
original posted on flickr by Malingering – who did gymnastics until she was age-20.
Category: Uncategorized
Glen Ishino dominates Jr USA Championships
UPDATE: Juniors Danell Leyva, Alexy Biloserchev & Edward Mesa competed Senior in order to gain experience in an Olympic Trial meet. Thanks to Coach Sommer for pointing this out.
===== One to watch for the future.
Ishino, the 2007 silver medalist, won the 16-18 age division by nearly three points. He added individual titles on floor exercise, pommel horse, parallel bars and high bar, and won silver medals on still rings and vault.
Ishino said hitting his pommel horse set was the highlight for him. “Vault could have been a little better, but I’m glad I ended on p-bars, ended on a good event,” he said.
Ishino, a high school junior, has committed to attend Cal Berkeley. Sister Allyse Ishino, an alternate to the 2004 U.S. Olympic team, attends Bay Area rival Stanford University. …
Junior 16-18 All-Around
1. Glen Ishino (SCATS-HB) 87.150
2. Donothan Bailey (Azarian) 84.250
3. Jake Dalton (Gym Nevada) 82.750
4. Russell Dabritz (Legends) 82.500
5. Alexander Naddour (Arizona Flairs) 82.350
6. Austin Phillips (US Dev Center II) 80.950
7. Christopher Stehl (Cypress Academy) 80.900
8. Glenn McCuen (WOGA) 80.400
9T. D.J. Repp (Gold Cup) 80.250
9T. Mackenzie Dow (Surgents Elite) 80.250
The youngest competitors are even better.
Junior 14-15 All-Around
1. John Orozco (World Cup) 86.000
2. Sam Mikulak (SCATS-HB) 84.450
3. C.J. Maestas (Gold Cup) 84.000
4. Jacoby Rubin (Buffalo Grove) 83.800
5. Cameron Rogers (Weyandts) 81.100
6. Dylan Akers (Cypress Academy) 80.650
7. Preston Ellsworth (WOGA) 80.450
8T. Matthew Del Junco (New Hope) 80.350
8T. Devin Burnett (WOGA) 80.350
10. Sean Senters (Parkettes) 80.250
Hamm, Horton, Artemev, Hamm, Tan and …
U.S. Men’s Olympic Gymnastics Team prediction:
The first place I look for analysis on the Olympics is Andrew Thornton:
… at this point, my Olympic team would consist of Paul Hamm, Jonathan Horton, Sasha Artemev, Morgan Hamm, Kevin Tan, and still waiting to determine the last spot! Things can definitely change at this point as there are several guys right on the bubble. …
read why on Gymnast.com
Of course it is very, very early to be making these predictions. Not even the Olympic Team selectors will be looking that far forward yet.
Artemev needs a good meet tonight, Day 2, for sure. Certainly I expect him to hit and win Pommel Horse.
Who is the 6th man?
It may come down to who can score highest on pipe. Joseph Hagerty placed second on HBar Day 1 with a 6.60 A-score and a 8.700 B-score. 15.300 total. Plus he could be the second All-Arounder ahead of Horton and Artemev. Doing the AA gives Joseph an advantage, I think, over Justin Spring who finished 5th on HBar with 14.900 and 3rd on PBars with 15.350. Justin competes only 4 apparatus.
Under this scenario I would have Tan, Horton and Paul Hamm doing rings, still the team’s weakest apparatus vs the friendlies, China.

