Entries from May 2010 ↓
May 23rd, 2010 — books & manuals, Coach Education
Dr. Gerald S. George is out and about, doing seminars in support of his new book Championship Gymnastics.

International Gymnastics Camp
Coaches Education Program
Bartonsville, PA
June 21-23, 2010
U.S.A.I.G.C. Congress
Coaches Education Program
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
June 27-29, 2010
USAG National Congress and Trade Show
Four (4) Lecture Presentations
Hartford, CT
August 12-14, 2010
Winning Gymnastics – Seminars
May 22nd, 2010 — NCAA, Power Tumbling
The former Utah star jumped into a new sport. Apparently Elite Gymnastics and the NCAA weren’t enough to convince her to retire.
Only to hang up her grips.

… Postell dabbled with both trampoline and power tumbling – sports which involve many of the same skills as gymnastics but require less of a time commitment. Power tumbling came more naturally, so Postell shelved the trampoline challenge for a later date. …
Utah’s Postell takes a tumble
Her goal is to qualify to VISA Championships for the first time, … first time as a tumbler, that is.
Almost 24yrs-old, Ashley coaches at Black Diamond Gymnastics in Park City Utah.
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Disclosure: I’d finished writing this post before realizing that Black Diamond is a club website built by one of our advertisers, Direct Works Media. Click through their link to support Gymnastics Coaching.

May 22nd, 2010 — Gymnastics
In the States:
NBC will be televising the recent Pacific Rim Championships from Melbourne Australia today (Saturday, May 22nd) … I believe it will primarily be women’s coverage, with some men’s highlights included. …
American Gymnast
May 22nd, 2010 — Olympics
If you think Russia has been tearing it up in Women’s Artistic Gymnastics, look at what’s happening with their Winter Olympic sports program.
May 20 – Alexander Zhukov (pictured right) will today be formally installed as the new President of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC), replacing Leonid Tyagachev, who resigned in March in the wake of the team’s disastrous performance at the Olympics in Vancouver. …
Russia finished a relatively lowly 11th in the overall medals table in Vancouver, winning just 15 medals, only three of which were gold, the team’s worst performance since the break-up of the Soviet Union.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has already set out what Zhukov’s goal must be.
Putin’s adviser Rostislav Murzagulov said: “The task is set clearly: first place in overall medals table in Sochi is a successful result, second – unsuccessful, third – an epic failure.”
Inside The Games
Zhukov is Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister. (I’m surprised that Putin didn’t take over the Russian Olympic Committee himself.)
Money is no obstacle in Russia. This at the same time 12 sports just had funding cut in Great Britain. And more cuts might be coming under the new government there.
May 22nd, 2010 — sport medicine
I was guest coach last week at Go For It Gymnastics in Vegas, invited by Dana Brass.
One of the girls was training with some kind of Insulin pump, the first time I’d seen one on a gymnast.

Online I later saw an article about this girl, Lena, a L6 now a L8 gymnast who trains 22hrs/wk.
… Lena was diagnosed with type one diabetes when she was four years old and is on an insulin pump. She is an inspiration to other children with type 1 diabetes. …
Type 1 Diabetes – Lena gymnastics meet
The comments on that post include some from parents of other gymnasts with Type 1.
Leave a comment if you’ve an opinion on the Insulin pump for gymnasts. Especially if there are any complications.
May 21st, 2010 — Gymnastics
I didn’t link to the crazy story that the Romanian Head Coach called British gymnast Beth Tweddle a possible “doper”.

The same Beth Tweddle that was just awarded the MBE by the Prince of Wales. Role model to gymnasts everywhere.
It must have been some sort of misquote. I assumed.
Nobody would be silly enough to make that kind of accusation … right after his team was beaten by the British.
The next day Forminte fumbled an apology.
Now we’re hearing buzz that former Head Coach Octavian Belu MIGHT return after the World Championships.
This would be akin to the USA, in a panic, hiring Bela Karolyi or Steve Nunno, to replace Marta.
A bad idea.
Update: Dmarten of gymgossip.com tells that Belu’s role might be that of consultant, no more. Whew.
May 21st, 2010 — Blogs, ethics, Gymnastics, salary (contract)
From yet another Romanian gymnastics blog, GymFever.
Sadly, Google Translate is terrible going from Romanian to English:
… I do not know if there are any gymnastics (outside Nadia Comaneci, perhaps) that appear in many magazines. Svetlana I was pretty horrid when they compete, always seemed to receive notes marry well, not really smiling outside the ground where they excel in Chapter difficulty but have attitude and charisma. Every time I look at her land in Athens memorable pass me shivers. …
I believe the topic is the astounding number of magazine covers featuring Khorkina.

