gymn
Digest
Sat, 1 Oct 94 Volume 3 :
Issue 26
Today's
Topics:
Amanda's College Pick
Birmingham Classic Competitors
Birmingham Classic Results
Birmingham Classic Womens comp
Bogi
Brown Settles Lawsuit ... sort-of
Doni Thompson Interview
Georgia & Amanda Borden
IG (2 msgs)
J.
Thompson's moved to Karolyi's
Juniors going Senior
Mike Jacki
Miroslav Smetana (2 msgs)
Oral agreements
Reese's World Cup
Romaian Strike Settlement
Romanian strike
Romanian strike over
Romanian Strike Settlement
Shannon Miller's Father
strike (3 msgs)
training conditions
World Cup 95--Portland (2 msgs)
This
is a digest of the gymn@athena.mit.edu mailing list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 01:09:44 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Amanda's College
Pick
I'm not sure about controversy over choices but Mary Lee told me
several
months back that Amanda, Karin, and Sammie
all wanted to attend college and
compete *together*.
She listed their top choices (though it was wide open at
the
time ... Amanda could really write her own ticket I'm sure) Georgia,
Alabama,
and Floridia and said then that wherever Amanda
signed she would
wait out a year to train for
Atlanta.
On another note, anyone hear anything about how Sammie's knee
is doing?
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 1 Oct 94 0:33:53 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Birmingham
Classic Competitors
Birmingham Classic, 30th September 1994,
Birmingham National Indoor Arena, England.
Competitors
list (sortred by competition numbers):
Women
=====
Olga
Yurkina
(BLR)
Zita Lusack
(GBR)
Elena Grosheva
(RUS)
Daniela Maranduca (ROM)
Nikolett Krausz (HUN)
Annika
Reeder
(GBR)
Lavinia Milosovici (ROM)
Svetlana Khorkina (RUS)
Nadia Hatagan
(ROM)
Elena Piskoun
(BLR)
Men
===
Craig Heap
(GBR)
Szilveszter Csollany (HUN)
Marius Urzica
(ROM)
Evgeny Gukov
(RUS)
Grigori Misutin (UKR)
Zoltan Supola
(HUN)
Igor Korobchinsky (UKR)
Ivan Ivankov
(BLR)
Lee McDermott
(GBR)
Dmitri Karbonenko (RUS)
Report
soon to follow.
Sherwin
(Just got back home
)
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 30 Sep 94
21:52:24 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Birmingham Classic Results
I'm
not sure if this will beat Sherwin's report or not but (it also doesn't
jibe with Sherwin's competitors list) ...
>From
the PA Newswire ...
Birmingham Classic, National Indoor Arena:
Women: 1 L Milosovici (Rom) 38.913, 2 S Korkina
(Rus) 38.500, 3 N Hatagan
(Rom) 38.388. Others: 7 Z Lusack
(GB) 37.650, 10 A Reeder (GB) 36.325.
Men: 1 I Ivankov
(Belarus) 57.250, 2 I Korobchinsky
(Ukr) 56.600, 3 E Gukov
(Rus) 55.400. Others: 7 L
McDermott (GB) 54.175, 8 C Heap 53.950.
"Romania's Lavinia Milosovici successfully
defended her title at the
Birmingham Classic tonight. She also took two
apparatus titles, beam and
floor. This earned her
a total of L5,000 in prize money which came as a
welcome bonus."
"The men's title was taken by
world and European champion Ivan Ivankov who
also won three apparatus titles, the pommel horse, parallel
bars and high
bar."
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 1 Oct 94 12:24:28 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Birmingham
Classic Womens comp
Birmingham Classics
1994
========================
The Birmingham Classics took place at
the Birmingham National
Indoor Arena, England on 30th September 1994
between 7pm and
10:30pm. There were twenty gymnasts taking part (10 men and
10 women).
We arrived at the arena a bit
late due to unforseen circumstances
(i.e. my brother's watch was half an hour slow and he's
supposed
to drive us up there!). The first thing
to do of course was to
spot who's here. A quick
check in the programme and a quick glance
at the arena told me that Piskoun
was here! That made me happy
enough.
