Shawn Johnson’s gym flooded

Olivia Howe let us know of this disaster:

In spite of a community’s sandbagging efforts Thursday night, Chow’s Gymnastics & Dance studio at 2210 Park Ave. in West Des Moines was knee deep in water Friday. …

The flooding displaced Olympic hopeful Shawn Johnson and other gymnasts from their practice facility.

“With the Olympic trials coming up next week, this can’t have found a worse time,” said Liang Chow, owner of the facility and Johnson’s coach.

Chow made arrangements with Iowa State University for Johnson and the competitive gymnastics team she practices with to train at that facility today and Saturday.

About 100 people showed up Thursday night to move equipment to a higher floor and to sandbag around Chow’s, including city councilmen and West Des Moines government personnel.

“I think it would have been a lot worse if we weren’t sandbagging,” West Des Moines city councilman Jim Sandager said. “Shawn is a community asset and we wanted to do what we can to protect her training schedule,”

“I’m not complaining,” Chow said. “I have a very touched heart to see so many people helping me.”

Chow’s Gymnastics knee-deep in water – Des Moine Register

Shawn.jpg
(AP Photo/Mary Schwalm) – ESPN

ice bath to manage chronic wrist pain

Quebec Men’s Artistic coaches at the Canadian National Championships told me of a new program being tested.

Boys after Pommel Horse training were daily plunging their hands and wrists into a bucket filled with ice water for up to 5min.

Reports are that chronic wrist pain has been much reduced.

Interesting …

I asked Ed Louie who works with the medical support team of the Canadian Men’s National Team what he thought of the experiment. Ed could not see any downside to the treatment. If it works — great. (He did feel 5min is probably too long.)

I then checked with Anatomy Professor, former Canadian Men’s National Team Coach, Keith Russell. He too was supportive of the experiment and noted that other sports — e.g. Athletics — were using ice plunge as a daily recovery modality.

pommel.jpg

UPDATE: Dr. Bill Sands, Performance Services – Recovery Center, U.S. Olympic Training Center wrote:

Virtually all of the thermal modalities have one primary mechanism in common: increased blood flow. In the case of ice, there is also a potential for reduction of inflammation (and its concommitant by-products) along with increased blood flow. While ice and other (less) cold modalities have been in use since ancient times, we still find that some people respond well and others do not. If there’s one thing I’ve learned in the two years of running our Recovery Center – one size does not fit all. We have a “cold plunge” in our Recovery Center (51 deg F), that athletes use primarilly for legs (since most sports, not gymnastics so much, rely most heavily on legs), but athletes have found that sticking a sore arm or wrist in the cold plunge seems to help them. We also provide ice bags, and of course it is very common to see athletes walking around complex with ice bags wrapped with a clear plastic wrap all the time (they get them from sports medicine).

One of the thornier questions I’m struggling with is where is the line between “rehab” and “recovery.” “Recovery” has become another garbage can term that is now so broadly defined as to have become pretty useless. Are we talking about “healing” something that is injured, or are we talking about returning a “fatigued” athlete to top form more rapidly. Of course, you can get into a fist fight regarding a definition of “fatigue.”

In closing, I would say that ice baths for sore wrists is unlikely to do harm, and may do some good. However, it is important to realize that the body part in the cold must be moved rather continuously to prevent blood pooling. The pooling of blood can ultimately result in some damage to tissues, so the blood has to be kept moving.

Letting A Coach Go

From Tom Burgdorf’s Oct. 15th GYMNET Sports FREE Parenting An Athlete weekly newsletter:

We hate to do it in most cases. We know that there are relationships between the coaches and the athletes and their parents. We know the history. We know the ups and downs. We know that the athletes are sensitive and that the coaches are important to them. And we want it that way. But.

When you are running a business like a gymnastics club, martial arts business, dance studio, or similar business, the coaches have 2 jobs. One job is to coach. The other job is to be a productive, positive, loyal employee of the business. Not everyone does a good job at both. We have seen numerous times where the person is doing a great job with the kids and the parents but they are not doing a good job with the other coaches or maybe the owner.

For all of you who own your own business, I think you can relate. You might have the best chef in the city for your restaurant, but if she doesn’t show up on time, takes too much time off, etc., etc. you may have to make a change. That change being in the best interest of the entire business. …

So there can be a time when we give chance after chance for the coach to change but when they don’t we have to let them go. We know it hurts. It hurts us too. But the gym, our business, is more important than any one person, except for the owner who has risked so much.

What You Can Do

When a coaching change happens, use the situation to teach your athlete about business and about how sometimes changes have to be made. We don’t have to get into the negatives, just tell your athletes that not everyone fits into every situation. And that the coach will be happier in a new situation. Yes the coach will miss her/his athletes. And there will be a period of sadness for everyone. But in life you have to get over these disappointing situations and move on. The new coach will do a good job too. …

Coaching changes are a way of life. We all need to get through the situation and get back to normal as soon as possible.

You might want to subscribe to Tom’s FREE Parenting An Athlete weekly newsletter. Simply send your e – mail address to tom at tomgymnet @ aol.com and get it every Monday morning via e – mail.

I am a sucker for the Olympics

Laura Figueroa recommended this Olympic promo video featuring Nastia Liukin, Shawn Johnson, and Alicia Sacramone.

