The Little Gym – franchise

I was surprised and impressed to see a Google ad for a program in my area called The Little Gym®. (Not many gymnastics programs are using Google ads.)

Little-Gym

The excellent website tells of 300 locations in 21 countries.

Click through if you might be interested.

In order to open a The Little Gym location, a candidate must have a net worth (assets minus liabilities) of at least $250,000. Additionally, the candidate must have $75,000 in liquid assets in order to be considered. …

Franchise opportunity

Leave a comment if you have experience with any of those gyms.

Gymnastics Finalists posted

Click through to the official Longines results page for all results.

Click on (PDF) to see just the Women’s Apparatus Finalists.

Thanks melanie.

best photos Gymnastics Worlds

I’ve seen thousands of pics over the last 2 days.

But the best of all were the series posted by The Big Picture.

chalk-gymnast

Britain's Rebecca Wing celebrates
Britain's Rebecca Wing celebrates

Check out The Big Picture.

… But it’s strange I haven’t seen a single routine video as yet.

World Gymnastics Prelims end

Thanks to all the bloggers, twitterers, Facebookers and photographers for the many long hours you spent scrambling between the meet and the internet. It was appreciated by those of us who could not be there.

A special thanks to Inside Gymnastics’ Grace Chui. (I believe I’ve linked to her work more than to any other.)

Final-results

Lauren Mitchell 3rd overall

Sweet as.

Congratulations Australia!

1. Bross USA–57.40
2. Porgras ROM–57.30
3. Mitchell AUS–56.675

4. Deng CHN–56.35, 5. Sloan USA-56.075, 6. Kurbatova RUS-55.95, 7. Tsurumi JPN-55.925 8. Yang CHN–55.5, 9. Kaeslin SUI-55.45, 10. Semenova RUS–54.90

Lauren Mitchell is the current National Champion.

Courtney Kupets Sportswoman of the Year

Via Sports Girls Play:

Former Olympian and NCAA Champion Gymnast Courtney Kupets was awarded the 2009 Sportswoman of the Year award for an individual sport. Courtney’s list of achievements over the past 4 years while she was competing for University of Georgia are just staggering. Courtney came back from a torn Achilles tendon in her junior year to lead the Gymdogs to a fifth straight NCAA team title and she won the all around, bars, beam and floor titles as well. Throughout her collegiate career, she earned nin individual NCAA championship titles – more than any other gymnast – ever. …

Congratulations. Well deserved.

30th Annual Salute To Women In Sports Awards - VIP Receptionhttp://cdn.pis.picapp.com/IamProd/PicAppPIS/JavaScript/PisV4.js

NEW YORK – OCTOBER 13: Gymnasts Shawn Johnson (L) and Courtney Kupets attend the 30th Annual Salute To Women In Sports Awards at The Waldorf=Astoria on October 13, 2009 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

Rebecca Bross will win prelims

With the highest All-around score only 57.30 through 4 of 5 rotations, it’s not really much going out on a limb to make this prediction.

Liukin-Bross
photo by Grace Chiu

Of course the Preliminary round is quite unimportant for Rebecca, except on those apparatus she wants to qualify for Event Finals.

=== Update:

A pretty good meet, the biggest deduction coming on Beam where she touched her hands on the Patterson dismount, double arabian.

Beth Tweddle fell on Bars

Too bad. She missed her insanely difficult routine in front of the home town crowd.

… first thing I knew about it was when my head hit the floor. …

Artistic Gymnastics World Championships 2009 - Day Twohttp://cdn.pis.picapp.com/IamProd/PicAppPIS/JavaScript/PisV4.js

Beth Tweddle’s world title defence comes to disappointing end when she falls in qualifying

Happily, Beth did qualify for the Floor Final.

beam photos – WOW

Great images are distributed via the internet in near real time.

Deng Linlin of China performs on balance beam on the first day of women’s competition at the 2009 World Gymnastics Championships in London.

APTOPIX Britain World Gymnastics Championships

AP Photo/Alastair Grant – Gymnastics Examiner

Artistic Gymnastics World Championships 2009 - Day Twohttp://cdn.pis.picapp.com/IamProd/PicAppPIS/JavaScript/PisV4.js

how David can beat Golliath

A non-stop full-court press gives weak basketball teams a chance against far stronger teams. Why have so few adopted it?

full-court-press

John emailed me an excellent article from The New Yorker:

HOW DAVID BEATS GOLIATH
When underdogs break the rules.
by Malcolm Gladwell

While not specific to gymnastics, it’s an excellent read for all sports coaches.

I love the story of how Vivek Ranadivé, with no basketball experience, decided to coach his daughter Anjali’s basketball team.

… They weren’t all that tall. They couldn’t shoot. They weren’t particularly adept at dribbling. They were not the sort who played pickup games at the playground every evening. Most of them were, as Ranadivé says, “little blond girls” from Menlo Park and Redwood City, the heart of Silicon Valley. These were the daughters of computer programmers and people with graduate degrees. They worked on science projects, and read books, and went on ski vacations with their parents, and dreamed about growing up to be marine biologists. Ranadivé knew that if they played the conventional way—if they let their opponents dribble the ball up the court without opposition—they would almost certainly lose to the girls for whom basketball was a passion. …

Not knowing any better, Coach told the girls to play a full court press defence for the entire game, every game.

Read the article to find out what happened – HOW DAVID BEATS GOLIATH