Paul Hamm has been through this twice before. I heard him say that the real contenders for the Olympics tend to stabilize performances as the Games approach. The team will become more obvious with each successive trial meet.
retired gymnast Chloe Sims speaks out
Chloe is a brilliant but inconsistent gymnast who surprisingly retired in the months leading up to Beijing.
I was sad to hear the reasons why. From a newspaper article:
… Battling an eating disorder and mental fatigue, [Sims] chose personal happiness over the ultimate prize of a shot at winning gold. It was the most difficult decision of her life, but for Sims it was the only way she could overcome her inner demons. “I was mentally unhealthy. I had a lot of problems. I had an eating disorder and I was under a lot of pressure,†she said. “Every morning I woke up and didn’t want to go to training. It felt like I was wasting my time and other people’s doing something I didn’t want to do.†…
Since severing ties with the inner-circle of the Australian gymnastic squad, Sims said she has experienced feelings of social alienation.“It’s hard not to go to the gym every day and see all my beautiful friends. We were very close but it’s hard to maintain that bond outside the sport,†she said. “My parents and my brother and sister are very supportive and have been incredible through all this.â€
read more on the Gymnastics Australia blog
Chloe is only one of a number of Olympic candidates who stopped training in Australia. All for different reasons. Still, the National Team program, excellent in the past, needs to reassess.
larger photo – Chloe Sims official website
USA selects 2 trampolinists for Olympics
Only one man and one woman will compete in Beijing. The VISA Championships are the first step. (I was told the American alternates will also travel to the Olympics.)
HOUSTON, Texas, May 23, 2008 – 2005 U.S. trampoline champion Alaina Hebert of Broussard, La., and Steven Gluckstein of Atlantic Highlands, N.J., lead men’s and women’s trampoline, respectively, after the preliminary round at the 2008 Visa Championships at Reliant Park in Houston, Texas.
… read more — including Tumbling and Double-mini results — on USAG: Gluckstein, Hebert lead men’s, women’s trampoline at 2008 Visa Championships
The post links to photos and results. Here’s the ranking, so far.

gymnastics cake – mmmmmmmm
You can get one of these cakes for yourself … if you live in Israel.

original – flickr
gymnast in Second Life virtual world
In Second Life, some avatars are gymnasts.

larger version – flickr
Here’s a Second Life balance beam.
Ashley Stott wins U.S. Gymnastics Classic
Senior – 2008 U.S. Classic, May 23, 2008, Reliant Arena, Houston, Texas.
* All-Around – Ashley Stott
* Vault – Mackenzie Caquatto
* Uneven Bars – Christa Tanella
* Balance Beam – Ashley Stott
* Floor Exercise – Randy Stageberg
UPDATE: full results – USAG
This small, little publicized competition actually drew a good crowd.
A number of NCAA coaches were in the audience, as well. Randy Stageberg, for one, has already signed with Florida.
Click PLAY or watch Randy on Floor at Gymnix 2008.
INSIDE the VISA Gymnastics Championships
Inside Gymnastics magazine posted by far the best detailed coverage I’ve seen:

Check also: News, Notes & Quotes from Nats, Thur
The layout of the site is much improved. Congratulations.
Paul Hamm out with a broken hand
Watching from the stands, I was hopeful it was a minor finger “jam”, a very common occurrence on P Bars. Especially on Stutz to one bar.
Sadly, it was worse than I thought.
HOUSTON — Reigining Olympic all-around champion Paul Hamm has a broken right hand and will miss the U.S. Olympic Trials in June, his coach Miles Avery announced Friday.
“He won’t be able to do the Olympic Trials,” Avery said. “The course of action for that is to petition him to the team. And try to prove his readiness later in the summer, closer to the Games.”
Hamm suffered the injury on parallel bars in the final rotation of the first day of the U.S. Championships for men in Houston. During a stutz to one bar, his finger shifted on contact with the rail and he felt something pop, he said.
X-rays on Friday showed a fracture in the fourth metacarpal. Hamm will likely undergo surgery to put a pin in, and he will take four to six weeks to heal.
read more on International Gymnast

original – flickr
If it was any other gymnast, they might be off the team right now. But here is how Paul did last night under the official “point program” for selection:
Paul Hamm – 46
David Sender – 29
Joseph Hagerty – 25
Jonathan Horton – 24
Morgan Hamm – 24
Kevin Tan – 23David Durante – 22
Raj Bhavsar – 22Justin Spring – 15
Kyson Bunthuwong – 15
(Leave a comment if you know how they arrived at these “points”.)
Certainly from the point of view of the athletes, they simply want to have a good competition on day 2 (Saturday) and qualify in the top 14 through to Olympic Trials in Philadelphia.
Everyone expects Paul to be given every possible opportunity to compete in Beijing. He has 77 days before the start of the Games.
