Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Did Cox screw me over?

Well I don't know about anyone reading this, but where I live, they didn't broadcast the Gymnastics Tour on Friday. :0(

For all who haven't seen, there is a STUNNING routine on Live.Breath.Love.Gymnastics of Nastia performing on floor to Ave Maria. I mean wow.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Most emotional gymnastics moments

In no particular order, here are some of my favorite "moments" that yes, can bring a tear to my eye. (Uber dork, I know).

1. Lavinia Milosovi: 1995 World Championships, All-Around
Lavinia Milosovici ends her competition on the balance beam. She does a good, solid routine. When she's finished, she leaps off the podium and squats down and puts her head in her hands and begins to cry. Why, she has done ane xcellent routine? Rather, it is the pressure of finishing the competition, her fourth world all-around competition, and just knowing that it's over. This really spoke to me, because you think of gymnasts being nervous before the routine. it's amazing to see her let this emotion out after the routine was over, and after a hit routine.

2. Dominique Dawes: 1993 Worlds, All-Around; 1994 Worlds, All-Around; 1996 Olympics, All-Around
In each competition, Dom was leading until silly mistakes, in 93 and 94 on her final rotation on one of her best events. Why does this happen? and 2 years in a row. I think 1996 might have been the worst though. I think it devastated her. In a 1997 interview almost a year later, she relived the moment and began crying even then, a year later, saying "You go to the Olympics to medal individually, at least for your second one you do....I guess it's just me being hard on myself, but why shouldn't I be?"

3. Shannon Miller: 1996 Olympics, All-Around
After her floor exercise with three potential areas for deduction, she could not stop hysterically crying. And this is a sport where most athletes suck it up and don't cry, even when it comes to big dissapointments. and even though Shannon is known t be a cyer, she just didn't stop. At one point we here Steve say in a low voice, "STOP CRYING...there's people EVERYWHERE...stop crying." Geez,steve. This is a life-long dream that was just crushed. At the opening of the ceremony, they show a picture of 4-year-old Shannon, saying that it had been a lifetime dedication...that always makes me tear up.

3. Vanessa Atler: 1999 U.S. Nationals, All-Around
This was where Vanessa had a disaster for the third year ina row on the bars, and her coach, who had a microphone on, basically blasted her on network tv. She was humiliated, not to mention personally devastated at missing this event yet again. This was the final straw that led her to leave the Rybackis. I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall when that went down.

4. Shannon Miller, 1992 Olympics, All-Around
I still can't help but cry when I watch this. I know we've had all-around gold medelists since then (Carly, Nastia) and I know Shannon "only" got teh silver, but dude, back then the silver might as well have been the gold. To me, the competition back then was so much more steep. Look at all the potential gymnasts who could have medaled: Milosovici, Bontas, Okino, Zmeskal, Lysenko, Boginskaya...Shannon outperformed anyone's expectations. She LOOKED like a Soviet. America had never dreamt of doing so well. I know, I know, Zmeskal won the worlds the prior year, but she had an "American" style that was neat, but not as artistic or desireable as Miller's. Yes, I think Gutsu was ultimately the best, but what a victory for Shannon.

5. Amy Chow: 1996 Olympic Trials, Optionals
I'll tell you what, she sure as hell eraned her trip right then and there. That was one of the nastiest falls I've ever seen. She had been suffering from back spasms that week and had limited training time. She completed her FULL routine with nothing taken out, to make the team. Damn, girl.


And on a side note, I'm also a figure skating fan.

1. 1998 Nagano Games: Michelle Kwan was so perfect but just missed, and Lu Chen only won the bronze but could not have been happier. Likewise, 2002 Salt Lake Games, Sarah Hughes, the underdog, came from no where with the skate of her life to win. Ahh, touching.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Body Type

My fellow gymnastics enthusiant Brian and myself have this theory that some gymnasts receive form deductions that are really for their body types. To be specific, a gymnast with a flat butt and straight or hyperextended legs is going to have a better handstand on bars than a gymnast with a "normal" build, and that's just wrong. But I'm not sure there's a way to prevent it. Case in point. Look here at Ma Yanhong's line:



I have to admit, even Nastia Liukin gets lucky here. She obviusly practices perfect form in that her legs are always together on her Geinger and toes always pointed, but it's also a big gift thrown her way that she has long, slender, straight legs and a flat butt. Compare her build to Andreea Raducan's, who has excellent form, but is so muscular that it can appear her legs are bent. Midway through the routine, Bart Conner even comments on this.


And then there's Kristen Maloney, who doesn't practice good form AND has an awkawrd body that just doesn't have a clean line at all. No offense to K., but she is one of my least favorite gymnasts to watch. Kind of make me cringe. Not light on her feet at all.

My version of smooth skills

Gymnast.com has been posting a series of what they call "smooth skills," which I think arose because we are seeing gymnasts now throw so many skills but the execution component is lacking, but this was not the case in the previous years. So, I wanted to make my own list, if you will, not just of gymnasts from the 1980s, but just some of my favorite gymnasts as far as execution and form over the past few decades.


Aurelia Dobre, 1987 Worlds, BB Event Finals:
I love the perfect 180 splits, the toe point, and the skills that are all done in connection.


