Gabby meets her "awesome" hero:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIne_...feature=relmfu
You're mostly right, Mathman. To elaborate a bit, the Difficulty score is determined by the skills you perform plus some extra tenths for tricky connections of two or more skills. There are also competitive requirements that are worth .5 each on each event except vault. The 5 requirements per routine make up a base 2.5 of the difficulty score (assuming you have them all), and the value of a certain number of the hardest skills is added to the top, fewer for women than men. Then the connective value is added in. Most connections award .1, the harder ones .2. The score is not predetermined, but rather based on what you actually do. Skills can essentially be downgraded in gymnastics, too, and gymnasts can move them around in their routines though they very rarely do because it's very difficult to get back on track.
The execution score is mostly deductions out of a 10.0 start. Though the deductions are specific, they do have a range. Slightly separated legs might be a .1 deduction, but really bad leg separation might be a .3. Badly bent arms might be a .5. There is a deduction for very poor artistry, i.e. lack of choreography or movement quality, of up to .3. Also, there are composition deductions for things like uneven distribution of difficult elements throughout the routine.
Thanks so much for the information, MoonlightSkater.
Ladies' gymnastics has changed radically. It seems like the present scoring system both reflects and drives this change.
Janetfan posted this performance by 14-year-old Dominque Moceano in 1996. Sort of the culmination of the trend that started with Olga Korbut.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6L8aZRDKcw
We will never see that sort of cutesy dancy routine again -- it does not score enough points.
I suppose it was sexist and unsporty back in the day to applaud little girls for being cutsey-wootsy while judging the boys on how steady they can hold their iron cross on the rings. I think the audience has matured along with the sport. Now we expect and appreciate strength and difficulty from the ladies, too.
Here is the best clip I have seen of Olga's legendary floor routine from1972.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJXXGyVly_g
The charm and beautiful expression Olga brought to gymnastics was perhaps the single greatest influence on (women's) gymnastics in USA. Olga's impact was so great she became one of the few athletes that actually transcended her sport.
BTW, if you listen to the commentary during Moceanu's floor routine you will hear "and another Russian just fell off the beam."
Khorkina was not exaggerating when she said the crowd noise was so loud in Atlanta it was blowing girls off the beam.
Last edited by janetfan; 08-18-2012 at 11:10 AM.
To the American people she brought a little spark of warmth to the cold war.
Here is a clip about the Netherlands team that won the first Olympic gold medal in women's gymnastics, competing in synchronized floor calisthenics in 1932. (The actual competitive team is the eight ladies exercising together in at the end of the clip. The first segment is an exhibition by a larger team and the middle part shows the men's vault. (Evidently they sent their best vaulter first so that he could stand there and catch the others if they fell.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJHcn3PUGzA
I apologize if this has been posted somewhere else but IOC has updated all their London 2012 Olympic videos on their youtube page.
All Artistic and Rhythmic gymnastic (some with BBC commentary) videos as well as other sports should be found here.
All sports: http://www.youtube.com/user/olympic/videos?view=1
Artistic: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...3&feature=plcp
Rhythmic: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...3&feature=plcp final: http://www.youtube.com/user/olympic?v=y-nyuuqmfVo
Last edited by gato; 08-21-2012 at 10:35 PM. Reason: links
Tremendous news! Thanks. Serious Business thought very highly of the BBC coverage, so it will be nice to see some of it.
I'm feasting on replays-not sleeping!!!! oh dear, so much to see i missed in the games...it could take months catching up, thanks much for this link to IOC youtube
Here ar Aly Raisman and Gabby Douglas at the Golden Globes.
http://morethan-stats.com/wp-content...red-carpet.jpg
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