GYMN-L Digest - 25 Mar 1995 to 26 Mar 1995
There
are 13 messages totalling 340 lines in this
issue.
Topics of the day:
1. If anyone, chew on ABC (fwd)
2.
Gym Stars
3. France Telecom
results
4. TV Coverage
(2)
5. Dom D wins another
award
6. This, that, and door
#3 (4)
7. EIGL's team
results
8. UCLA Women win PAC-10, Umeh wins AA, 3 EF
9. Women's SEC Championships
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 25 Mar 1995 23:28:32
-18521200
From: ***@MADRAD.RADIOLOGY.WISC.EDU
Subject:
Re: If anyone, chew on ABC (fwd)
> And this is totally off the
subject,
> but someone was saying something
about Amanda's smile and
> personality...did
you know that she looks almost exactly like Jayne
> Torvill
from around 1979?
>
> Speaking of look-alikes, does anyone else
think Kristy Powell
looks like Laura Ingalls Wilder (ie-Melissa
Gilbert)?
Lani.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 12:30:27
BST
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Re: Gym Stars
> Could someone please tell me how I can subscribe to
Gym Stars magazine?
> Thanks!
>
> Ann Marie
The
subscription details can be obtained by ftp to the gymn
site
"ftp.cac.psu.edu" in directory
"/pub/gymn/Resources/Print". The
filename
is "GS-card".
For
those who don't have access to ftp and want to know how to subscribe to
"Gym
Stars", you can E-mail me and I'll send you the details by E-mail.
I'll
send you the details now, Ann Marie!
Sherwin :)
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 12:32:44
BST
From: ***@IC.AC.UK
Subject:
Re: France Telecom results
> Begue goes
wild on
> her floor routine and has great
tumbling too with no front full filling
> (whip
to triple full, tuck full-in, another triple full).
Well I may have to
disappoint you Amanda because the three tumbles that
Begue
did in the France Telecom Trophy were "only":
whip to full-in;
Rudi;
full-in.
She
still has very expressive dance though.
Sherwin
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 08:57:59
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: TV Coverage
> I remeber awhile back
seeing a poll that listed women's gymnastics second
> only
to figure skating. Men's gymnastics
was 7th or so--ahead of the NBA!
Ah, yes, the infamous poll. The one that must've been done on the
figure
skating mailing list or newsgroup. Or that must've asked the question
"What
sport would you rather watch on TV than pay to go see live?"
Because
of course it's absurd to say that any of the three sports is more
popular than NBA basketball. It hardly takes an expert to figure that
out.
:)
Adriana
This week's sentiment:
"There
may not be a heaven,
But somewhere there's a San Francisco"
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 09:01:49
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: Dom D wins another award
> MISCELLANY: Gymnast Dominique Dawes,
18, who will attend Stanford next fall,
> and
Chicago Bears lineman Chris Zorich were named
recipients of the Henry P.
> Iba Citizen
Athlete awards.
Next fall?
Anyone know if this is right?
Or will she wait until after
Atlanta?
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 09:13:05
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: This, that, and door #3
> For all you people who have the Code
of Points.. what is a pike tsuk
> off beam worth.. is it in there?
I haven't seen one since Voinea did one
>
at '85 Worlds... it was way cool..
You'll be
disappointed to hear that, in the infinite wisdom of the WTC,
Tsuks off beam were removed from the Code (I think it was
after '88).
:)
Adriana
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 07:43:49
-0700
From: ***@RMII.COM
Subject:
EIGL's team results
Temple won their 6th EIGL title yesterday. Danny Akerman
placed first
in the all-around (Temple had 5 of
the top 7 all-arounnd) and Aaron
Vexler was chosen as EIGL Rookie of The Year. Go Owls!
1995 EIGL
Championship
March 25, 1995
Syracuse University - Manley
Syracuse,
NY
Team
1. Temple, 229.20
2. Syracuse, 223.650
3.
University of Massachusetts, 222.500
4. Army, 221.000
5. Navy,
219.050
6. Springfield, 207.150
7. Southern Conneticut,
188.200
AA
1. Danny Akerman
(Temple), 57.650
2. Ofri Porat
(Syracuse), 57.200
3. Steve Marshall (Army), 57.000
4. Dave Frank
(Temple), 56.600
5. Kenny Sykes (Temple), 56.250
5. Dubie
Bader (Temple), 56.250
7. Aaron Vexler (Temple),
55.950
8. Gabe Columbus (UMass), 55.350
9. Kiat
Oboler (UMass), 53.750
10. Peter Gizzi (Army), 53.650
Rachele
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 10:47:36
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: TV Coverage
>Because of course it's absurd to say that any of
the three sports is more
popular than NBA
basketball. It hardly takes an
expert to figure that out.
Unusual circumstances granted, a few figure
skating programs this season went
up against the
NBA and won.
Regarding polls, though, I believe there was one a few
years back that
confirmed that gym and figure
skating are the two most popular tv sports
among women.
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 10:47:43
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Re: This, that, and door #3
>You'll be disappointed to hear that,
in the infinite wisdom of the WTC,
Tsuks off beam
were removed from the Code (I think it was after '88).
Why? Also, what was the reason for removing roll-out tumbling on floor from
the
Women's Code?
Mara
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 10:48:02
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
UCLA Women win PAC-10, Umeh
wins AA, 3 EF
A summary, with a couple of "quotes" from the
AP blurb, of the Women's PAC-10
Mara
**********
UCLA won the team
title, no team scores given. No
other team info was given.
Stella Umeh dominated
the individual competition, winning AA and 3 events.
