Izzy became a quad amputee at age 7. Yet she competed Trampoline. #respect
Instagram (@itz.izz), Twitter (@itz_izz)
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
Izzy became a quad amputee at age 7. Yet she competed Trampoline. #respect
Instagram (@itz.izz), Twitter (@itz_izz)
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
… Spring of 2020, due to government restrictions I found myself stuck at home with a lot of time on my hands.
When I was younger, Pallets were always the go to obstacles for honing my skills on the Trials Bike, so it was only fitting to get 30 Pallets delivered to the house, turning the driveway into a wee trials park to keep us amused over the summer! …
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
Real life, real time it can be challenging to analyze complex twisting skills.
In FB CURVES you can slow them down and watch from different angles.
Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.
MrBulletPig is BACK.
Gabriel Hannah from the U.K.
He doesn’t post often, but when he does … it’s EPIC.
Guaranteed to include MAG skills you’ve never seen before.
watch it on YouTube as this one cannot be embedded.
Nick Blanton:
… of 259 female competitors in the 2019 WC’s, the average age was 19.93. Since the inception of the open-ended code in 2006, the average age of female competitors has risen from 18.2 years of age in the 2005 WC’s, to 19.93 in 2019. From this comparison, federations could strategize what age to peak their athletes in contemporary high-performance gymnastics.
To put it simply, programs should be strategizing on how to support older female athletes. …
That’s just one conclusion from Nick’s new paper.
If you follow Syque on social media, you know he’s a very astute Gymnastics expert.
Syque Caesar has been named head coach for the men’s gymnastics athlete resident program at the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Training Center (OPTC) in Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA Gymnastics announced Tuesday. …
Caesar will oversee all aspects of the USOPTC Resident Team Program, where he will be responsible for athlete development and building training and competition plans for all resident athletes. He also will serve as an educational and technical resource for other coaches in the gymnastics community …
I feel progress has been slow.
I can’t foresee it happening any time soon.
Watanabe, who retained his position as FIG President at last month’s Congress, stresses that the technology is currently assisting judges but did not rule out the idea of it eventually becoming sole arbiter.
“At this stage, it is a judging support system,” Watanabe told insidethegames.
“It may be a substitute for humans in the future. …
Exclusive: FIG President Watanabe says computers may eventually replace judges
