Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
1/1-out progressions
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
The premiere Dutch website has a new address:
And is now being updated in both Dutch and English. No more Google Translate for me.
Thanks Lisa.
UPDATE:
The regular website http://www.gympower.nl will soon be in the new format, as well. So you can check http://www.gympower.org OR http://www.gympower.nl.
They are updating the huge archive of posts over the past 5 years.
WAG 1998-2000
1. China 162.963
2. Great Britain 160.064
3. Australia gold 150.798
Brigid McCarthy:
… The tiny Chinese team were exquisite and had some huge skills on bars. On this event we saw some multiple releases, and several full-twisting double layout dismounts. …
… China was exactly as I expected. Bars were nearly flawless, while there were some falls and mistakes once they hit beam and floor. But there was also that magical, stunning Chinese form and dedication to execution. They were expected to win on difficulty and, despite the mistakes of youth, they prevailed …
… for me, it was the British girls who were the revelation of the meet. … They had big skills, wonderful presentation, great choreography and showed great calm under pressure given their limited experience in international competition. Catherine Lyons, who is already known for her stunning form, was magical on beam and floor, and came out on top in the beam rankings. …
Click PLAY or watch Catherine Lyons’ Beam on YouTube.
The GB men’s team stole the show taking the title in style. The team of Courtney Tulloch, Nile Wilson, James Hall and Dominick Cunningham powered through to be crowned champions ahead of China …
1. Great Britain 250.050
2. China 243.050
3. Australia 231.550
Catherine at Beautiful Gymnastics has commentary and links to video.
Can all of your gymnasts do half twists in sequence up to their maximum number of twists?
Or have any “lost” some of those twists over time due to lack of training?
Click PLAY or watch Denis Vachon on YouTube.
Dance Dance Trampoline
Slightly Overdone:
For over a year I had been thinking about using a trampoline as a game interface. When I got the opportunity to present an installation at the A.NY Party in the Design Centre De Winkelhaak in Antwerp, the time was ripe to put thoughts into actions. On the 15th of January 2013 I presented the first prototype to 400 creative people, and they jumped to it.
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
More info on this project.
This is Aref from Yemen.

He was put in this chair 8yrs prior after a bad fall.
I guessed the skill was double front. Correct. He was doing a skill easy for him, double front from spring board on to a good crash mat. It only takes one over-rotation. Be very, very careful when training multiple fronts. They are by far the most dangerous acrobatic skill.
Aref is doing well in 2013, working with the Yemeni Olympic Committee.
… one of the top elite programs in the U.S., Texas Dreams Gymnastics run by Kim Zmeskal-Burdette and Chris Burdette. This video shows their second training session of the day back in November of 2012 as they worked new skills for the 2013 elite season. …
Click PLAY or watch it on Gymnastike.
Uncle Tim was there for opening day of the (poorly attended) Battle of California:
Haas Pavilion was packed on Sunday afternoon for the first of five matchups between Stanford and Cal this season.
… Cal lost to Stanford: 425.000 to 411.150. As the scores indicate, it was a rather decisive victory for the Cardinal gymnasts, who basically swept the individual titles as well. (Cal’s Jeffrey Langenstein tied Stanford’s Eddie Penev for the floor title. That was the only first place finish for the Bears.) Generally speaking, if a college team is going to be in the hunt, it needs to score 70 or above on almost every apparatus. Cal, unfortunately, fell short of that mark on five of the six events. …
Even though they lost, Cal has a lot to be proud of. Their team is made up of mostly freshmen–13 of their 20 gymnasts are freshmen–and for their youth, they posted a very respectable team score. …
My biggest concern for both teams is their health. More specifically, I’m worried about the gymnasts’ knees. On floor exercise, the trend is to do a lot of twisting in combination. Unfortunately, I saw a lot of gymnasts twisting right off the ground (a big no-no), as well as many who were still twisting as they’re feet are hitting the ground (an even bigger no-no). Those two things, in and of themselves, are recipes for disaster …
Click PLAY or watch Eddie Penev’s Floor on YouTube.
Team scores from the weekend
Penn State: 446.85 (HOLY MOTHER OF NADIA!)
Illinois: 425.45
Stanford: 425.00
Oklahoma: 423.5
Nebraska: 418.9
Two Olympic Champions.
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
Straddle Tkachev is Gabby’s best skill, I reckon.
Made for the 2012 Paralympic Games, this ad features a disabled runner making his way past wheelchairs, emergency vehicles and an accident scene, before breaking away into a fast run. It’s an inspiring metaphor for people’s ability to overcome challenges, and one of HuffPost’s most totally favourite ads of the year.
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.