USA gymnastics wins USOC Team of the Year

2007WomensTeamshot-MinkusImages120.jpgWow.

This is a big honour. Congratulations to the girls and their coaches. To everyone in USA Gymnastics, in fact. That team is a culmination of the system.

Details on USA Gymnastics.

(via Colorado Springs Gazette Olympic sports blog)

Sonic and Mario at the Olympic Games

Brett on the Tramp and Tumble blog notes that trampoline is one of the “events” in a new game:

… the Sega video game Sonic and Mario at the Olympic Games, released last month for the Nintendo Wii and to be released later this month on the Nintendo DS. Normally I wouldn’t post about a video game here, even a game about the Olympics, but in this case I decided to make an exception. You see, the initial gymnastics event that you can try your hand at is – Trampoline!!

I tried to find a video of the Trampoline part of the game that I could post here, but didn’t find one I could use. You can, however, see a video of the Trampoline (and other) part of the game at the game’s home page: click on the Events tab, then Gymnastics button, and you will see the button for Trampoline. …

Tramp and Tumble

The only other Gymnastics event is Vault:

Mario-vault.jpg
screen shot

how to build a pommel bucket

The October 2007 CrossFit Journal (#62) had a cover story on using a pommel bucket for general strength conditioning.

“Bucket Circles” – Gymnastics coach Phil Savage explains how to use a simple bucket-and-rope contraption to allow the Rest of Us to train like gymnasts. Working the ability to perform circles on the floor (as male gymnasts do in competition on the pommel horse) with the feet supported and rotating around the body provides excellent strength and coordination work that carries over to all sorts of endeavors.

pommel-bucket.jpg
CrossFit Journal: October 2007

I like these buckets for beginners, and for recreation. The flat floor (as shown) is safest. Be sure to put marks on the floor so the kids know where to place the hands.

The bucket shown, however, is not the ideal design. Having built many over the years, the best way I’ve found is to suspend the bucket in a “twist belt” by height adjustable chain and cable. Attaching to a boxing swivel on the roof.

Expensive, yes. But worth it.

Leave a comment if you have any other advice for coaches who want to build one.

Related post: forearm circles on the pommel bucket

Parenting the Average Athlete

Sports Girls Play, inspired by Tom Burgdorf, posted something really important. Something you just don’t read about very often.

I was a very average athlete. Yet gymnastics became my life.

It’s great to see someone thinking about the most of us.

Parenting the Average Athlete

gymnastics-score.jpgIf you have a child on a sports team, chances are they are an average athlete – after all, the stars are few and far between. Every team is made up of more average athletes than it is stars, yet so much self worth of parents and athletes is caught up in the star mentality.

When Tom Burgdorf’s Parenting an Athlete newsletter showed up in my inbox this morning, his first message really struck a chord with me:

Teams will always be comprised of athletes who are different. Teams will always have “stars”, “athletes with a little less of everything” and “athletes with even less of everything.” That is the way it has been, is now and will be in the future. The kids had better learn about it and get used to it.

They are going to be faced with the same situation in EVERY aspect of their life where there is a group. Middle school, high school, college, sports, business, relationships, everything. We can’t all be stars in everything we do. To learn that you are talented in some things and that others are more talented in other areas is a huge life lesson.

A team is great because of a lot of people, not just the “stars.”…

Parenting the Average Athlete

appalling – Children of the Chinese Circus

In 2007 the BBC aired a documentary called Children of the Chinese Circus.

On the BBC website, the viewers were “horrified”. Read the comments.

This grim and fascinating documentary looked at the Shanghai Circus school. …

Behind the scenes, we witness gruelling training regimes with kids as young as eight having their limbs stretched to the point of agony and tested to breaking point. Seeing these children being pushed around while a trainer shouts “REMEMBER YOUR COLLECTIVE DUTY!” and “YOU SIMPLY DON’T WANT TO BE SUCCESSFUL!!!” is heartbreaking.

The documentary/film is without narration… leaving the tale to be told by the people being filmed. This leaves the whole thing feeling incredibly stark, cruel and cold… which in itself is a masterstroke as it shows the incredible hardships suffered by the children as they learn horrific looking postures like ‘The Sweat Push’. The pressure and the seething anger of the trainers is almost palpable, which is all the more hard-hitting without being softened by an overdub from an overly concerned saccharine thespian.

To watch these children being mentally abused, pushed to the point of injury and pressure by everyone they meet is amazingly woeful. Robbed of their childhood and forced to met unfair demands, you cannot help but wonder what becomes of them in later years. Briefly, we see a man in hospital who used to perform with a circus, and his list of injuries is frankly appalling. Children of the Chinese Circus is one of the most terrifying and depressing things I’ve ever seen. Tragic and grotesquely fascinating.

