The girls look surprisingly “loose”. By that I mean, “relaxed”. Not loose.
Georgia entered like rock stars. Defending Champion Courtney Kupets, not competing, is rotating with the team, despite her Achilles injury. Loud music. Louder audience. Smoke and light show. Even indoor fireworks!
The competition is on podium, adding another level of importance. (The podium has caused some grief for the girls on beam. It shakes more than normal.)
Full house, needless to say. The Georgia chants are near deafening. I love it!
Longtime University of Illinois men’s gymnastics head coach Yoshi Hayasaki announced today that he is retiring following the 2008-09 season. Next year will be his 33rd and final season leading the Illini men’s gymnastics program. …
During his career, Hayasaki has produced 86 All-Americans, 44 Big Ten Champions and 10 National Champions, including Paul Ruggeri, who won the 2008 High Bar national title. His crowning moment came in 1989 when he led the Illini to the NCAA Team Championship. …
“I’m content with my decision to finish off my coaching career at the end of the 2009 season,” Hayasaki said. “The Illinois program is in great shape now and its success will continue. It is always difficult to say good bye, and it may get harder as I continue coaching next year. We have had a lot of success at Illinois and I have enjoyed each and every season with different encounters, challenges and successes. I enjoyed the journey that I took, but it is time for me to do something different while still young and healthy. I’m going to enjoy one more season with this terrific group of guys I now have, plus the outstanding freshmen who we are adding to the program. Obviously, my goal is to win the Big Ten and national title next season, just as it has been for the last 35 years.”
Yoshi was as energetic and enthusiastic as a 21-year-old coach at NCAA Championships last weekend. And anyone there can tell you, his team did a fantastic job.
We’re seeing the retirement of many of the original Japanese gymnasts and coaches who came to North America.
In my city, Calgary, I can tell you we knew NOTHING about gymnastics until the arrival of Shiro Tanaka, former Japanese High School Champion, in the 1970s. The Japanese ruled Men’s Gymnastics at that time. The legacy of those coaches is still with us today. It a little sad to see them retiring.
Good luck to Yoshi Hayasaki in all his future projects. After he wins NCAA Championships 2009, that is.
Get autographs from your favorite gymnasts. From 4 – 5:30 p.m. several gymnasts from each of the competing teams will be available to sign autographs. This event will be held on the Coliseum plaza area located near ticket booth #5.
Almost ignored in the excitement of the preliminary Team competition is the All-Around.
The NCAA has included “specialists” for decades. Indeed, the FIG is only starting to move towards the NCAA in this regard.
In future it will be increasingly unusual to compete the AA, I think. At high level meets like World’s, Olympic’s and NCAA Championships, the All-Arounder may one day be as rare as the decathlete in Athletics.
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The Men’s NCAA system for the All-Around is better, I think. Under Men’s rules, top AA gymnasts would be invited to compete again on day 2 to determine the champion.
Recall that Sho Nakamori led the AA on day one in 2008. But that Casey Sandy edged him for the Championships on day 2. Having 2-days to decide the AA Champion made that contest more exciting.
Click PLAY or watch Daria Bijak’s handspring front layout vault (earlier this season) on YouTube:
Only six remain in the chase for a national title. Georgia, Utah, Stanford, Florida, Alabama, and LSU survived tough competition Thursday, and will face off Friday night in Stegeman Coliseum.
From an Alabama fan:
(Georgia) were the best team Thursday, are the best team this year, and likely will win and deserve their 4th consecutive championship.
But this is what makes it so ridiculous that they ALSO getting a boost from favorable judging. …
Will Georgia be overscored tonight? Because they are 3 time defending Champions? Because they are home with a raucous crowd?
Perhaps. Slightly.
Due to the strange judging system used in the NCAA — everyone at Championships gets 9.85 if they “stick” and have no other blatant error — Georgia could easily lose. If they count one fall on one apparatus, it’s over.
This is a judging system that gives Alabama an excellent chance to win. It’s the reason NCAA competitions are so thrilling.
Aleksas had impeccable taste. I was a big fan of his work.
Blythe posted a thoughtful tribute:
Lex made montages and webpages and photographed some of the best American gymnasts of his generation. The gymnasts he loved most were the ones who brought something extra to the competition floor in terms of personality, spirit and choreography — Yvonne Tousek, Tabitha Yim, Terin Humphrey, Allyse Ishino, Shantessa Pama and Chellsie Memmel.
He also had a supreme sensitivity to the not-so-wonderful stories that gymnastics produced. …
Host Georgia, Utah and Stanford qualify to the Super 6 Friday night. Congratulations.
Right from the start you had the feeling that Utah and Georgia were not to be denied. That it might end up being a fight between rivals Stanford and UCLA for the third and final spot into the Super 6.
Stanford looked relaxed. Had the best team spirit in the gym. And the Cardinal went with smart, clean routines that judges find difficult to deduct.
UCLA in the first rotation rocked bars for a season high score. But in the second rotation on beam Jordan Schwikert had a fall after a delayed judging discussion resulted in a low score for Niki Tom.
At the press conference following the competition Georgia coach Suzanne Yoculan reminded all that her team had had a “peak performance” in qualifying. There is not much more that her lineup can do to improve. They had only 3 small mistakes in prelims.
Ashley Postell (Utah) finished 2nd with 39.55. (This is the third season in a row Postell has finished as runner up.)
Still, Tasha was disappointed as her UCLA team was eliminated from the Super 6. Only the top 3 teams qualify.
Stanford did an excellent job to get through.
“Bittersweet” was the word Tasha used in a post-meet interview. Winning the All-around but having your team eliminated is no fun at all. I had not realized that Tasha came in ill. Has Achilles tendon pain. Did not warm-up Floor or Vault to “save” herself in order to count for the team score.
Recall that Tasha was on the 2003 World Championship team that became the first U.S. team in history to ever win the gold medal at Worlds. And that she won the NCAA Championships in 2005. This is her second title.