GymFever – Again Svetlana Khorkina (translated to English)
Never accused of being shy, Svetty posed nude for the Russian version of Playboy in November 1997 and almost nude for the Russian version of Maxim right before the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.
As comedy site Uncyclopedia expains:
Svetlana Khorkina (pronounced WHORE-kina, aka: ‘The Queen’) is a Russian-born gymnast known for her long lines and innovation (often born out of her inability to do most other skills).
‘Sveta’, as she is known, is one of the most decorated gymnasts in the history of gymnastics, due in part to her longevity and her ability to seduce the judges into giving her massively inflated scores.
Sveta earned a reputation as a fierce competitor who remained focused in competition. This focus was often complimented by her excessive whining and uncomfortably dramatic performances on the floor exercise. Her Russian teammates were often warned to keep themselves at least five feet from Sveta at all times during a competition, as she had a tendency to slap, and occasionally bite other competitors when things didn’t go her way.
For the record, I feel Khorkina was one of the most interesting and entertaining gymnasts in history. I love her Bars, her Bars, her Bars.
May 21st, 2010 — beam, Gymnastics, photos
I had to email to ask.

coach Stephanie Floyd
Leave a comment if you’ve a guess.
UPDATE: Watch Grozdova competing the skill in … 1978!
May 21st, 2010 — cheer, humour
Never has a Cheer coach got so much press.

Click through to EW.com for details of a terrific GLEE rumour … Susan Boyle to play the school “lunch lady” next season.
May 21st, 2010 — cheer, safety
Front page story on MSNBC May 20th, 2010:
… Cheerleading — not basketball, not softball, not even field hockey or ice hockey — is by far the most dangerous sport for girls. Cheer accounts for 65 percent of all catastrophic injuries in girls’ high school athletics, shows a recent report by the National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research at the University of North Carolina.
That’s especially striking considering cheerleaders make up just about 12 percent of the 3 million female high school athletes in the U.S.
Devastating injuries soar
Frederick Mueller, director of the injury research center, has tracked down 73 cases of “catastrophic” injuries in U.S. cheerleaders over the past 26 years.
Flying without a net: Cheer injuries on rise
I’m one of the few Artistic gymnastics coaches trying to encourage and promote competitive cheer. But it’s not easy in the face of statistics like this.
Should competitive cheer be better regulated?
Difficulty further restricted?
Leave a comment if you’ve an opinion.
Thanks Quentin Finck for the link.
May 20th, 2010 — salary (contract)
This is the third I’ve posted in the past few weeks.
I’d best get out to Newfoundland myself in July. And check out what’s happening on the Rock, gymnastics-wise.
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Campia Gymnastics in Mount Pearl, NL is looking for a full-time Head Coach for their competitive programs, MAG and WAG. Salary commensurate with experience, education and certification.
Contact: Michelle Tuck, info AT campiagymnastics.com

Campia Gymnastics
May 20th, 2010 — ethics, safety
Until now.
Seems to me that doping in distance cycling is endemic.
The New York Times is reporting today that after four years of denials cyclist Floyd Landis has admitted that he used performance enhancing drugs throughout his career. The 2006 Tour de France winner, who was later stripped of that title, reportedly sent e-mails to top cycling officials in the U.S. and Europe detailing his use of the drugs, while also naming other top U.S. riders who he says were doping as well. …
read more – The Adventure Blog – Floyd Landis Admits Doping, Throws Other Riders Under The Bus
Let’s say, for example, that gymnasts from your nation were underage when they competed at the Olympics.
How long can you deny that truth?
It’s bound to come out, sooner or later.
May 20th, 2010 — Gymnastics, Olympics, Rhythmic, Trampoline
I thought the open-ended code was supposed to be killing Women’s Artistic Gymnastics.
The 42nd FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships set for Rotterdam (NED) this year are drawing a great response from national gymnastics federations around the world. By the time provisional registration closed yesterday, May 19, a record number of gymnasts had entered the championships.
A total of 729 gymnasts (399 men and 330 women) from 72 different nations are expected to make their way to Rotterdam in October.
However, whether or not 2010 will go down in history as the world championships with the greatest number of competitors ever remains to be seen; we’ll know more after the athletes have shown up in Rotterdam.
It’s easy to see why the Rotterdam Worlds are attracting so many participating nations. This year’s championships will determine which 24 Teams in Men’s and Women’s Artistic will go on to compete at the 2011 World Championships in Tokyo (JPN), prior to the 2012 Olympic Games. A total of 56 Teams will compete in Men’s, and 47 in Women’s. …
read more – FIG – Record participation in Rotterdam?

The draw for the 1st Youth Olympic Games in Singapore has been posted, as well. Nations have been assigned, but not whom will be competing.
Numbers at the Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships are way up, too, a 26% increase over 2008.