I love this stuff.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Music by ANDRES FIERRO. (MySpace)

UPDATE: If you like that video, Laura recommends this follow-up: Beijing 2008 – “Dejame Tocarte”

Dean Potter – slackline 400ft high

Dean Potter is the controversial rock climber increasingly attracted to B.A.S.E. jumping.

Here Dean combines the sports of slacklining with a B.A.S.E. jump — something he calls baselining.

A Walk in the Clouds – NY Times

Related: Aerialist – The Movie

Ekaterina Lobaznyuk – 2000 Olympics

We were honoured to have “Kat” Lobaznyuk at our coaching course this week, a member of the Russian team at the 2000 Olympics. She is now coaching in Vancouver, Canada at Omega.

BRONZE – Vault finals. Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

SILVER – Balance Beam finals. Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Bin Fan, multiple Olympic medalist from China, is assisting me with the course, as well. Bin and Kat were comparing Olympic experiences at dinner tonight.

Bin is Men’s Head Coach at the host club, Calgary Gymnastics Centre. And coach of National Champion Adam Wong.

Bin will be hosting the final staging training camp before the Canadian Olympic Team flies to Beijing.

German Olympic Gymnastics Team

University of Utah gymnast Daria Bijak has made Germany’s Olympic team after placing fourth in the all-around at the German National Championships on June 7 in Chemnitz. Bijak was notified of her selection to the team on June 11. The first three finishers qualified automatically.

Bijak’s 56.30 all-around score was .30 out of third place. She also placed fourth on beam, bars and vault and was sixth on the floor.

Her next competition will be at the Beijing Olympic Games, which start on August 8. Bijak, who won the German national all-around championship in 2005 and 2006, qualified for Germany’s Olympic team in 2000, but missed the Olympics due to an Achilles injury. Germany did not qualify for the 2004 Olympics.

Bijak becomes the fourth Ute gymnast to make her country’s Olympic gymnastics team, joining Cheryl Weatherstone (Great Britain 1984), Missy Marlowe (USA 1988) and current teammate Gael Mackie (Canada 2004).

CSTV.com

She hit all four events in their championships.

Translation: German » English

The DTB nominated for the women’s team Katja Abel (SC Berlin), Daria Bijak (TT Toyota Cologne / University of Utah), Anja Brinker (TV Herkenrath), Oksana Chusovitina (TT Toyota Cologne), Marie-Sophie Hindermann (TSG Tuebingen) and Joeline Möbius (TuS Chemnitz-old village). As the seventh woman will turn Kim Bui (TSG Tuebingen) with travel to Beijing and ready in case of failure.

The German men’s team were Philipp Boy (SC Cottbus), Fabian Hambüchen (TSG Wetzlar-Niedergirmes), Robert Juckel (SC Cottbus), Marcel Nguyen (TSV Unterhaching), Eugen Spiridonov (TV Bous) and Thomas Andergassen (KTV Stuttgart) nominated. As an additional Turner will Helge Liebrich (TSV sweetening) and Robert Weber (TSV Ehmen) with direct competition to prepare to travel to Japan.

On last Thursday (05.06.08) were the two trampoline Turner Anna Dogonadze (MTV Bad Kreuznach) and Henrik Stehlik (TGJ Salzgitter) nominated by the DTB.

Germany-gymnasts.jpg

DTB

(via difficulty plus execution)

gymnast Dominique Dawes on body image

Did Dominique have an eating disorder?

Of course not. She was a triple Olympian.

In this interview she speaks about growing up petite and muscular. The psychological challenges of being built like an Olympic gymnast in a world where magazine models are 5′ 10″ tall.

Dominique, 31, was the first African-American woman to win an individual medal in gymnastics, having won bronze in the floor exercise at the ’96 Games, the second of her third Olympics. She was recently named – along with her teammates on the “Magnificent Seven” from 1996 – to the United States Olympic Committee’s Hall of Fame and will be inducted in June.

BlogHer audiocast interview

gymnast Caslavska – Olympic protest 1968

VERA CASLAVSKA of Czechoslovakia is in the Hall of Fame. She won more individual Olympic gold medals than anyone in history.

You’ll hear her name in the lead up to Beijing:

After all these years the Tommie Smith-John Carlos Black Power salute at the 1968 Mexico City Games has come to dominate the discourse, at least in America, when it turns to protests by athletes at the Olympics.

But at those Games there was one other protest, equally eloquent and probably even more courageous: that of Caslavska, as she shared the victory stand with the Soviet gymnast Larissa Petrik. Two months before the Games began, the USSR invaded Czechoslovakia to crush the Prague Spring democracy movement. So when Caslavska and Petrik stood atop the medal stand after tying for the overall gold medal and the Soviet anthem was played, Caslavska turned her head down and away, and kept it averted until the anthem ended.

�áslavská_protest.jpg

… actively involved in the democracy movement. … She was almost denied permission to travel to Mexico City for the Games. But her performances there, the plight of her country, and the eloquence of her protest made her the most popular athlete at the Games. …

Caslavska’s protests had serious ramifications. Upon returning to Czechoslovakia she was denied employment, and she would remain unemployed until authorities finally allowed her to coach a gymnastics club in 1975. …

NY Times

There are many things to protest in China. I wonder if we’ll see any other symbolic podium gestures in Beijing.

Thanks to the Wordsmith from Nantucket.