"Umeh, who has competed for the Canadian national team, won
the balance beam,
floor exercise and uneven
parallel bars on her way to the all-around. She
collected
39.375 points, edging Arizona State's Meagan Wright by .075 of a
point overall."
Kareema
Marrow UCLA - 3rd - 39.250
Leah Homma UCLA - 4th -39.225.
Katie
Freeland ASU - 5th - 39.075
"Umeh took
the balance beam by .05 of a point over teammate Homma and Oregon
State's
Randi Miller. The Bruin freshman edged Freeland by .025 of a point in
the floor exercise and had the same margin in the uneven
parallel bars over
Danna Lister of Arizona State and
Becky Bowers of Arizona.
Freeland, Darci
Wambsgans
of Arizona and Lisa Washington of California tied for the vault
title."
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 12:12:34
-0500
From: ***@AOL.COM
Subject:
Women's SEC Championships
A television scriptwriter could not have envisioned a better scenario.
Take
4 of the nation's top 6 women's gymnastics teams and put them
head-to-head at
the nation's toughest conference
championship. Have the meet boil down to the
final
rotation, with two underdogs having a clear shot at winning, and then
have all four teams finish no further apart than a single
fall.
Welcome to the 1995 SEC
Championships.
In a dazzling,
sizzling meet that left even the fans exhausted, Alabama
eeked by Louisiana State, 196.175
to 196.125 to claim the coveted SEC title.
Finishing close behind was
Georgia (195.875) and Florida (195.650). Rounding
out
the lineup was Kentucky (191.975) and Auburn (190.675).
"Going into the final rotation, we
knew we could finish 4th or 1st,"
Alabama Head Coach Sarah Patterson
said. "I told the team, 'Go out there and
do
the best that you can do. Don't hold anything back.'"
That's what LSU did all night long,
counting no falls and repeatedly
sticking
landings. Louisiana State Head Coach D-D Pollock looked pained as
she spoke of her team's finish.
"Being second in this meet is like
kissing your brother," she said.
"There's nothing
there."
Head coaches for
both Florida and Georgia acknowledged how close they came
to winning -- one less fall would have given either one of
them the title.
"The only team that can beat Georgia is Georgia, and
that's what happened
tonight," Georgia Head
Coach Suzanne Yoculan said. Said Florida Head
Coach
Judi Avener: "We can be better than
this. We need to pay more attention to
the small
things."
Taking the
all-around title with a 39.65 was Gator Kristen Guise, who had
the flu and lost 8 pounds in the 5 days previous to the
meet. She had no idea
she was going to be given
the all-around title, but her teammates knew. "My
teammates
told me I had a big surprise waiting for me at the end of the meet.
I
thought it was food. I was really excited about that," she said,
laughing.
Guise also earned a
9.9 on bars, tying for first place on that event with
Alabama's Stephanie
Woods and Georgia's Andrea Dewey. Taking first place on
vault
with a 10.00 was Alabama's Kim Kelly, while Kentucky's Jenny Hansen
took beam with a 9.95 and floor with a 9.975.
Georgia's Julie Ballard was named SEC
Freshman of the Year, and Hansen was
named SEC
Gymnast of the Year. The SEC Coach of the Year honors went to
Pollock and
Patterson.
Perhaps the hero of
the night was LSU's Alysia Furgatch,
a Level 8 walk-on
who was asked to vault in a
pinch situation, replacing an injured Jennifer
Landry. Furgatch
went on to score a 9.8, earning a career high and the
second-highest
vault score on her team that night. "Her vault made all the
difference and fired us up," Pollock said.
---
Ronald
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 14:27:14
EST
From: ***@EXPERT.CC.PURDUE.EDU
Subject:
Re: This, that, and door #3
> > For all you people who have the
Code of Points.. what is a
pike tsuk
> > off
beam worth.. is it in there? I haven't seen one since Voinea did one
> > at
'85 Worlds... it was way cool..
>
> You'll be disappointed to
hear that, in the infinite wisdom of the WTC,
> Tsuks
off beam were removed from the Code (I think it was after '88).
Well,
I guess I will be the first to ask - can anyone describe what tsuk
on beam is? I am familiar with the vault but not
this one.
Lori
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 15:51:14
-0500
From: ***@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject:
Re: This, that, and door #3
> Well, I guess I will be the first to
ask - can anyone describe what tsuk
> on beam is? I am
familiar with the vault but not this one.
We're referring to the
dismount where the gymnast goes into a roundoff,
putting her hands on the end of the beam, and from her hands
she does a
1-1/2 salto backwards, without putting
her feet on the beam, landing on her
feet on the
mat. It's essentially the same as
the vault. It always
catches people by surprise and gets a few gasps, because
they're
expecting a regular roundoff
into something, and when the gymnast fails
to put
her feet on the beam, they freak.
As to Mara's question of why it was
taken out -- who knows? Ask
Jackie
Fie. Roll-out
tumbling was removed for safety reasons, but 1/4 tumbling
I think was
removed for aesthetic reasons, which really annoys me. All
the
skills starting from one's feet on UB were also removed (like the
famous Korbut, and also Rhonda Faehn's double full dismount). Of course,
the
ugliest of them all -- standing on the lb to reach
the hb -- hasn't
been
outlawed (but then, it really isn't a "skill" either -- no
value).
:)
Adriana
This week's sentiment:
"There
may not be a heaven,
But somewhere there's a San Francisco"
------------------------------
End
of GYMN-L Digest - 25 Mar 1995 to 26 Mar 1995
*************************************************