The
Russians had employed a barber! Certainly all four Russians
(Grosheva, Khorkina, Karbonenko & Gukov) had
haircuts. (The guy
sitting behind me said Grosheva looked like Boris Yeltsin with her
short hair!) In fact I didn't recognise
her at first since I thought
she was Galeva for a minute.
Women
=====
The
ten women gymnasts competitors were:
Olga Yurkina
(BLR)
Zita Lusack
(GBR)
Elena Grosheva (RUS)
Daniela
Maranduca
(ROM)
Nikolett Krausz (HUN)
Annika
Reeder
(GBR)
Lavinia Milosovici (ROM)
Svetlana Khorkina (RUS)
Nadia Hatagan (ROM)
Elena
Piskoun (BLR)
Yurkina looked the same (and still wearing her green
leotard).
Lusack and Reeder of course had the
support of the British crowd
behind them. The
other loudest cheers were for Lavinia Milosovici,
not surprisingly
since she won the "Gym Stars" pool just a couple
of months ago. She had a bit more curly hair too sticking
out at
the back. Nikolett
Karusz was tiny. I haven't seen her before so
this should be interesting. Maranduca
and Hatagan were both tall.
The Romanians were
generally very supportive of each other, you
can
hear them shouting for each other when a fellow teammate was
performing. Piskoun was hanging
around Khorkina and Grosheva
most of the time (again not surprisingly).
I didn't
take down any notes since I was busy video-taping the
meet.
The tape should help me in identifying some of the moves.
I also didn't
have time (or a spare hand) to take down any scores
I'm afraid. The meet
is going to be shown on TV later on today so
I may be able to give you some
scores.
Vault
-----
I missed some of this since I arrived
late. From where I was
sitting I couldn't see
much of it anyway. Some major incidents
include
Elena Piskoun under-rotating her double-twisitng Yurchenko
badly and her overall score for the VT was only 9.150 (one
of the
few scores that I had mentally noted). Milosovici's VT was very
clean.
Lusack fell over on her second vault.
Uneven
Bars
-----------
The apparatus closest to me.
No major mistakes from anybody
except Annika
Reeder who fell in her Geinger and again in her
double pike dismount.
Yurkina:
full-twist giant into Geinger; piked
Jaeger; full-twisting
double back dismount.
Milosovici had a different dismount (since she's having
trouble
with her bars dismount lately). It was a
double front with half
turn so she landed facing
forwards. It was a good landing too!
The two best bars both scored 9.8.
They came from Khorkina and
Piskoun.
Khorkina's include the Gnauck
release and lots of other twisitng
actions. She finished off with a full-twisting
(anybody else find
typing the word
"twisting" difficult? I always typed it as "twsit"
or something before having to correct myself... A
twisting word...)
double back.
Piskoun's include Delchev; full-twisitng hop over the high bar
straight
into a full-twisitng giant; and a double layout
dismount
(good landing).
Beam
----
I've
written down all the major moves from my video so here goes:
Grosheva: front somi mount; front
somi; side somi; flick(ff),
flick;
fish jump into Korbut; round-off (RO) into stuck
double back.
Cool routine with nice jumps (straight legs)
Maranduca: Yuchenko mount
(round-off, layout); ff, layout (LO),ff;
side
somi; fish jump into Omelianchik
(flick 1/4 turn to handstand);
RO, double tuck.
Krausz: front somi mount; back somi to 2 feet; ff,ff,LO
to 2 feet;
front somi; RO,ff, double pike.
Yurkina:
Yuchenko mount (wobble); handstand splits into ff, LO, LO
(wobble); Omelianchik; RO, double pike.
Lusack:
simple mount; ff, LO, LO; ff
double tuck. (Really a very
simple routine)
Khorkina: RO onto springboard, full-twisting ff mount straight into
ff, ff; splits handstand
into ff, full-twisitng ff; RO, LO to 2 feet
(OFF she fell!),
RO into side double twisting dismount.
Hatagan:
mount (I missed it); ff, LO, ff,
LO; front somi (heavy!);
split
jump into Omelianchik; RO, double tuck.
