Yamilet Pena fell at 2011 Worlds, 2012 Olympics and twice at 2013 Worlds — yet this Code of Points keeps placing her in Finals.
Arabian Punch Front:
Scarier … was Phan Thi Ha Thanh attempting the Amanar …
With the triple twisting Yurchenko on it’s way, I worry for the state of vaulting. We have gymnasts landing Produnovas to their heads (or to forward roll would be the nice way of saying it). We have gymnasts competing underrotated Amanars (think Shawn Johnson to Maria Paseka). We have gymnasts getting credit for laid out Podkopayeva’s (Yurchenko 1/2 on pike half off) when they are indeed piked. And now, joining the group of not-yet-ready-to-land Produnovas, we have gymnasts creating a new group of not-yet-ready-to-land Amanars. The same way Pena seems safer than Mahmoud, we’re entering a world where Paseka seems safer than Phan. …
Vault deductions doubled? (at least)
Improve the landing mat? (something like that used for Double Mini)
Use video analysis to award part of the score for Height & Distance? (as Trampoline does with “Air Time”)
Reward clean twisting more?
Will FIG WTC do anything this quadrennial to FIX Vault judging?
… I doubt it. They failed to fix it from last quad. Expect to see someone falling on Prudnova and someone injured in every World Final from here to Rio.
It’s going to take some accident more horrific than Mustafina or Netteb on international TV before somebody fixes the Rules.
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It’s also the Men’s most dangerous apparatus in 2013. Changes in the WAG Code should be matched in the MAG Code.
Jennie Lynn Finch … is a former American softball player who pitched for the USA national softball team and the Chicago Bandits. Jennie helped lead Team USA to the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics and a silver medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics.
Time magazine described her as the most famous softball player in history. In 2010, Finch retired from softball to focus on her family. …
Finch was the most dominant and recognizable softball pitcher of her era …
According to Mike Candrea, her coach at Arizona and through two Olympics,
“Jennie has transformed this sport, touched millions of young kids in many different ways – whether it’s fashion, whether it’s the way she plays the game – but through it all she’s been very humble.”
A Chicago Tribune editorial commented,
“She leaves with a spotless personal reputation, an intent to keep promoting softball, and the knowledge that she has inspired other girls and women who play for the love of the game.” …