how to make the U.S. Olympic gymnastics team

The Olympic Team will be 6 athletes nominated to the US Olympic Committee (USOC). Additionally, 3 replacement athletes will be named.

There are 3 “tryout” events leading up to making the Olympic Team:

VISA Women’s Gymnastics Championships (June 5-7, Boston), …

Olympic Trials (June 20-22, Philadelphia), …

and Final Selection Competition (July 16-20, Houston).

Qualification to the Visa Championships is by scoring 56.00 All Around (or 45.00 3 event total) at Classics, or for National Team members at Team Training Camp, International Assignment or the May Open Qualifier.

The 7 members of the 2007 World Championship Team (Ivana Hong, Shawn Johnson, Nastia Liukin, Samantha Peszek, Alecia Sacramone, Bridget Sloan and Shayla Worley) automatically qualify to Visa Championships. Accepted petitioned athletes will also be admitted to Championships.

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The top 12 All Around (2-day combined total) from Visa Championships qualify to Olympic Trials. The Olympic Selection Committee (Martha Karolyi – National Team Coordinator, Steve Rybacki – Chairman, International Elite Committee, and Kristi Phillips – Athlete Representative) MAY add additional athletes from the Championships or petitioned athletes to the Olympic Trials.

Olympic-Trials.jpgFirst, you must qualify to the Olympic Trial. The top 2 All Around (2-day combined total) from the Olympic Trials will automatically qualify for the Olympic Team. Additional athletes from the Olympic Trials MAY be selected directly onto the Olympic Team based on discretionary criteria (listed below). An unspecified number of additional athletes from the Olympic Trials and petitioned athletes will be invited by the Selection Committee to the Final Selection Camp. All Olympic contenders must attend the Final Selection Camp.

The Final Selection Competition will be 2 days of competition judged by 2 Brevet judges. The 6-member Olympic Team and 3 replacement athletes will be named immediately after the Final Selection Competition, but ranking in the competition will NOT necessarily determine placement on the Olympic Team.

The Selection Committee will use discretionary criteria to select athletes to the Olympic Team. Since Olympic rules no longer require all athletes to compete on all events, simple rank AA order doesn’t measure relative event strength and contribution to total or event scores. To be optimally
competitive for both team and individual medals the following discretionary criteria will be considered by the Olympic Selection Committee.

– Team needs and medal potential
– Results from international and national competitions
– Difficulty scores
– Routine performance “hit” consistency
– Composite strength of all the Olympic Team members
– Routine execution
– World class presentation
– Competitive readiness
– Professional attitude and ability to positively contribute to the team dynamic

The complete USAG 2008 Olympic Athlete Selection Procedures document (PDF).

Yup. Pretty subjective.

To guarantee your spot, best place in the top 2 AA at Olympic Trials.

(via Judge Judy’s Just Gymnastics newsletter)

Canadian Gymnastics Championships venue

I’ve been looking forward to this!

The competition starts Tuesday in the gargantuan Calgary Olympic Oval.

I stopped by tonight to snap a few pics.

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Men’s Floor Manager Rosemary Rosemary Redgrift confirmed what you assume. The set-up was a BIG JOB. Thanks to all the volunteers.

over 600 gymnasts and 300 coaches and officials to the Olympic Oval where Canada’s young athletes in artistic gymnastics, tumbling, and trampoline will compete for National titles. This will be a gymnastics competition of unprecedented size in Calgary requiring the support of over 500 volunteers. Over 5,000 spectators are expected during the week of events. …

official competition home page – Gymnastics Alberta

more doubt about the age of He Kexin

Shergymrag has done it again.

“Stumbled on to” the blog of an English speaking employee of the Ch*na Daily newspaper. In this non-official post, the employee — spiraledout — questions the real age of He Kexin, the favourite to win Bars at the 2008 Olympics:

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Normally when a paper issues a correction it is to set the record straight. Ch*na Daily, my employer, almost never issues them because, well, as the official paper of the Communist Party, it is Pope-like — infallible.

So imagine how shocked I was when I was told earlier this week that we would be running a correction to a story from last week. I have never seen one in the 9 or so months I’ve been here, so I was a bit shocked. Did we get something wrong and, more shocking, are we admitting it?

Well, in a way. The story was about a young gymnast named He Kexin. Pretty straightforward tale: new gymnast on the scene, an ace at uneven bars, could give Team China that extra push to win all the golds they lust after. Except one little thing — the story said she was 14 years old.

The correction, then, reads as follows: “The second and third paragraphs on the May 23 story on Page 23 entitled ‘Uneven-bars queen new star in town’ should read: The 16-year-old newcomer to the national team…” and it goes on, exactly as it was in the original story, just with the age changed. Normally, of course, a real correction will mention what it is that’s being corrected, that is, what was wrong. But not this one. It just re-writes the story and insists that’s the way it is, not an admission of error. Just restating the facts as they were meant to be told.

