One of the stranger stories you’ve heard all year.
A dispute over an autograph session between World vault champion Kayla Williams’s parents and coaches at Bozhi’s Gym Nest in Charleston, West Virginia, has caused the U.S.’s most unexpected star to stop training while she searches for a new coach, USA Today reported Thursday. …
The funniest response I’ve seen to the news that Team USA is getting a Bronze team medal for the Olympics 2000:
Dominique Dawes (triple Olympian) …
“Thanks to the due diligence of the IOC and FIG, the truth has been revealed. I could have never imagined receiving another medal after 10 years. Maybe this will inspire me to come back for a fourth Olympics. Oh wait, is there a maximum age?”
The best summing up of the entire sorry story can be read on the American Gymnast blog, posted by the always thoughtful Andy Thornton:
Coming out of the mouth of one of the biggest opponents of the age requirement to begin with…I must say I am very proud of the IOC. If the FIG is going to try to enforce such strict rules that have such a huge impact on world and Olympic competition – no matter how absurd they may be – there HAS to be consequences for violators. …
Andy lists a few of the gymnast who didn’t cheat: Russian Natalia Ziganshina and perhaps even Anna Pavlova (2000), Kristal Uzelac (2000), Uzelac (2001), Romanian Sabina Cojocar (2000), Nastia Liukin (2004), and Samantha Shapiro (2008).
You could name dozens more.
Andy links to Blythe Lawrence’s summing up on Gymnastics Examiner. It talks of the underage gymnast in the 1996 Olympics, never investigated by FIG or IOC.
Both Andy and Blythe conclude with the obvious. The minimum age requirement for competitive gymnasts must be eliminated once and for all.
The U.S. men’s team won the men’s team title at the 2010 Pacific Rim Championships at Hisense Arena today in Melbourne, Australia.
2009 U.S. junior all-around champion John Orozco of Bronx, N.Y., won the junior all-around title with a total that would have captured the senior crown.
The men return to competition on Saturday, May 1 at 7 p.m. for individual apparatus finals.
Scoring a team total of 345.950, the U.S. men earned the team title, finishing first on pommel horse (54.950), still rings (58.750), and parallel bars (58.850).
“The team is always our priority,” said U.S. men’s national team coordinator Kevin Mazeika. “We are very happy with this result.” …
China respects the IOC will be returned within one week punishment Olympic gymnastics bronze
A Chinese site, sports.qq.com, seems to confirm:
… China news agency, Beijing, April 29 (Reporter Gao Kai) – The Chinese Olympic Committee and the Chinese Gymnastics Association, said the International Olympic Committee will respect the penalties handed over within a week the Sydney Olympics bronze medal women’s gymnastics team.
It quotes General Administration of Sport Gymnastics Management Center Director Luo Chaoyi, so should be official.
Thanks ZhongguoJiayou for the link.
==== original post:
This is a surprise.
I expected a complete denial. Or that some scapegoat would be blamed, capital punishment the solution.
An article several hours old by ANITA CHANG:
The Chinese Gymnastics Association said Thursday it is “pained” by the ruling to strip its women’s team of a bronze medal from the 2000 Sydney Olympics for using an underage athlete but respects the decision.
The International Gymnastics Federation found that Dong Fangxiao was only 14 during the 2000 Games. The International Olympic Committee then ordered China to return their medals, which will now be awarded to the United States. Gymnasts must turn 16 during the Olympic year to be eligible.
“We are pained over this incident. We will learn a lesson and further strengthen all kinds of administrative work on athletes and resolutely prevent a similar incident from happening again,” the Chinese association said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua News Agency. “The attitude and stance of the Chinese Gymnastics Association is completely the same as that of the IOC.”
News that China was losing its bronze over age falsification was reported only briefly in the country’s entirely state-run media. Such an incident is considered hugely embarrassing to the communist government in the sports-crazy country that puts heavy emphasis on Olympic achievement.
The Chinese statement did not say who was responsible for the apparent age falsification or whether the gymnastics association was involved. …
• band = AWESOME
• vocalists = very, very good
• lighting = excellent, but nothing new
The highlight for me was the video editing. I cannot imagine the amount of time and genius it took to put that together. Who thought of using slow motion while Elvis straps on the guitar?
The 2,000-seat custom built theatre at the new Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter in Las Vegas is stunning. Yet the show looks somehow too spare in that huge space.
It’s intended, I assume, to provide clean, traditional visuals, taking us back to a simpler era. That didn’t work for me.
There’s no such thing as a bad Cirque show, … but for me, and most acrobatic coaches, I feel, Elvis has too much dance, not enough acrobatics. For any gymnastics coach coming to Vegas first time, I’d recommend these shows over Elvis:
Many Vegas shows have great song and dance, Jersey Boys, for example. But nobody can do acrobatics better than Cirque.
Like any new show, ELVIS is still evolving. No doubt it will be improving over the coming months. (The “Army Gymnastics” act in this show is perfect. Don’t change a thing.)