Piskoun: front mount (no immediate jump afterwards); ff to 2 feet,
ff
to 2 feet, LO to 2 feet (left foot went off and OFF she fell...);
ff to full-twisting back somi (OK); RO, double pike.
Reeder: Yuchenko mount (and OFF she fell); Korbut;
ff, LO, ff;
Omelianchik to splits; front somi
(OFF she went again); RO, double
tuck.
Disappointing with the falls.
Milosovici: RO
into Korbut mount; side somi;
ff, LO, ff, LO; jump
into Omelianchik; Omelianchik (again); RO, double tuck.
It was
generally quite high class overall, despite a few falls.
Floor
-----
I've
written down the major tumbling runs...
Maranduca:
Triple-Twists (TT); front somi, front 1 and 1/2
twists;
front 1 & 1/2 punch front.
Krausz: full-twisting double (FTD) pike; front 1 & 1/2;
3 whips, ff, TT
(it
would have been excellent but she fell short).
Yurkina:
Arabian double front; front 1 & 1/2 punch front;
TT (OK).
Lusack: FTD-tuck; back 1 & 1/2
twists into front walkover; ff, whip
immediately into double twists.
Grosheva:
FTD-pike; front handspring, LO front, full-twisting front;
front 1 & 1/2; double pike.
Hatagan:
TT; handspring, LO front; Full-twisting front; TT again.
Piskoun: TT; 2 & 1/2 twists punch front; FTD-pike.
Reeder:
FTD-tuck: handspring, 1 & 1/2 twists, ff, ff, double twists;
handspring, front 1 & 1/2.
Milosovici:
FTD-tuck; 3 whips, ff, double-twists punch front (!);
TT.
She was still very good despite her critics.
Khorkina: FTD-pike; Rudi punch front; TT (not quite
round).
Overall
-------
1. Lavinia Milosovici
(ROM)
38.913
2.
Svetlana Khorkina (RUS) 38.500
3. Nadia Hatagan (ROM) 38.388
4. Daniela Maranduca (ROM) 38.188
5. Elena Grosheva (RUS) 38.138
6. Elena Piskoun (BLR) 37.750
7. Zita Lusack
(GBR)
37.650
8. Nikolett Krausz (HUN) 37.125
9. Olga Yurkina
(BLR)
37.113
10. Annika Reeder (GBR) 36.325
So
Lavinia successfully defended her title without much
trouble.
After the medals ceremony the young audience of course shouted their
hearts out for
autographs. "Annika!" and "Lavinia!"
were the most
common calls. Lavinia
stayed behind to satisfy many of them, but Annika
was
held up by the Press wanting to do interviews, etc. The Russians
were off the podium in a flash.
Here endth the womens competition
report. As I've said the meet is going
to be shown
on TV later on today, so I may have something more to add then.
The Mens report will probably have to wait till then since I
didn't note
down enough to put up anything
significant (I don't have enough battery
to
video-tape the Mens comp) Sorry Susan... but I will
write as much as
poss on
the Mens, which include a Grigori
Misutin injury shock!
Later,
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 1994 02:12:24 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@delphi.com
Subject: Bogi
Susan stobchatay@aol.com) writes;
>Yes, she's at Karolyi's
and yes, she's in the gym ... but training for
>competitive
gymnastics? I *seriously* doubt it. If she wanted to make a
>comeback she would have done it long before now. I, quite
frankly, chalk this
>whole thing up to Bela's fabulous self promotion ...
I certainly
hope you are right. I have been a big fan of hers for years and
can not believe she would take part in the weird shenanagans going on at
Bela's
place lately....
And I NEVER meant that Bogi was
pathetic!!! I meant this apparent attempt at
expoiting her good name!
P.S. The recent
post of "Olympic Fever" left me in a state of shock. What a
tragic, horrible story! I only hope it was the fabrication
of a very bitter
women, without a shred of truth
to it. I feel truley sorry for anyone
harboring such a dreadful view of our sport as this document
portrays.
Gave me chills.
Ben
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 94 08:08:36 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Brown Settles
Lawsuit ... sort-of
>From the AP by Tim Whitmore (direct quotes
noted) ...
