For between $10 – $730 / month, a gymnast can sign on to be mentored by Dee Theriault, who was known as Dee Dee Foster when she won the Women’s NCAA all-around title in 1990.
Or …, you could buy her first book in a planned series. Read an excerpt.
In competition we see many more late, deductible pirouettes (the former) than pirouettes close to handstand.
An even better example she showed is Sheep Jump. Either a D-value on beam … or a NOTHING. It’s not devalued.
Judges have gotten much tougher on Sheep this code. Even if the feet are high enough, the feet close enough to the head, the head far enough back … if the gymnast is not extended in the hips, no value.
no value
gets credit
There are many more good examples and reminders Kim showed.
She goes over the controversial new landing deduction on Floor: stepping back with 1-foot into lunge position. The good ladies of the FIG never seem to consider safety when they come up with these new interpretations. This rule will certainly cause more injuries. But since it helps the judges separate the top routines in the world, … they adopt it.
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I’ve not yet heard if Project 2012 will be continuing into the Fall. I hope so.
Certainly you can sign up and go back and watch the old presentations archived online any time you want.
… Project 2012: a Web Event for Coaches highlighting the essential techniques for gymnastics success in the next quadrennium. This 12-week event, brings the best coaches in the United States to your computer screen doing LIVE lectures and demonstrations on the most important cutting-edge information in our sport. …
Sessions include 45 minutes of lecture and 15 minutes of question and answer, using live lecture, video, power point.
But on the occassion of the 30th birthday party for Al’s Club, Great American Gymnastic Express (GAGE) in Blue Springs, Missouri, I was interested to ready what one of his very first gymnasts and coaches had to say:
… Flash back 32 years to a young girl who was in love with gymnastics.
Her name was Yvonne Johnston and she was part of an up-and-coming gymnastics team that was coached by Diane Stockard.
The team’s assistant coach was a young man who wore a bright yellow T-shirt that read “100% Chinese.”
The adoring young gymnast bought a bright yellow T-shirt that read “100% Gymnast.” …
I prefer young gymnasts to use Velcro. Advanced gymnasts to use buckle.
No girl should ever use palm grips, in my opinion. They are a waste of money. Go either without grips, or get dowel.
A bigger question, of course, is when to start using grips. Normally start them in the off season. Putting on grips only at the end of the Bars workout each day. No rush. Most kids will start preferring to wear grips at about 80lbs (36kg) body weight.
Leave a comment if you have advice for female gymnasts and their coaches on grips.
American-Gymnast.com is a great site, of course. Aside from gymnastics products, they offer many other services for coaches.
For the past 20 years, Mark has worked as a high-level gymnastics coach in Australia. Our team met first met him in 1999 during the American Cup in St. Petersburg. The following year, during a stay in Sydney for the summer Olympics, our paths crossed once again, and Mark accepted our proposal to collaborate as a partner to the Casting team. At the time, his mandate for Cirque was to keep an eye on the local acrobatics and sports scenes, cover major competitions, and lend a hand during our auditions. A few months ago, Mark joined the Cirque family by becoming Acrobatic Head Coach – Touring Shows.
What is your most memorable experience with our casting team?
Apart from the 3 a.m. phone calls I used to get from Montreal (there is a 10-hour time difference to Australia), I would say it’s the true satisfaction of seeing an athlete I have auditioned go into a show and the great feedback that the majority of them give me on the life-changing experience it is. My new position also allows me to catch up with some of them. Also, the actual casting team in itself is a pretty memorable group.
How is it working at Cirque du Soleil IHQ?
Working here is like being in the wash cycle. There are many things going on at once, a lot of different perspectives to be considered and so little time to do it all. I travel a lot so time here is short with a lot to do.
Which aspect of your new coaching job at Cirque do you enjoy the most?
The mix of people I get to meet and work with. They are from such a diverse range of backgrounds.
What is the biggest motivation or challenge for a coach working with athletes who will be performing on stage?
8–10 shows a week, 350–440 shows a year… keeping artists healthy and motivated, and trying to balance the demands of training and performing to allow this to happen. This is totally different from peaking for specific events, as they’d be used to from their athletic careers
Only 3% of the acrobats in Cirque shows were Olympians. Anyone interested in auditioning should click through to the link at the top of each page on Gymnastics Coaching. Cirque is the biggest employer of acrobatic athletes and coaches in the world.
Auditions are coming up in Portugal and Australia.
Gene died, actually, of a complication from an aggressive infection.
It was a shock.
Her passing caught many in the sports community by surprise, even though they knew their friend was in a tough battle.
“It’s just surreal,” said close friend Therese Quigley, the former McMaster University Athletics director.
“She’s just one of those people you expected to always be around.”
Sutton recently helped with the Canadian gymnastic championships at McMaster. She’d been involved in an Olympic symposium in Greece and was co-chair of Hamilton’s Olympic torch celebration. …
“She will be missed big-time. There aren’t many people with her passion and the drive to give at all levels of sport, from grassroots to the elite level.”
Quigley said “she did the work of 120 years in her 64 years.”
Sutton’s influence spanned local to international sports as a gymnastics judge, administrator and visionary.
…
She sat on the executive and board of the Canadian Olympic Committee, was an international authority on gymnastics, served on a multitude of committees and was Canada’s chef de mission at the 2003 Pan American Games.