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.
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).
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.
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 onbeam: 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.
— 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. …
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. …