article , such as the

intro paragraph. It reads, in part:

        "Her name is Dominique Dawes, and the first thing you notice

about her is that chiseled 5 foot 1/4 inch, 98 pound body. It is perfect,

and all you want to do is look at it."

        Not exactly molestation, but doesn't exactly make me want to sign

up any future kids of mine into the sport.

        USA Weekend also made me mad because they interspersed two Mary

Lou Retton quotes into what looks like one quote in bold. During the

article, she says "she's (Dom) a real 90's gymnast, explosive and athletic".

Much later in the article, she says "She's not in it for the exposure.

She's true." USA Weekend therefore combined the two quotes over a Dom

picture to read as follows - "'Dawes is a real 90's gymnast,' observes Mary

Lou Retton. 'She's not in it for the exposure'"

        Which really makes it sound like she's saying that most gymnasts

today are in gymnastics for the money, fame and glory. Except that she

didn't say that. Grrrr.

        Taped Peachtree Invit. I like Mina Kim's potetial, and yes, she

is smaller than Jennie T. - you can see it the shot of the 'Shannon with

her team' interview at the end. Who I really liked was the 13 year-old

Zeena from Australia. Beautiful floor and beam choreography and

execution. And for those who think that Aussies can't tumble, I'd show

them a tape of her extra-high first pass, RO, 2 whips through to double

back. Cool choreography as well!

        Liked the choreography of Shannon's new routine very much -

there's a lot of complex combinations of dance in it that really are

wonderful. She just needs to look up and sell it. And not break her arm

line at her wrists. I also love her back extention rolls on beam -

poetry, I tell ya!

        Hey, under "stupid commentator remarks" y'all for got to mention

John Nabor and his added syllable to the word 'athlete'. I think Nancy

R.'s mentioned that one before as well.

 

Cara                   

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 19:50:02 -0400

From:    ***@AOL.COM

Subject: Re: ages

 

>        The only country that might be more than a little wary of this

might be N. Korea. ;)

 

 

I doubt it.  They'll probably just be smart enough not to say they're 15 3

years in a row!

 

Mara

 

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Date:    Sun, 9 Apr 1995 18:40:25 -0700

From:    ***@ASU.EDU

Subject: Re: Code Ideas

 

> I've been wanting to get in on this discussion, b/c it's one of my

> favorites.  I've had something similar to what Amanda proposed in mind,

> but only for skills above a C, i.e. the ones that get bonus points.

> Which doesn't mean we couldn't have number ratings for A-C; we should

> probably have them so meets with modified difficulty requirements could

> work the same way.  But at the elite level, do we really care to

> differentiate between A's, B's, and C's?  It would reduce the burden on

> judges.

 

        There isn't that much of a point in differentiating between the

lower valued skills, I agree.  Not when world titles are won with double

layouts and triple fulls.  Good point. . .

 

> As to the "magic" 10, I really don't think the pubic would riot if we got

> rid of it.  People deal with diving just fine.  Make a big deal of the

> execution score like they do.  Actually, I think a lot of people would

> enjoy watching to see if the next gymnast can outdo the previous.

 

        Also, when the scores come up from the judges, there still would

be potential to score a 10, in fact, more than one!  It is still exciting

in skating when a skater gets a 6.0.  It brings down the house.

 

        I lost the original post, but I strongly disagree with the premise

of keeping an inaccurate scoring system so the "American public"  will be

happy.  First of all, gymnastics is an international sport for those of

you that don't know.  Also you have to remember that the average American

viewer doesn't contribute very much to the popularity of the sport beyond

the Olympics.  They couldn't care less about it.  Then when our overhyped

US athletes fail to win Olympic golds they slam the sport as stealing

childhoods.  The idea that we should let the American viewing audience run

the sport is outrageous.  So what if the "perfect 10" is exciting to them,

do they know anything about the sport or what's good for it?

        Here's a good example, my brother is tres American and he was

glued to the set during the Olympics.  He could tell me who won Olympic

trials.  But then after the closing ceremonies he goes back to watching

football, basketball and baseball and is more than annoyed whenever ESPN

happens to show gymnastics and bothers to get mad at me, as though

something somewhere was not televised because of it.  It has been my

observation that gymnastics is played only when NOTHING else can be shown.

        But since he is a viewer why not let him make up some rules that

are pleasing to him, the average American viewer.  He suggested to me that

gymnastics would be a lot better if it was a race, and that whoever could

do all four events the fastest would be the winner.  He said it would be a

lot more exciting if they were timed, and raced from one event to the

next, running from the floor to the vault and not even stopping or slowing

down after they've landed their vault but kept right on running to the

bars.  Also, the gymnasts should all have to do Dobre's famous pose (which

he saw from my poster) on beam or else they are disqualified

automatically.  Let's hear it for the average American viewer.

 

 

Amanda

 

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End of GYMN-L Digest - 8 Apr 1995 to 9 Apr 1995

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