TV Scoop: TV Review – Children of the Chinese Circus, BBC4, Tuesday, 10pm

A similar documentary is up on YouTube. (I think it’s not the BBC special. Leave a comment below if you have seen Children of the Chinese Circus online.)

Here’s a sample of the kind of unbelievable acrobatics children do at Chinese Circus Schools.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Before we get too judgmental about severe coaching of children in China, consider the alternatives for those kids. Would you rather have them working in a factory?

I want to hear what they and their parents think about the coaching.

double layout dismounts from bars

Yet more great captures from Trent Nelson, Chief Photographer at the Salt Lake Tribune. Utah gymnasts:

double-layout.jpg

Two eerily similar photographs of dismounts. Above: Katie Kivisto, Below: Jamie Deetscreek.

double-layout2.jpg

Tribune Blogs — Fly on the Wall

You might expect the girls to have their arms pinned to their sides. (That would be more artistic.) Having the the arms forward like this allows them to either increase or decrease rotation slightly, depending on what is needed to “stick” the landing. (This is the NCAA, remember. Landing is everything with their scoring system.)

Related:

  • vault photos from the end of the horse
  • great gymnastics photos – Trent Nelson
  • teaching safe rope climb to beginners

    by Rick McCharles

    A group of experts brainstormed the best ways to introduce rope climbing to children at a recent clinic.

    I volunteered to put together a short video of the techniques discussed.

    Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

    Note that none of the activities shown have children climbing high. In fact, we said any athlete who wants to climb to the roof must first prove ability to climb half way, down, half way, and down. Then you can be sure they have the “stuff” to get to the top.

    We also asked every demonstrator to climb down with feet. This reduces the risk they might be tempted to slide down, burning their hands.

    Not yet included in the video is this point emphasized by Keith Russell:

    Knots at the end of a rope are a danger when “flicking” through the air. They also make the rope deteriorate more quickly. (If you must have a knot, make a figure-8. And remove it once the activity is finished.

    Better is to set a “no knots” rule. And be sure to buy your rope long enough so that it lies flat on the ground:

    Want to know more? One website documents the decline in the popularity of rope climb.

    I’m not so sure about that. There are more kids climbing ropes better today than ever in history, I reckon. Thanks to gymnastics coaches. It’s one of our very best activities.

    If you have any suggestions or additional drills for the video, leave a comment below. Thanks.

    check out New York Kids Club

    Chessia made us aware of this interesting program:

    The New York Kids Club, now in its seventh season, has become New York City’s premier facility for children between the ages of 6 months and 12 years old.

    Firmly believing that children succeed in a structured and nurturing environment, the curriculum for the New York Kids Club classes provides children with the opportunity to build confidence through consistent performance in both physically challenging courses such as gymnastics, rock climbing, and martial arts, as well as the opportunity to express their own creativity and individuality through dance, drama, music, art and cooking.

    NY-Kids_Club.jpg

    New York KiDs Club

    I want to watch Shannon Miller on Gymnastics 360

    Shannon.jpgSeems we don’t have CN8, The Comcast Network, streaming where I live. (At least their confusing, slow loading website has never yet delivered me streaming Shannon Miller.)

    The best gymnastics TV show anywhere — Gymnastics 360 — is on cn8. I guess it streams only to 9 million Comcast cable viewers in 12 states on the east coast of the USA.

    Too bad, so sad, for me.

    Here’s the tentative line-up of shows for this season:

    … Hosted by two-time Olympic gold medalist Shannon Miller and CN8’s Emmy Award-winning Gregg Murphy, the show features exciting gymnastics action, up-and-coming stars and local athletes. …

    “Gymnastics 360” episodes airing on CN8 include:

    Good Luck Beijing International Invitational, Saturday, December 29

    In Pursuit of Gold, Saturday, January 12

    George Washington Invitational, Saturday, January 26

    Gym Gala, Saturday, February 9

    UCLA at Georgia, Saturday, March 29

    European Women’s Championship, Saturday, April 19

    NCAA Men’s Championship

    European Men’s Championship, Saturday, May 24

    Beijing: Ready or Not, Saturday, June 28th

    Shannon assesses the U.S. Olympic Trials and the European Championships as the stage is set for the Olympic Games in August. The special will feature highlights, interviews and expert analysis.

    ***Schedule subject to change

    CN8 Press Release

    Am I confused?

    Is there no way for me to purchase these shows? Or must I wait until someone posts them on YouTube? Leave a comment if you know how to make it work.

    Seems Comcast should find some way to market their product to fans around the world who want to buy it.

    See a sample: In Pursuit of Gold, Saturday, January 12