Bi Wenjing, 1997 Worlds, UB Team Finals:
I remember this was the first time the world saw the Ono spin, and how Kathy Johnson marveled at it.



Ling Jie, 1998 BB International Team Championships:
Despite the break in her series, looks at the artistry. Looks how she delivers the choreography. Look at the height in the Onodi. And LOOK at the dive to handstand. I don't know that I've ever seen anyone hit that skill that way.




Mo Huiland, 1995 Worlds, BB Event Finals:
The Chinese choose very simple choreography without a lot of exessive movements but they deliver it so flawlessly. I adore her iconic mount, pressing her handstand down on one hand.


1989 Worlds, Yang Bo, BB Event Finals:
dismount aside, this kind of leaves your breathless. Her signature leap is stunning.


Oksana Omelianchik, 1985 European Championships, FX Event Finals:
The tumbling + the dance = there are no words

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Nastia moving on?

Nastia Liukin's Performance Quells Rumors of Quitting Tour of Gymnastic Superstars
Liukin Turns Out a Stellar Performance in San Jose Show


astia Liukin has certainly become a hot topic with numerous offers of lucrative endorsement deals and even talk of an appearance on the hot teen TV show 'Gossip Girl' that had the internet buzzing about whether she'd honor her obligation as one of the headliners of the 2008 Tour of Gymnastics Superstars. Her name was dropped from some of the advertising which led some to believe she would be a no-show and that maybe the fame had gone to her head . . . or her wallet.

Nastia Liukin opened the show in San Jose on September 21, 2008 alongside fellow gold medalist Shawn Johnson and both women delivered their typically riveting performances, albeit in some pretty ridiculous looking outfits. I'm not sure anyone was prepared to see members of the US women's Olympic gymnastics team perform in neon colored outfits fashioned more for Mardi Gras than the uneven bars. Even in her hot pink bra top and tutu Liukin was regal on the uneven bars, then later a grace to behold on beam and finished with a uniquely elegant floor routine for which she is famous. Johnson rocked out a few numbers on floor, which reminded the audience just why this spunky little spitfire won the gold. Something tells me she's not done with the Olympics.

Liukin and Johnson aside, the other women did struggle. The rhythmic gymnasts failed to perform with any degree of synchronicity, which made their performances appear awkward and poorly rehearsed. The crowd became awestruck when they began tossing the large metal rings, but for all the wrong reasons. One missed catch after another, then another made you feel embarrassed just watching. For the ensemble cast of girls on the uneven bars, it was a hot mess. One girl fell and like dominos everyone started falling and suddenly no one could stick a landing. Maybe they hated their hideous outfits?



What does everyone think?

Monday, September 8, 2008

Nastia & Alicia attend fashion week

U.S. gymnasts Nastia Liukin and Alicia Sacramone, fresh off medal-winning performances at the Olympic games in Beijing, are making the rounds at New York Fashion Week.


Liukin was front row today at Peter Som and sat beside fellow sports babe Maria Sharapova (more on tennis babes Sharapova and Venus Williams at Fashion Week to come).

The two mugged for the paparazzi before the show, chatting until the lights went down, and then Nastia watched the models strut by -- giving most and up-and-down and keeping a placid smile on her face ... a far more sedate reaction than that of actress Elizabeth Banks, who sat on the gymnast's other side visibly oohing and ahhing.

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Saturday, September 6, 2008

A few scary vaults

These are a few of my favorite clips, ironically enough, of vaults that could have gone really really wrong.

Here is Elise Ray at the 2000 Olympics, before the horse was set to the correct height.

A few good vaults

Just taking a moment to relive some beautiful vaults over time.

Lilia Podkopayeva, 1996 Olympics, AA, Vault 2, Podkopayeva vault (Yurchenko half-on, piked front out)
This vault and since become a base for popular vaults now, that is, doing this vault in a layout position. What you have to love about Lilia is the strong bump off of the horse she gets, the clean execution with the legs together and toepoint and of course the stick.


Simona Amanar, 1996 Olympics, AA, Vault 2, Double twisting Yurchenko vault
I don't really think anyone comes as close as Amanar does as far as distance away from the horse. She really flies off and does it seemingly with ease.


Aurelia Dobre, 1987 World Championships, AA, Yurchenko full vault
OK we just don't see vaults like this anymore; the perfection of the position is unmatched. It makes me sad that we don't see anything like this anymore.


Kim Zmeskal, 1992 Nationals, Yurchenko full vault
Again, perfection. She is also aggressive and hardly has to work for the landing at all.


Kerri Strug, 1992 Olympic Trials, Yurcheko full vault
I honoestly think that she is about as good as Kim.

Do we ever see good Yurchenko 1.5's?

I don't think we see many nice one and a half Yurchenkos, and I'm not sure that they are easy to do well. I mean, duh, on the one hand, but on the other hand, I've seen more stuck double Yurchenkos than 1.5's. So here are a few that I think are terrific.
Also, I think you could argue that these are even better than Nastia's "perfect" vaults at the Olympics, to which Steve & Elfi flipped out over. To me, she almost look underrotated, and she doesn't ge the same "pop" off the horse as these do.

Dominique Moceanu, 1996 Olympics, AA, Vault 2


Kerri Strug, 1996 Olympic Trials, Vault 2