U.S. gymnastics championships | Golden Skate

U.S. gymnastics championships

Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Did anyone watch last night? Simone Biles barely hung on for the overall gold after missing the bar with her feet in the final routine. But Kyla Ross had one big balance save on an otherwise perfect beam routine, and couldn't quite catch Simone.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Since my cable provider stopped showing the TV Guide Channel, I miss everything. Rats! It sounds pretty exciting. But after an Olympics, I'm once again completely ignorant about any of the competitors. Female gymnasts don't seem to hang around very long, and I don't follow the sport closely enough to keep track. That's why every time someone says that a successful ladies' figure skater needs to be sprite-sized, my blood runs cold. I can't bear the thought of skaters with a shelf life of three years in Seniors. Thank goodness that hasn't happened (knock wood) yet.
 

louisa05

Final Flight
Joined
Dec 3, 2011
Since my cable provider stopped showing the TV Guide Channel, I miss everything. Rats! It sounds pretty exciting. But after an Olympics, I'm once again completely ignorant about any of the competitors. Female gymnasts don't seem to hang around very long, and I don't follow the sport closely enough to keep track. That's why every time someone says that a successful ladies' figure skater needs to be sprite-sized, my blood runs cold. I can't bear the thought of skaters with a shelf life of three years in Seniors. Thank goodness that hasn't happened (knock wood) yet.

Well, it did. Tara Lipinski being exhibit A. But age limits seem to have ended that.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Well, they announced that the whole Fab Five planned to come back for 2016. We'll see how they feel about it two years from now. ;)

One thing I noticed at this U.S. championship is that you can tell at a glance the difference between the girls with serious World and Olympic aspirations and the those who are just in it for fun at the national level. The latter look like normal teenaged girls. If they are old enough they have a normal girl's body, breasts, female shape, etc. The prospective Olympians have that testosterone driven barrel chest, no breasts, narrow hips, and strong core that overtraining imposes. (There are some exceptions, like Nastia Liukin, who commentated last bight.) I would think twice before encouraging my daughter to take up this sport obsessively.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Well, they announced that the whole Fab Five planned to come back for 2016. We'll see how they feel about it two years from now. ;)

One thing I noticed at this U.S. championship is that you can tell at a glance the difference between the girls with serious World and Olympic aspirations and the those who are just in it for fun at the national level. The latter look like normal teenaged girls. If they are old enough they have a normal girl's body, breasts, female shape, etc. The prospective Olympians have that testosterone driven barrel chest, no breasts, narrow hips, and strong core that overtraining imposes. (There are some exceptions, like Nastia Liukin, who commentated last bight.) I would think twice before encouraging my daughter to take up this sport obsessively.

This is what I mean. Thank goodness right now skating is made up of a reasonably diverse group of ladies, though none of them is exactly hefty. But my hat's off to the gymnasts, who are probably among the bravest athletes of all. Even the male gymnasts don't have to do some of the life-threatening moves that the ladies must execute. The guys' apparatus mostly requires them to hold on while they're moving around. The girls have to do double flips backward in midair, with nothing to hold on to. If I had a daughter who went into gymnastics, I wouldn't sleep for the next fifteen years.
 

ice coverage

avatar credit: @miyan5605
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 27, 2012
The guys' apparatus mostly requires them to hold on while they're moving around. The girls have to do double flips backward in midair, with nothing to hold on to.

Don't think you're being quite fair to the guys.
Females have uneven bars; males have high bar (equally perilous, to my eyes) and parallel bars.
Both genders have vault and floor.
The one difference in terms of riskiness, IMHO, is that the skills for beam seem more daring than for rings and pommel horse.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Yes, but the guys hold on to the high bar and the parallel bars though most of the tricks, and even onto the rings except for their dismount. They also hold onto the handles on the pommel horse. I'm not saying their routines are not challenging--clearly they are! But they rarely have to let go on these pieces. As a rule, they're older and bigger (by far) during their peak years, too. It's not that the guys are wusses but that the girls now take their lives into their hands when they're in little more than middle school, and it makes me anxious.
 

ice coverage

avatar credit: @miyan5605
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 27, 2012
Yes, but the guys hold on to the high bar and the parallel bars though most of the tricks ...

Disagree re high bar. I'm no gymnastics expert, but to my uneducated eyes, the release moves on high bar seem as numerous and as dangerous as on uneven bars.
So I stand by my point that beam is the sole apparatus (but a biggie, of course) for females without a counterpart -- in terms of riskiness -- for males.
If I had a son and a daughter who both were gymnasts, I believe that I would be as concerned for his safety as for hers. YMMV.
 

heyang

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Don't think you're being quite fair to the guys.
Females have uneven bars; males have high bar (equally perilous, to my eyes) and parallel bars.
Both genders have vault and floor.
The one difference in terms of riskiness, IMHO, is that the skills for beam seem more daring than for rings and pommel horse.

