Australian Youth Olympic Festival

The 5th annual — and the biggest yet — AYOF runs 14 – 18 January, 2009 in Sydney.

With 1,600, 550 officials, 17 sports, and 25 invited nations, this is one of the most important Junior multi-sport competitions in the world.

Rhythmic, Artistic and Trampoline are scheduled.

Australia has named their WAG team:

Britt Greeley – VIS/VIC
Emily Little – WAIS/WA
Mary-Anne Monckton – AIS/NSW
Georgia-Rose Brown – MBC/QLD
Emma Collister – Waverley/VIC
Ashley Cooney – WAIS/WA
Natalia Joura – WAIS/WA
Karina Brooks – QAS/QLD

Australian Gymnastics Blog

The British competitors are listed on British-Gymnastics.org.

AOC-logo.jpg

Official Gymnastics home page on the Australian Youth Olympic Festival site.

The USA and Canada are attending in some sports, but I’ve not heard if any gymnasts are going.

who invented the Kolman on Hbar?

Urejanje Lojze Kolman from Slovania, born 1967 most would say.

He won Bronze on Horizontal Bar at the 1990 European championships with an original move: a Kovacs with a 1/1 twist.

But I was there in the early morning session at the 1985 World Championships when unknown Tony Pineda from Mexico threw this MONSTER routine. It was one of the highlights of the entire meet.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Tony was coached by Hideo Mizoguchi in Oregon. Truly one of the most unique and explosive gymnasts ever.

The code tries to differentiate the Pineda (Gaylord 2 with half out) and the Kolman (Double back with 1/1 twist).

Pineda.jpg

Kolman.jpg

I don’t buy that distinction. Fabian Hambüchen added what he calls a “Pineda” to his horizontal bar routine last weekend, setting a new world-record for difficulty.

This should be the same skill, regardless of where the twist happens.

Tony Pineda was first to compete the Kolman. It should be named after him alone.

Tony is still coaching, by the way.

UPDATE: Check the comments for a discussion on who did the Gaylord first … Mitch Gaylord or Tony Pineda.

who invented the Onodi on beam?

Henrietta Ónodi from Hungary was one of my favourite gymnasts when she unexpectedly won Vault at the 1992 Olympics.

Her name is known worldwide now for the gorgeous Onodi on beam: backward handspring with a half turn to forward walkover. (Olympic Champion Nastia Liukin does it beautifully, for example.)

However, here’s Olga Mostepanova from the former USSR competing an Onodi back in 1984.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Here’s another video clip of her performing it in 1983.

I’ve seen it referred to as a Mostepanova-Onodi.

But truly it should be called a Mostepanova.

UPDATE: MostepanovaFan notes that Onodi, as a gymnast learning the trick, called it the “Mostie”.

(via Past & Present Gymnastics)

related: Whatever happened to Olga Mostepanova

Lord of the Rings – Yuri van Gelder

Gelder.jpg
source

Triple Full posted some interesting news:

— Two years from now, Dutch ring specialist Yuri van Gelder will be seen doing something quite spectacular: Performing his ring routine while suspended from Rotterdam’s Erasmus Bridge, so as to promote the 2010 World Championships, which will be held in Rotterdam (also site of the 1987 Worlds).

The stunt was announced yesterday by the organizing committee of the 2010 Worlds. …


International News Roundup

Erasmus.jpg
larger original – flickr – name

worst gymnastics leotard ever

The Couch Gymnast has posted 6 leotards to choose from in a poll: World’s Worst Leotard Heat 1…

I voted for …

WWL geo chusso.jpg
#3; Nineties Geometric Uzebekistani style (Oksana Chussovitina) – larger version

how crappy is the FIG website?

Triple Full has a scathing review of the FIG (International Gymnastics Federation) website. Especially their photo galleries.

… Have you ever had the feeling that the FIG didn’t really know what it was doing? That it was just making things up as it went along, with nary a thought for the consequences of its decisions? We most definitely have. Over the years we’ve had countless discussions about how the FIG was ruining our sport with its trillion stupid rules, none of which increased the appeal of the sport in the slightest. Over the years we’ve spent days if not weeks lamenting the fact that gymnastics is no longer the artistic sport it once was, that competitions are no longer held the way they once were, etc. Often these conversations ended in a mega-frustrated “Can’t the FIG see what it’s doing? Don’t they watch their own competitions?”

Well, it appears they don’t. Or at least their press people and webmasters don’t. …

Triple Full – In Which We Say Unkind Things about the FIG

The FIG website for years barely worked at all.

The current edition I would say is “not bad”.

FIG-website.jpg
Federation International Gymnastique – official website

At least it provides RSS feeds like this one: Main RSS. If you are one of the 10% of people who use an RSS Reader, that feature is critical.

Certainly I ignore their site, visiting it as infrequently as possible.

acrobatic elements on beam video

This is the last of the MostepanovaFan video guides to the 2009 Code of Points.

Many are hoping she makes more. Leave a comment or rating on any of her YouTube videos if you want to add your voice.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

related MostepanovaFan posts:

  • gymnastics – bar mounts video
  • balance beam dismounts video
  • video guide to beam mounts
  • Manna press to inverted handstand

    I’ve seen a few male gymnasts do Manna (high V-sit) press to inverted position.

    The best was Bill Roth from Temple. (A BIG guy.)

    But nothing like THIS.

    A gymnast from Jamaica (near the end of her beam routine) at the WOGA Invitational.

    Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

    This was linked from Andrew Thornton’s weekly video column on Gymnast: Smooth Skills – Part 18

    One commenter says her name is Shanay Gentles.

    poll – best Aussie gymnasts ever

    Results are in.

    1. Dasha Joura
    2. Allana Slater
    3. Hollie Dykes

    full results – The Couch Gymnast

    Joura.jpg
    Dasha – The Australian