3 days into the trial a partial settlement between the
women athletes of
Brown and it's athletic
department assure that men's and women's sports will
be
treated equally for the next three years.
"[The school will] continue to
be
equitable in allocation of locker rooms, athletic equipment, supplies, and
practice facilities; scheduling of games and practices; use
of the
university's weight room, and opportunities
to take training trips. It does
not require the
school to fund a specific number of varsity teams or any
specific
varsity team" School offcials says that the
settlement agreement
only affirms current policy
but the athlete's lawyer called it "a major
victory
for women's rights."
"The agreement, which came on the third
day of a trial, settles the part of
the suit claiming
Brown gives preferential treatment to male athletes, but
leaves
open the question of whether Brown women are given sufficient
opportunity to participate in sports." The trial will
continue to try & solve
that dispute.
Comments
from Brown's VP: "We agreed to continue to exercise our discretion
in an equitable manner on a program-wide basis. It expresses
our intent that
if there are changes they will be
made in an equitable manner."
Athletes lawyer (Bryant) -
claiming a victory - say:
"This agreement will
make Brown
University a model for the nation in the treatment of men and
women in athletics." [on the
continuing dispute] "There are additional women
at
Brown who are not being accommodated [in their interest in sports]" The
lawyers
are pushing for permanent injunctions that would force the University
to fund women's gymnastics and volleyball (the sports that
started the suit)
and start funding women's
skiing, water polo, and fencing teams. "Lawyers for
the
athletes have said the proportion of male and female athletes at the
school should approximate the ratio of male and female
students. Attorney
Lynette Labinger said while
women make up approximately 50 percent of the
5,600 undergraduate students,
only about 36 percent of varsity athletes are
women."
The school contends that
women on campus are not as interested in athletic
participation
as men ... and say they have surverys to prove that.
Lisa Stern co-captain of
the gymnastics team, said she didn't think there
would
be an out-of-court settlement of the remaining issues. But Stern, who
testified Monday that she and other members of the
gymnastics team felt like
"second-class
citizens" during the two seasons they were without varsity
funding, acknowledged Brown has made great strides in its treatment
of women
athletes. "Things have improved a
great deal," said Stern, of Mesa, Ariz.
"They're not yet perfect,
but we're hoping they'll continue to improve with
this
agreement."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - -
Does this sound like
a lot of whining to anyone else? I mean did the men sue
(water
polo & something else for the guys was cut at the same time as gymn
and volleyball for the
women)? How many schools have
enough interest to have
a women's fencing team?
C'mon! Isn't school supposed to be for education
anyway?
Athletic departments are nice but they shouldn't be the central focus
of your
"academic" life.
Let's be realistic here, sports like
football and basketball get big bugets
because the raise big money. Without that money sports like
gymnastics
wouldn't even exist on the college
scene (men or women).
Equality is nice but not always "fair"
... Sex discrimination is what
lead
to the current situation of the men not even having an NCAA
program (for all
practical purposes anyway). Do
people really think they're going to cut
football
to keep a team that runs in the red (as all gymn
teams do)? Also,
the "same number of men's
sports as women" is just plain silly. How many
colleges
have a women's football team? That means that with fewer women's
sports competed (a simple fact) that "good" men'
sports - like gymnastics -
get cut to make the
quota. Are we going to see
scholarships in women's
waterpolo
now?
To me, anyway it's the height of silliness and selfishness. How
many men from
olympic
sports will no longer be able to compete so that the women can feel
that things are "fair".
In gymnastics in this country
little girls can be elite gymnasts and compete
at
the club level ... it's not something you see very much with men. For most
guys the NCAA is their only chance to put to use the years
of training
they've put in.
Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 28 Sep 1994 14:12:49 +0800
From: ***@Eng.Sun.COM
Subject: Doni Thompson Interview
For those who haven't met
her, Doni Thompson is an interviewer's dream.
She
speaks very easily and appears to really enjoy the interview process.
Not
that the shy gymnasts are weird or anything (I know I wouldn't want
people poking recorders in my face asking all sorts of
questions), but it's
fun to interview someone that
doesn't seem intimidated by the process.