I agree. For me, High bar looks very risky as they whip themselves around a single bar and release. Rings are dangerous, too - momentum, getting wrapped up in a ring, sheer strength involved - every time I watch and iron cross, I hope that no one tears a ligament or overstrains a muscle.

Pommel horse is likely the 'most boring' to watch for me, but I can see that it requires a great deal of strength and agility.

And I agree with Mathman - Vault seems so 'tame', but many have died on that apparatus.
 

skateluvr

Record Breaker
Joined
Oct 23, 2011
where is Gabby? didn't she say she was heading for another Olympics? So Kyla is the only gal still competing?
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 25, 2013
where is Gabby? didn't she say she was heading for another Olympics? So Kyla is the only gal still competing?

Apparently all of the fierce 5 are going to be training.

I think there will be newcomers on the team though. Of course, Simone Biles is one example - particularly with her FX and VT. Where was Kaetlyn Ohashi?
 

MoonlightSkater

On the Ice
Joined
May 17, 2011
Well, they announced that the whole Fab Five planned to come back for 2016. We'll see how they feel about it two years from now. ;)

One thing I noticed at this U.S. championship is that you can tell at a glance the difference between the girls with serious World and Olympic aspirations and the those who are just in it for fun at the national level. The latter look like normal teenaged girls. If they are old enough they have a normal girl's body, breasts, female shape, etc. The prospective Olympians have that testosterone driven barrel chest, no breasts, narrow hips, and strong core that overtraining imposes. (There are some exceptions, like Nastia Liukin, who commentated last bight.) I would think twice before encouraging my daughter to take up this sport obsessively.

I'm going to have to beg to differ with this. I can hardly believe I'm posting this since I grew up doing gymnastics and thinking that you had to look like a little girl to succeed (and spent years being unhealthy because of it), but a lot of the senior level gymnasts now have a figure, and those that don't are probably naturally svelt. Look at McKayla Maroney- she's very slim, but she's still filled out some. Or you could look at the new national champion, Simone Biles. She's definitely not stick thin. Go back to last quad and look at Aly Raisman or Alicia Sacramone. There are now many body types represented in gymnastics. Yes you have to maintain a certain strength to weight ratio to stay healthy (too much weight increases the likelihood of stress fractures and decreases your amplitude) but it's become more mainstream to recognize that this ideal balance doesn't necessarily happen at the lowest weight you can maintain. Sometimes having more weight gives you more power, depending on your body. Other times it might make things harder. It varies by gymnast.

For those that missed the broadcast, the whole thing is now up on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GbUQwE9N3aM

As for the poster who asked about Katelyn Ohashi, she had surgery back in the spring (I think it was shoulder surgery) and is still too injured to train normally. It's a shame, but hopefully she'll come back next year.
 

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avatar credit: @miyan5605
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 27, 2012
So Kyla is the only gal still competing?

Maroney also is competing -- and winning :).

@USOlympic
Congrats two-time Olympic medalist @McKaylaMaroney on earning the vault and floor titles at the 2013 #PGChamps! pic.twitter.com/3iCCaN0otS
7:22 PM - 17 Aug 13
https://twitter.com/USOlympic/status/368920746795339777

"After roughly six months back in the gym, Maroney only competed on floor and vault — a wise move considering she won national titles on both events Saturday night."
 

TontoK

Hot Tonto
Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 28, 2013
Country
United-States
I don't consider myself a huge fan of gymnastics, so my opinion may be worth less...

But I think the balance beam would be the scariest. It's terribly skinny, and the girls do very acrobatic flips and leaps on it. I'm always afraid one of them is going to slip on one of these moves, say a flip, and bang her head.
 

ice coverage

avatar credit: @miyan5605
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 27, 2012
where is Gabby? didn't she say she was heading for another Olympics? ...

Gabby Douglas leaves longtime coach, base in Iowa
Bryce Miller, USA TODAY Sports
9:41 p.m. EDT August 21, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...coach-chow-iowa/2681563/?morestories=obinsite

Excerpt:
Douglas has moved to Los Angeles to join her family, leaving those who follow the star coach and the 17-year-old celebrity to wonder what it could mean for a bid by Douglas to compete in the 2016 Games.
No matter what the future holds for both, it appears unlikely Douglas will call Chow coach again.
"At this point, I don't think so," said Liwen Zhuang, Chow's wife and co-owner of the training facility. "No."
The move by Douglas, who had resumed post-Olympics training at the Iowa gym in May, was as surprising to Chow, apparently, as it was sudden.
Douglas visited the gym Monday to tell the coach who molded and mentored her during a two-gold run at the London Olympics that she was leaving to join her family in California.

Bryce Miller writes for the Des Moines Register, a Gannett affiliate.​
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Wow! A surprise. I can see how Gabby would not want to keep to the same grind away from her family now that she's won everything she could dream of. Whether this short-circuits any future hopes of competing at that level again is almost irrelevant right now. She needs to have other things in her life.

I'm impressed that she went to tell Mr. Chow in person. That is very considerate and empathetic.
 
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