So why the big deal? Why would we take the unprecedented step of issuing a correction, such as it is? Well, Olympic rules say that gymnasts must be at least 16 in order to compete in the Games, so even though her bio on Sina.com (a Chinese sports site that I can’t navigate since it’s all in Chinese) says she is 14. But no, she is officially 16, because, well, they say so. …

A rare correction to obfuscate the truth – Left Coast Leaner

This “reeks of dishonesty”.

We may never know if He Kexin is old enough to qualify under F.I.G. rules. But it’s possible that the truth may out if Chinese reporters and bloggers decide to investigate.

The post goes on to compare this “scandal” with that of Chinese NBA Basketball prospect Yi Jianlian who’s age is “officially” 20, but some think he is closer to 24 or 25.

Related posts including He Kexin

Head Games mental toughness training

Alison Arnold Ph.D. is a sport psychology consultant for USA Gymnastics, a former gymnast.

Her site is Head Games.

One of their online offerings is called Web Camp ($99/month). There you can get video tutorials on mental toughness training.

They have free trial sessions, as well.

Jami Sims of GymMeet did an interview with TV star Janae Whittaker Ali, former captain of the Penn State gymnastics team:

So, we’re here to talk about the Head Games Web Camp. What is it exactly?

JW: A chance to train your mind ONLINE with a LIVE mental toughness trainer, like myself. There is nothing like it. You can get mentally tough this summer from anywhere in the world as long as you have internet access! It is designed to have you grow in confidence, overcome fears, and be able to perform your best.

Why is it important in sports to be “mentally tough?”

JW: As we say at Head Games, “Out of control thinking leads to out of control performance.” Who wants to have an out of control performance? Sports are mentally challenging. It comes down to the one who can be confident and consistent…in training and competition. Your mind either makes you or breaks you. We all have fears and inconsistencies. It is important to learn [not how to be fearless], but how to have fear and do it anyway. This is called courage. And, being mentally tough makes sports a heck of a lot more fun! It is fun to be in control of your mind, it is fun to win.

read the rest of this interview on GymMeet.com (free membership required)

Aerobic gymnastics videos from Russia

capnemofromrus from Russia has posted over 700 sport aerobics videos on YouTube.

One series includes elements from their code of points.

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Quality is good. Check a sample: A256 – Flair on YouTube

If you want to see more, browse the hundreds of clips on the capnemofromrus YouTube channel.

Related: Archive for the ‘aerobics’ Category

pushing the limits of human movement

The most original modern dance. The most original acrobatic elements

Bboys dance competitions.

This video is long at 8min. But includes at least 20 outrageous moves I’ve never seen before.

It’s a competition final between Team Korea (maximum & gamblers) vs B-town allstars (Germany).

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

I think they can dance.

NBC TV sucks

NBC TV is “old media”, trying to find a way to thrive and survive in the age where you and I want “video on demand”. Trying to modernize.

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Many feel that old media is doomed. That NBC will be too slow to change in trying to compete against smaller, newer rivals.

Yet NBC got a lot of good press for their online product called Hulu launched March 2007. It is a video on demand service offering streaming TV shows and movies, primarily from NBC and FOX. The slogan is “Watch your favorites. Anytime. For free.”

Hulu is free. Later they can find ways to monetize it. NBC and FOX are real players on the web.

Right?

For me Hulu has been a disappointment. Too many restrictions.

But the real evidence that NBC wants to chase away their customers to competitors is happening right now. First Jess. Then the Live.Breath.Love.Gymnastics blog reported that NBC is taking down gymnastics video clips on YouTube. The very same day, Gymnast.com is uploading their videos to YouTube. Using YouTube to promote the new website. To attract people to Gymnast.com. Using YouTube as free advertising.

Gymnast.com “gets it”.


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Gymnast.com

At VISA Championships in Houston the Gymnast.com cameraman stood right beside the NBC cameraman.

With hopeful optimism I’d initially given NBC’s new website a positive review. Later I learned I could not watch their videos from Canada.

NBC sucks, for me.

After the Olympics, I’ll go back to boycotting NBC productions as much as possible.

Those of us who want to see Olympic video clips online will find a way, even if it’s not on YouTube.

UPDATE: NBC and CCTV in China have Olympic broadcast rights. Seems even Beijing is getting serious about preventing copyright infringement. This will only work if those networks offer a way for fans to see gymnastics legally. If not, fans will find a way to post clips.

UPDATE: I tried again today. Something NEW was on the site. It said that IF I download silverlight2 BETA from Microsoft that I could watch NBC video on my new Mac. I did. And did get a preview video to play. Nothing else.

Nice user experience NBC. You suck.

Hall of Fame gymnast Boris Shakhlin dead at 76

With 10 individual titles in world championships and gold medals in three successive Olympic Games, the Ukranian “Iron Man” was one of the greatest gymnasts of all time.

Shakhlin won seven gold, four silver, and two bronze Olympic medals.

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winning Gold in the Tokyo Olympics 1964

International Gymnast has a wonderful recap of his career: Boris Shakhlin, 1932-2008