Rhythmic Gymnastics Olympic test meet

Starts tomorrow …

… they have invited the top 20 athletes and the top 10 teams of this year’s World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships to compete in Beijing.

As each of the associations of those best 20 athletes can only field one gymnast, so there will be a total of 16 gymnasts in the individual events and 10 teams in the group events. Among the 10 teams Italy and Japan will only take part in the group events. …

Press conference for rhythmic gymnastics event – 2007 Rhythmic Gymnastics International Invitational Tournament

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official website

Christ as sports guru for kids

Jesus has got game.

They’re called Jesus Inspirational Sports Statues. Each features Jesus Christ engaged in one of 12 different sports, from soccer to track to gymnastics, with two children.

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… The imported color statues, about 6 inches tall, have been a hit, … said Frank Pollicino of Nesconset, N.Y., who sells them and other goods on his Web site www.catholicshopper.com.

“These really have outsold everything that I do,” Pollicino said today from his Long Island store. “This is going to sit on a child’s dresser where normally you have images of God. I think it’s an inspiration to people.”

The Web site calls the statues “the perfect gift for every young Catholic athlete or coach. . . . a wonderful way to reinforce Jesus ‘as friend’ in everyday activities.”

Jesus statues got game / Inspirational figurines depict Christ as sports guru for kids

I hope no one is offended. That would be as silly as jailing a dedicated teacher for calling a Teddy Bear Mohammed.

There’s more, from another company. Jesus sports action figures:

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Jesus-rock-climbing.jpg

source – WeAreFishermen.com

how to find information on Gymnastics Coaching

Why the incredibly long list of links in the right hand navigation? That’s typical of the blog format. Blogs are all about networking.

It’s cluttered and messy looking. But very useful, if you are looking for something in particular.

one-click.jpgThe goal is ONE CLICK. Find what you want in only one click of the mouse.

For example, lets say you are looking for information on “psychology” or wanting to click through to the Gymblog website.

On any page on this site use the FIND FUNCTION in your web browser to search for the key word Gymblog or “psychology”.

Nine times out of ten, you will jump immediately to what you are looking for. (The more unique your search term, the better)

When that method doesn’t work, use OUR SEARCH box (top right hand corner). And when you really, really get frustrated, email us.

PS

Based on a suggestion from coachnate, we’ve cleaned up the gymnastics category, putting the competitive apparatus together:

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waiting for the judge

A great capture by Hsu-Ta.

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Waiting on Flickr

What is she thinking?

Do we instruct what mental key words to focus on at this moment?

What if there is a long delay?

super CLEAN beam routine

I don’t seem to recall this routine from the Athens Olympics.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

I’m not sure where that animation comes from. abcd tells me it’s from the Athens 2004 playstation game.

It was posted by brunab1 from Brazil.

one last chance – Pegan to Beijing

Amanda Turner wrote a great article for International Gymnast magazine:

The numbers tell the story of Aljaz Pegan’s incredible career.

The venerable Slovenian has competed in 14 world championships — every one since his first appearance in 1989.

Six times he has competed in the high bar final at worlds — winning four medals, including the gold in 2005.

He is ranked No. 1 on high bar in the FIG World Cup points system; with more than 750 points, he has nearly 300 points more than the next highest gymnast.

WCup109Pegan_HB_0402.jpg
photo – gymnasticsonline.co.uk

But for Pegan, the only unimpressive number in his career is 0. That’s the number of Olympics he has been in. Four Olympics have passed since his first world championships appearance, three have passed by since his first world championships final and one has passed since his first world medal.

At the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart, he barely missed qualifying to the Olympics. It was the first time that the qualifying system, which traditionally grants berths to the strongest teams and all-arounders, allowed individuals to earn berths to the Olympics by winning an apparatus gold medal. But Pegan won the silver on high bar in Stuttgart, and although it was another world championship medal, it wasn’t enough to earn him a trip to Beijing.

At age 33, Pegan points out that trying one more time to qualify to the Olympic Games in 2012 may be unrealistic.

So for the next five months, the most important number for Aljaz Pegan is: one. There is one single remaining berth to the 2008 Olympic Games, a wild card spot to be decided in April by a Tripartite Committee made up of one member each from the FIG, the IOC and the 2008 Olympic organizing committee. It is the number one that keeps Pegan’s Olympic dreams alive today.

In this IG Online interview, Pegan talks about his numbers, his Olympic hopes and the efforts he and his country are making to convince the Tripartite Commission that he is deserving of its selection. …

IG Online Interview

As I’ve said before, Aljaz Pegan should get that wild card. More details.