-George
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 00:22:07 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Georgia &
Amanda Borden
To All:
FYI: There has been a minor controversy brewing over Amanda's selection
of
Georgia.
Amanda's
coach is dating an assistant gymnastics coach at the University
of Georgia, and some have grumbled that the situation gave
the Bulldogs an
advantage in recruiting the
nation's #1 pick.
These folks, I suspect, are only grumbling because *they* didn't have
any
sort of advantage.
--- Ron in Fla.
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 1994 06:17:03 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@asu.edu
Subject:
IG
I
just got my new IG today... or yesterday as the case may be.
Anyway, what's this about Sandy
Knapp of USAG being nominated to the
FIG? Puh-lease...
Also, why were
the two Dominiques on this months cover... IG is
the only magazine in the world that I've ever seen that it's
covers have
nothing to do with the inner
content. You don't see TIME putting
Haiti on
the cover when the crime bill is the main
story inside. The victors of
the various competitions actually covered won't ever get a
cover that way,
unless they were covered the month
before... I know I'm sounding picky,
but what's
the point of this? Is there
one?
Just wondering...
Amanda
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 01 Oct 94 01:14:53 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: IG
>
Also, why were the two Dominiques on this months
cover...
IG is the only
magazine in the world that
I've ever seen that it's covers have nothing to do
with
the inner content. You don't see
TIME putting Haiti on the cover when
the crime
bill is the main story inside.
Agreed. It's ridiculous, and it happens nearly
every month. I don't who's
picking the covers, they need to have some relationship to
the content!
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 10:21:40 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: J. Thompson's
moved to Karolyi's
[Jennie T. moving back to
Karolyi's]
>Anyone know why? I mean, is there any particular
reason?
I would guess two words: home, Aleksandrov
BTW,
Amanda, did you call that or what? :)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 1994 02:12:34 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@delphi.com
Subject:
Juniors going Senior
>I can see going Sr. at age 14 the yr. before
an Olympics but at 13? At 12?
>Will we see it
even younger then that? Where do we draw the line? Why even
>bother with the Jr. designation if "anyone" can be
a Sr. just be declaring
>that they were? To me
it seems beyond silly that many of the Jr's are
older
>then the Sr
team members.
Exactly, and well put. Rules and designations are
designed for a reason. To
make them and then to
circumvent them as you desire is a waste of time. To
allow
a 14 year old to move up prior to the games has at least a logical ring
to it, but other than that, what purpose does it serve? (or whom?) I can think
of plenty
of negatives, but no positives worth mentioning. What mutton
head
thought up this Sr/Jr age group system in the US?? Aren't there enough
International
Jr. meets? Talk about confusion...
Ben
------------------------------
Date:
Sat, 01 Oct 94 01:14:48 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Mike Jacki
Although he isn't strictly a gym-related
topic anymore...
According to USA Today, Mike Jacki's
first major function as head of US
Skiing will be to downsize the operation
(and possibly cut participation in
training camps)
due to funding shortfalls of over $2 million.
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 9:17:41 BST
From: ***@ic.ac.uk
Subject: Miroslav Smetana
This is probably old news but do
you guys know that the
Czech gymnast Miroslav
Smetana was killed in a car accident
in August? He
was a Europeans'94 Rings finalist and was 16th
All-Around
in Europe.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 10:21:32 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Miroslav Smetana
>This is probably old news but
do you guys know that the
Czech gymnast Miroslav
Smetana was killed in a car accident
in August? He
was a Europeans'94 Rings finalist and was 16th
All-Around in Europe.<
*What* is going on? First Oksana Kostina,
then the Turkish gymnast, now
this... are there
others?
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 28 Sep 94 21:17:37 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Oral
agreements
>>PS I'm taking sports law this semester and I just
*love* it. We did NCAA
stuff the last couple of weeks.
Is there precedent
you've come across for allowing USGF trust fund gymnasts
into
the NCAA?
Mara
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 23:40:02 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Reese's World
Cup
The World Cup, scheduled for Portland, Oregon in January, will
invariably be
at the Memorial Coliseum, Portland's
only _major_ arena [until late 1995],
home of the
Portland Trailblazers and a minor league hockey team. It was
also
the location of one of those post-Olympic gymnastic exhibitions.
