… the inaugural Slacklining Masters, which will be held in Fort William, Scotland, “will be kicking off at 12pm on Saturday 23rd February at the Lochaber Leisure Leisure Centre playing fields with the Grand Final at 4pm.†Dust off your slacklines, tie them off to some trees, and get practicing! …
“The cash prizes for the comp are now totaling a whopping two grand.
UK Champion = £500
UK 2nd place = £300
UK 3rd place = £200
International Champion = £500
International 2nd place = £300
International 3rd place = £200″
I like the graphics on a page from Tulsa World of Gymnastics. Here’s a sample:
Begin by lying on your back, your arms out to the side on the floor, and your legs elevated about 90 degrees from the ground. Using as few other muscles besides your lower abdominal muscles, lift your hips up off the floor only a few inches. Then roll your hips back on the floor and repeat.
This exercise can be done in both pike and straddle position. Place your hands on the floor next to your knees, and then scoot them forward three inches. Leaving your hands in this position, lift your legs off the ground about three inches. Drop your legs, but do not let them touch the ground, and repeat.
She had tougher tumbling and a more difficult vault in Montreal …
Dwight Normile, IG editor interview:
“Nellie,” I began confidently, “I remember you at the 1976 Olympics. You did a double back on floor, and you kept your knees together and your toes pointed.”
Nellie melted in gratitude. She thanked me — ME! — for noticing and remembering. This led to further discussion of her greatness. At those Montreal Games, she also introduced the full-twisting Tsukahara, using an inferior board to the contraptions used today. And hers was the real deal; she did the whole 540 degrees. It wasn’t the Kasamatsu-kind, where you can cartwheel on, cut the corner and get away with a lot less twist. Again, her form was impeccable.
Even we gymnasts at the time (I am the same age as Nellie) recognized that Nadia was “special”. She had a style and charisma that exceeded everyone else at the competition. At the 1976 Games, in fact. Nadia was the main story of those Olympics for all sports.
Yet today Nellie Kim is President of the Women’s Artistic Gymnastics Technical Committee.
It’s a football recruiter under the microscope. Only one of the issues is whether or not he called the football player’s girlfriend, gymnast Maranda Smith. And whether or not that was a violation of NCAA rules.
It’s still being investigated.
Gainesville, FL– The U.Florida compliance office is currently gathering information about a possible secondary recruiting violation involving Gators football coach Urban Meyer and his communication with a junior college transfer and his girlfriend, a Gators gymnast.
According to a Jan. 16 article in The Gainesville Sun, gymnast Maranda Smith said Meyer called her about signing with UF in hopes of luring her boyfriend, Carl Moore, a five-star wide receiver from Sierra (Calif.) College, to Gainesville. Moore signed his letter of intent with the Gators on Dec. 19 and enrolled in classes earlier this month. Smith competed for UCLA but transferred to Sierra last year before enrolling at UF. …
Brett on the Trampoline and Tumbling blog is doing something cool with Google Maps:
… My goal for this map is to list every USAG member gym that has a competitive Trampoline and Tumbling program. As I find lists of gyms (and have the time to enter them), I will add gyms to the map. If you would like me to add your gym to the map, just drop me a note in the comments. …
She linked to this fantastic example performed by Kui Yuanyuan (Simplified Chinese:奎媛媛) in the 1997 Worlds Beam Event Finals. Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube:
Circus performers have done double twist and far, far more on “beam-like apparatus”.
Who and how soon will we see an Artistic gymnast compete double twist? Or will the beam need to be sprung more first?
PS
I had forgotten about the Kui Yuanyuan controversy:
Kui went on to win two bronze medals at the 1997 Worlds with her team and on the balance beam.
The balance beam results turned into one of the most disputed events in gymnastics history. Kui performed one of the most difficult routines of all time, yet finished .012 behind Romania’s Gina Gogean, who competed one of the easiest sets performed in World competition during the 1990s. Kui’s rare full-twisting back layout on the beam drew gasps, as did her three split leaps to back handspring, 2 layout step-outs. Kui lost the silver medal as well, when a tie-breaker was put into effect. The results prompted the president of the Federation of International Gymnastics to publicly chastise the judges and tell them they were wrong. …
Corvallis, Ore. – The Oregon State University Department of Athletics is one of 11 Division I programs in the nation that has received an “A†for gender equity, in a letter dated Jan. 14, 2008 from Charles L. Kennedy, senior instructor of political science at Pennsylvania State University-York. Oregon State earned a national ranking of seventh, up from 30th the year previous.
The Gender Equity Scorecard V graded 115 universities in 11 major conferences of Division I athletics. The Scorecard staff evaluated the programs’ degree of commitment to women’s sports for the 2005-2006 academic year. The study’s criteria was based on participation, scholarship, coaches’ salaries, recruitment budget and operating expenses. The data was obtained utilizing the Chronicle of Higher Education’s study on gender equity via the Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act (EADA).
Oregon State was joined in the top-11 by North Texas, Nevada, Buffalo, Stanford, Idaho, Eastern Michigan, Miami (Ohio), Ball State, Utah and Toledo.
I’ve said many times before that discrimination is wrong and unethical. But that “reverse discrimination”, while still wrong, is preferable to discrimination.
What happens in arenas of sport that do not monitor gender equity as closely as does the NCAA?