Gymnastics Olympic test meet wraps-up for Men

P A R A L L E L B A R S

China’s LIANG, Mingsheng and FENG, Zhe (- with the highest a-score of 17.0) swept the gold and silver medals in the parallel bars final at the third part of the pre-Olympic finals.

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photo

Placing third in the event was the p.bars finalist of the 2005 and 2006 Worlds, YANG, Tae-Young (KOR), who had ranked first in the qualification round (- … two judges awarded him 9.10 his B-score reached 8.950, higher than that of China’s Feng Zhe). …

Results, Parallel Bars
1. LIANG, Mingsheng (CHN) – (16.8) = 15,800
2. FENG, Zhe (CHN) – (17.0) = 15.775
3. YANG, Tae-Youjg (KOR) – (16.8) = 15,750

H I G H B A R

1. KIM, Jihoon (KOR) – (16.5) = 15,425
2. HOSHI, Yosuke (JPN) – (16.4) = 15,150
3. TANAKA, Kazuhito (JPN) – (16.2) = 15,000

GYMmedia.com

The meet is finished. Final scores: GymnasticsResults.com (P Bars and H Bar missing as I write. They should be posted shortly.)

I expected Fabian Hambuechen to easily win Horizontal Bar. But he had a strange “ping” on dismount, falling.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Olympic Trampoline test meet full of ups and downs

2306408193.jpgAfter the chaos in the qualification, the men’s final resumed its normal order, when world champion Ye Shuai of China emerged the winner, followed by world bronze-medalist Ueyama Yasuhiro of Japan and Dmitry Ushakov of Russia.

Roundup: Tournament full of ups and downs but highly successful

Full results, photos and commentary are linked from that, the official site.

FIG president Bruno Grandi no doubt had to deal with a number of problems over the past week. Including FIG being blasted in the press by Canadian coach Dave Ross and others.

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read Grandi’s comments – Venue operation not perfect but good enough

Looks like they will be completely ready for the Games in 2008. That’s why they call it a “test meet”. To work out the problems. Trampoline only became an Olympic sport in 2000.

Cheng Fei wins Vault, Floor AND BEAM

China’s Cheng Fei won the balance beam title, her third gold medal of the tournament, as the “Good Luck Beijing” competition concluded on Monday.

Winning even her “bad” apparatus at the Olympic test meet — she has stopped competing bars — the Chinese Olympic Team captain will be under some pressure leading up to the Games.

Cheng, who had qualified eighth to the final after falling in qualifications, won the gold despite a large wobble on her tucked full and watering down her usual triple-twisting dismount to a 2 1/2.

“I got a gold medal today, but I believe my strong points still lie in floor exercise and vault,” she said. “But through today’s competition, I gained confidence. Although balance beam is not my preferred apparatus, I am always ready to compete for the team.”

Cheng said she doesn’t plan to add more difficulty to her routines, and that her winter training will focus on her psychological stability.

“My biggest pressure comes from the younger athletes,” she said. “They are improving rapidly, and at the same time, there is little room for me to improve. I really feel anxious about it.”

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Australia’s Lauren Mitchell finished second, one tenth behind Cheng. …

Top qualifier Chellsie Memmel won the bronze with 15.300.

For videos, photos and more, visit the official event Web site: gymnastics2007.org.cn/ga/en/

International GYMNAST Magazine Online

The meet is finished. Final scores: GymnasticsResults.com

new blog – The Gym Press

Valentin Uzunov, editor of the excellent Gym Press on-line magazine, has added a blog:

GymPress.net

Update your link to the new URL.

It has an RSS feed, so I can keep track of what’s new in New Zealand between issues.

You can download the newsletter (free) there. Valentin is planning many new features. He’s one of the most active coaches on the net, a video expert.

For a sample post, check out the feature on 16-year-old Misha Koudinov from North Harbour Gymnastics who attempted to qualify for the 2008 Olympics.

He is the best prepared male gymnast, for his age and physical maturity, this country has ever seen.

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The Gym Press: Happy Birthday Misha

For the 2000 Olympics, New Zealand qualified a “Wild Card”, Kiwi David Phillips, who trained with us at Taiso in Canada. David finished a very respectable 52nd All Around. He had a fantastic career.

That same year, Kyle Shewfelt from Canada qualified last minute, the youngest male competitor in Sydney.

Unfortunately, the even younger Misha did not get through to Beijing. But we’ll be looking for him next quadrennial!