too much reward for difficulty

MODELING THE FINAL SCORE IN ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS BY DIFFERENT WEIGHTS OF DIFFICULTY AND EXECUTION

A recently published research study by Cuk I., Fink H., Leskosek B.

One of the authors is Hardy Fink, the man more than any other who birthed our current open-ended Code. He’s crunched the numbers more than any other alive, I reckon.

The goal was to …

… investigate how different calculations of the final score may change the ranking orders among gymnasts. Fourteen different calculations were taken into consideration and then compared with official results from the 2011 Men’s European Championships in Berlin. …

Results?

… In the Code of Points it is emphasized that the exercise presentation is the most important part and it should never be compromised for difficulty.

In the practice of competitions we often see exactly the opposite philosophy from gymnasts and their coaches. At this moment, the proportion between difficulty and execution is, on some apparatus, already above 70% (pommel horse, high bar).

If we look at other sports it is clear that the most risky sports (diving, aerial skiing) have very low contributions from difficulty towards the final score while the most aesthetic sports (synchronized swimming, rhythmic gymnastics) have a more balanced proportion …

Louis Smith

I chose that quotation because it matches my personal opinion, and the majority opinion, that current FIG rankings reward difficulty too much, execution not enough.

Gymnasts like Louis Smith (Pommels) and Ali Raisman are not penalized much compared with those who have superior body line and stretched feet.

Read the entire article (PDF). That comes from Vol. 4 Issue 1: Science of Gymnastics Journal.

Florida #1

1 Florida 196.929
2 Oklahoma 196.784
3 Georgia 196.725
– Alabama 196.725
5 Utah 196.721
6 UCLA 196.543
7 Arkansas 196.500
8 Oregon State 196.383
9 Nebraska 196.308
10 Penn State 195.982
11 Ohio State 195.856
12 Stanford 195.725

Next week, the rankings will switch to the Regional Qualifying Score (RQS), and the rankings will get shuffled once again.

Greg on College Gymnastics Fans

Florida's first year competitors

See all rankings on GymInfo.

Elite Canada Finals

Gearing up for the upcoming battle to win a spot on the Canadian women’s 2012 Olympic gymnastics team Kristina Vaculik of Whitby, Ont., Victoria Moors and Madeline Gardiner of Cambridge, Ont., and Brittany Rogers of Coquitlam, B.C., all came through with strong performances on the final day of competition Sunday at Elite Canada.

Vaculik, winner of the all around title on Friday, led the way again, winning a medal in three four event finals, taking silver on beam and uneven bars and bronze on bars.

Vaculik also placed fourth on vault. …

Gymnastics Canada – Olympic hopefuls shine at Elite Canada gymnastics meet


VAULT
Ellie Black
Brittany Rogers
Emma Sibson

BARS
Brittany Rogers
Kristina Vaculik
Victoria Moors

BEAM
Madeline Gardiner
Kristina Vaculik
Ellie Black

FLOOR
Victoria Moors
Stefanie Merkle
Kristina Vaculik

All results are now posted.

Of the many Canadian girls who have done a terrific job this season, one who impresses me is Brittany Rogers. After a long term injury, her comeback has been one of the big success stories on the team. A Vault specialist, she still managed to win Bars in Finals.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Victoria Moors is another “power” gymnast with surprisingly good Bars.

Anderson Loran – Pommels

2012 Elite Canada. Anderson Loran GOLD medal performance 14.6 (5.3 Diff)

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Anderson won his specialty, Horizontal Bar, as well with 6.2 difficulty. He’s one of the next generation of Canadian gymnasts who will be fighting to get on the A Team this cycle.

all Elite Canada results

The Canadian men finished 13th, just missing Team qualification for London. They were shattered.

By comparison, Belgium was 13th in WAG. But that was their best rank ever. A BIG accomplishment.

related – more MAG Finals videos

Shallon Olsen – Vault

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

I assume her 6.8 difficulty score was given BONUS under the Canadian Jr rules.

Jr Results (PDF)

Watch the Gymnastics Canada interview with Shallon. (VIDEO)

Simone Biles – Floor

Simone competes Amanar – EASY.

And is already one of the very best tumblers in the world.

Click PLAY or watch it on Gymnastike.

http://www.gymnastike.org/embed/NjE0NjA3ODk5?related=1

Watch more video of 2012 WOGA Classic on gymnastike.org

WOGA Jr results

Thanks @gymnewstics

Tumbl Trak Bungee Incline

One of their best products. I saw it used first in Melsele, Belgium. Lieven Vercruyssen of EuroTumble.com set one up so the club could try it out.

Easy up.

Small electric pumps and bigger valves have improved the inflation process significantly, over the years.

There are a vast number of drills you can do with that unique apparatus. Useful for every program in the gym. (You can’t have too many inclined surfaces, so far as I’m concerned.)

To see some variations, click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Cost is about $1200. Details.

Tumbl Trak is a valued advertiser on this site.