Doug Davis of TumblTrak published the results of a coaches poll: Do you have trouble finding teachers/coaches? If so what do you do?
All of the respondents indicated that they have problems finding qualified coaches/teachers. We did receive some interesting ways gym owners go about looking for and cultivating staff; so we thought we would share some of their ideas with you.
Nathan from Ligthouse Gymnastics Academy in Norwalk CA usually trains from within, using older gymnasts to teach.
Brian Smith of GymnastiKids, Inc. in Pasadena CA uses Craigs List and has had luck with that. We did give you three options, A-train from within, B-recruit a parent of a gymnast and train them, or C-advertise locally. Of the three options A seems to be the most common option.
Matt McCann of Club Gym-Action in Gatineau, Quebec has many great ideas on how to find staff. He uses older gymnasts (between the ages of 12-14) from his classes and uses them as assistants in other classes. That way they start to learn how to put a class together. This works great because they can be demonstrators, extra eyes and can help be line watchers or even help take a student to the bathroom. Then when these assistants reach the age of 16 they can be responsible for their own group. This creates a great sense of pride for the “new coach”. Matt insists that the key to success is to do a lot of staff training. He has developed a library of drills for staff, new and old, to access any time. His staff keeps the classes fun and new through the use of a variety of drills. Matt also works with the local colleges and high schools to get additional coaches. He makes sure to work with school schedules and keep the lines of communication open. The staff of Club Gym-Action is expected to keep a good rapport with each other as well as the parents. They are responsible for talking to parents about the class plan; this keeps everyone informed. In order for Matt to keep his coaches current in their education he does fundraising to send his staff to clinics as well as bringing clinics to his gym. …
Encouraging your gymnasts to start training as coaches (and judges) is the way to go.
The TV special airs Oct. 12th in the USA. The event will raise awareness and money to prevent and treat women’s cancers.
Shawn Johnson, Nastia Liukin, Paul Hamm and other Olympic gymnasts will join musical stars including Cyndi Lauper, Natasha Bedingfield, Carole King and others.
Odds are that, one day, the age falsification scandal of 2008 will be revealed in an autobiography of a Chinese gymnast or coach.
Yet the story still has legs:
… The federation said it is still looking into the ages of 2000 Olympians Yang Yun and Dong Fangxiao. China won the bronze medal at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, which concluded eight years ago Tuesday. Yang said in an interview that she was 14 in Sydney, but explained later it was a slip of the tongue.
“The FIG does not consider the explanations and evidence provided to date in regards to these athletes as satisfactory,” the federation said in a statement Wednesday.
FIG Secretary General Andre Gueisbuhler said Dong obtained a credential for the 2008 Olympics using documents that indicate she was only 14 in 2000, according to the AP. Dong worked as line judge in Beijing.
“I would hope that the whole world in sport realizes that the FIG is serious about these rules and the ethics and moral questions,” Gueisbuhler said.
Since an age requirement of 15 was first established in 1981, numerous gymnastics champions have admitted after retirement that they competed using false documents, including Soviets Olga Bicherova and Olga Mostepanova, and Romanians Lavinia Agache, Gina Gogean, Alexandra Marinescu and Daniela Silivas.
The only nation punished to date for age falsification in gymnastics is North Korea, which was banned from the 1993 World Championships after varying birthdates were given for Kim Gwang Suk. Kim was registered as 15 years old at the 1989 World Championships, at the 1991 World Championships and at the 1992 Olympic Game.
The new look National Gymsports Championships is underway at Mystery Creek, Hamilton. Early signs are that Canterbury will dominate the junior Artistic Gymnastics events and they have already taken the Level 4 in both Men’s and Women’s Artistic Gymnastics. Tumbling as proved a spectator hit with New Zealand Indo Pacific athletes, Campbell Main (Counties Manuaku) and Kieran Growcott (Canterbury) thrilling the audience with speed and power.
Hawkes Bay/Poverty Bay had an excellent first day in the synchronsized Trampoline events with pairs Scott Tallot/Sam Tallott and Anastasia Smith/Chivaun Broderick taking titles in the 13/14 years.
Rhythmic Gymnastics Level 8, 9 and 10 has started with stiff opposition from the visiting Australian athletes. Otago gymnasts Brooke Hastie and Gabriella Garcia put on an excellent performance in the Ribbon apparatus with 1st and 2nd place.
Monday 29th is the start of the Aerobic event with World Number 3, Angela McMillan performing for the first time this year in New Zealand. …
The Couch Gymnast posted yet another original, well-researched article listing many up-and-coming Jr. Gymnasts around the world. Who will come into prominence as Seniors over the next Olympic cycle?
They even poke fun at the Chinese program with this photo:
Included are:
USA: Bross and Shapiro and Wieber
Russia: Tatiana Nabieva, Aliya Mustafina
France: Youna Dufournet
England: Nicole Hibbert, Danusia Francis
Canada: Peng Peng Lee, Dominique Pegg, Charlotte Mackie
Romania: Amelia Racea, Larisa Lordache and Diana Chelaru
On May 12, 2006, Donnellan walked onto a tumbling mat at Tucson’s Gymnastics World and did a single front flip, a move he’d done daily for seven years.
But that day, the 16-year-old Salpointe Catholic High School sophomore over-rotated and, in less time than it takes to give your best friend a high-five, fractured two vertebrae and damaged his spinal cord. …
Today Drew is age-18, a freshman at the University of Arizona.
The Tuscon Citizen posted a major article on Drew’s life after the accident:
Life at college has been an adjustment, but mostly in a good way, he said. He learned how to operate the elevator controls, something he couldn’t do before, and he loves being away from regimented high school schedules.
He doesn’t really have a social life yet, but is considering joining a Methodist campus ministry at UA and possibly the UA Adaptive Athletics quad-rugby team.
“I’ve pushed a quad chair,” he said. “I’m not very fast, but I can push it. I think it might be fun.”