…on whether she was happy with what she achieved in Ghent:
“No. Well for me this was more like a friendly meet. Nonetheless I am not satisfied…” …
… She also mentioned that she has other things that she wants to add to her BB routine to make it more difficult for the Olympics more difficult compared to what she showed both in Ghent and in Euros. …
… …on why are some people surprised that she might be a contender for the beam medals in London
“You know, not many people believed in my comeback” she said… she also added that she felt like at first no one had faith, except for herself and her mother… not even the coaches
Actually, she’s wondering about the deductions on that finals routine, a bit surprised that judges only gave her pike instead of layout on the two foot.
… Nathan Bailey, Kat Driscoll, Bryony Page, Emma Smith and Steven Williams’s bodies were broken up into fragmented forms and motions by a bank of six mirrors. …
Dr. Jeni McNeal is researching sport applications of thermal imaging technology. AKA thermography.
… An exercise science professor at Eastern Washington University, McNeal is working on new ways to detect injuries in athletes, and to help them recover from the rigorous training …
… in research she chronicled in a new paper this year, McNeal and a colleague from the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs used thermal imaging to see weak spots that naked eyes and X-rays could never detect.
“It’s something that’s been used in trying to early-detect breast cancer,” McNeal says. …
… Of course, there’s still more work to be done. So far, McNeal’s work has been mostly qualitative. What she needs now, she says, are quantitative surveys of injuries — showing, say, what a sprained ankle looks like in the thermal camera on Day One, Day Two, Day Three — so that they can better track and diagnose injuries as they happen. …