… Athletes have endorsed junk food for years, but emotions over seeing the fittest athletes in the world selling burgers, submarine sandwiches, sugary cereals and sodas seem stronger this year.
… perhaps it’s our awareness that we as a nation are fat, and we’re only getting fatter …
Rosannagh MacLennan won Canada’s first gold medal of the London Olympics on Saturday, taking top spot in the women’s trampoline at the North Greenwich Arena. …
Shanshan Huang won silver with 56.730 points and Chinese compatriot Wenna He took the bronze with 55.950.
Three-time Olympic medallist Karen Cockburn of Stouffville, Ont., just missed the podium in fourth place with 55.860 points. …
Camp Director Brent Kraus gave me a personal tour of their massive complex in the Poconos.
Week #7 they had 404 gymnasts. All 5 gyms were busy.
My trip sponsored by Tumbl Trak, I set up some of their newest inflatable equipment. Jesse Silverstein, Brandon Wynn, Sean Townsend, Sean Golden and Andrew Elkind played. Many of the coaching staff tried out the equipment, too.
Coaches at IGC are all required to do 2hrs of “school” 5 days / week. (8-10pm)
That’s part of their Professional Coaching Diploma (PCD) — currently the best coach training program in North America, since the Seneca School of Gymnastics in Toronto cancelled their 2yr degree program.
PCD is ideal for a young coach looking to get experience.
Founder Bruno Kraus was working out himself during “open gym”. Abe Grossfeld, age-78, not so much. Abe has been at IGC since the beginning. This summer he’s in charge of “visiting coaches”.
In fact, I was a visiting coach myself. Two girls I coached last season were enjoying Camp week #7, somewhat overwhelmed with the scale of things.
I was happy to see international elite Jessica Dowling. (Her coach was away at Olympics with Team Canada.)
Unlike Woodward, IGC offers only Artistic Gymnastics. They are serious. Kids are not “thrown” through difficult skills, as they are at most other Camps.
Gymnasts have no contact with parents over the week. No social media. No cameras.
OTHER IGC HIGHLIGHTS:
• 1 to 8 coaching ratio, plus two counselors living in every cabin
When you’re feeling down because your body hurts
When your hands are torn and your muscles ache
When the beam’s so high and you feel you’ll fall
When you feel you can’t and want to stop it all
When the spring floor feels like concrete
When you feel you’re spent and can’t compete
And the bars, they seem so wide apart
And vaulting now is not in your heart
When all of this makes you feel like the pits
It’s time to relax and think a bit
Of the hours and hours of hard work put in
It’s time to collect the dividend
You know why you’re here, what it’s all about
You know there’s no time at all for self-doubt
So get up, with both your body and your mind
And keep it going because you’re going to find…
YOU CAN…you can do it with a little more grit
Beijing Silver medalist Jason Burnett took a chance, trying the highest degree of difficulty, but was terminated after the second skill. Jason had qualified in 6th.
Actually, Tony Pineda competed Kolman (or something near identical) in the first session of World Championships 1985. Only a few hundred spectators were there that early.