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 94 08:08:46 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Romaian Strike Settlement
>From the Chicago
Tribune (29th Sep. '94) "Baseball, The NHL, Now This"
(direct quotes noted)
"The strike *threat*
ended when the Sports Ministry said it would increase
prize
money fivefold"
"The move came after the chief trainer, Octavian Belu, threatened last week
that
women gymnasts would go on strike unless the government kept its
word."
[I found it interesting that this article is the first article
that says that
it was oragainzed
by a coach and not the girls themselves ... which knowning
the Romo system I found very hard
to belive.] Belu says:
"They are true
ambassadors of Romania abroad
and therefore they have to be treated
properly."
While preparing for
competitions in the near future [World Challenge of
Champions in CAN and
the Birmingham Classic ... both this weekend] the girls
did
*NOT* stop training but the strike threats were widely circulated.
"A
gold-medal winner now will get the equivalent of $7,000, a silver medal is
worth $5,200, a bronze $3,400. Those figures are about five
times higher than
before."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - -
>From the AP ...
"Like other former
Communist nations, Romania used its gymnastics program as
a symbol of its country's excellence. After the fall of
Communism, gymnasts
protested that their prestige
had fallen, and that prize money and training
conditions
were inadequate."
-posted by Susan
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 94 10:07 PDT
From: ***@MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU>
Subject:
Romanian strike
Lets face it...
Milosovici
needs the money for her breast reduction surgery and Gogean
never finished paying the doctor who performed the
lobotomy...
-Brett
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 28 Sep 94 18:28:23 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: Romanian strike
over
It was reported on AP that the dispute has been settled and that
the gymnasts
never interupted
training although the threat was widely announced and the
gymnastics federation upped the money for medals. $7000 for a gold, $5200
for a silver, and $3400 for a bronze. ---Brian
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 94 15:00:38 EST
From: ***@email.cfr.org
Subject: Romanian
Strike Settlement
>From AP "Like other former Communist
nations, Romania used its gymnastics
>program
as a symbol of its country's excellence. After the fall of Communism,
>gymnasts protested that their prestige had fallen, and that
prize money and
>training conditions were
inadequate."
Actually their "prestige" *was*
artificial, given the political
conditions of the
country. Obviously after Ceausescu fell, it lessened
..though
I believe much of the bureaucratic machinery is still
in
place (Vieru is still head of gymnastics, no?). As to training
conditions,
a story about gymnasts in Bucharest in the recent IG mentions
that one facility still uses the mats that Ungureanu used way back when...
sounds
unsafe to me...can you "re-stuff" a mat? If Comaneci is sending
money to the Romanian Federation as was reported, hope it's
being used for the
betterment of training and not
leotards (of course she probably will provide her
own
brand anyway free of charge).
Connie
------------------------------
Date:
Wed, 28 Sep 1994 22:22:48 -0600 (CDT)
From: ***@rainbow.uchicago.edu
Subject:
Shannon Miller's Father
Hi,
Does
anyone know the name of Shannon Miller's Father and, even
better, his e-mail address? He gave a seminar at Fermi Lab once
about Physics and Gymnastics, and I wanted to ask him some
questions
about it, but I lost his e-mail address,
and to me he was "Dr. Miller,"
so I
could not find him with an Intenet Search
engine.
Thanks In Advance
Chuck
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 1994 02:12:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@delphi.com
Subject:
strike
>From 2 stories on Reuters(27 &
28 Sep. '94) by Radu Timofte
(direct quotes
>noted) ...
>
>The
ROM women's gym team (10 girls) walked out of the training hall in Deva
>on Monday effectively going on strike. They claim that their
gov't was not
>rewarding -
financial rewards that is - them properly for their successes
>in competition.
Am I the only person here who finds
this attitude tragic? NOTE: I did not say
'terrible'
or 'selfish', etc. I mean sad. Has Gymnastics finally come to this?
everyone who thinks cash prizes and professional meets are
the way to go
should see this.
Money, but no honor?
I realize that for these people the
money is probably a much more important
factor in
their lives back in Romania than I understand from my place in the
US, but
still...
And as the USGF turns into an orginization
apprently more fascinated with
revenue
generation (how many certifications do people need now?) with a
bloating bueracracy and employees
making 6 figures, incentive money for
coaches,
gymnasts with agents, I feel a cold wind blowing....
or
is it just me?
Ben
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 1994 23:52:48 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@asu.edu
Subject:
strike
> >From 2 stories on Reuters(27
& 28 Sep. '94) by Radu Timofte
(direct quotes
> >noted) ...
>
>
> >The ROM women's gym team (10 girls) walked out of the
training hall in Deva
> >on Monday
effectively going on strike. They claim that their gov't was not
> >rewarding - financial rewards that is - them
properly for their successes
> >in
competition.
>
> Am I the only person here who finds this
attitude tragic? NOTE: I did not say
> 'terrible'
or 'selfish', etc. I mean sad. Has Gymnastics finally come to this?
> everyone who thinks cash prizes and professional meets are
the way to go
> should see this.
>
Money, but no honor?
> I realize that for these people the money is
probably a much more important
> factor in
their lives back in Romania than I understand from my place in the
> US,
but still...
> And as the USGF turns into an orginization
apprently more fascinated with
> revenue generation (how many certifications do people need
now?) with a
> bloating bueracracy
and employees making 6 figures, incentive money for
> coaches,
gymnasts with agents, I feel a cold wind blowing....
> or is it just me?
>
> Ben
>
Whether you agree
with it or not, prize money is often given at
most
international competitions. Is it
fair for the gymnasts to have that
money taken
away from them when they return home?
They earned it, they
deserve it. Are their fedarations
and/or government owed a piece of the
action? I don't think so. And it is up to each individual gov't
whether
they want to monetarily award their
athletes based on international
success or not,
but if they make that promise, they should at least deliver.
Amanda
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 94 09:52:52 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: strike
>Am
I the only person here who finds this attitude tragic? NOTE: I did not
say 'terrible' or 'selfish', etc. I mean sad.
What
do you mean by "sad" if it's not selfishness or something along
those
lines that is bothering you?
>Is
it fair for the gymnasts to have that money taken away from them when
they return home?
[...] it is up to each individual gov't
whether
they want to monetarily award their
athletes based on international
success or not,
but if they make that promise, they should at least deliver.<
My thoughts exactly.
It reminds me of "who should've won" controversies --
when there is such a controversy, everyone bemoans the
obsession with
"winning", but I think
there's a lot more to it. When you
work hard for
something and don't get it because
of unfair judging, an injustice has been
done that
is worth getting worked up over. It
isn't wanting to win "per se"
as much as it is wanting what one deserves (i.e. wanting
justice).
Similarly, it's not
(just) the money, it's the failure to deliver as
promised.
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date:
Fri, 30 Sep 1994 18:38:02 -0400 (EDT)
From: ***@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Subject:
training conditions
What Connie said about
the Romanians' training conditions reminded me of
the article (also in this month's IG) about Elena Piskun and how her gym
doesn't
even HAVE a floor-ex mat at all! I have so much respect for her that
she's able to perform at such a high level when she must not
be able to
practice her floor routine very much.
I know she can practice the tumbling on
the vault
runway and I suppose she can do the dance moves somewhere, but to not
have a mat to practice the whole routine on, using the whole
floor area, has
got to be TOUGH. What an
athlete!
Beth
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 94 18:33:54 EDT
From: ***@aol.com
Subject: World Cup
95--Portland
Could anyone give me info on what arena in Portland the
World Cup is being
held? Thank you.---Brian
------------------------------
Date:
Thu, 29 Sep 1994 21:16:24 -0700 (MST)
From: ***@asu.edu
Subject: World
Cup 95--Portland
> Could anyone give me info on what arena in
Portland the World Cup is being
> held? Thank you.---Brian
>
Is
this the *actual* World Cup (ie like Brussels '90 and
Beiging
'86) that should
have been staged this year? Or is
it only another
"pro-am" circus
performance?
Amanda
------------------------------
End
of gymn Digest
******************************