Bingwa Geng: China's new hope for the Olympics?? | Page 3 | Golden Skate

Bingwa Geng: China's new hope for the Olympics??

Is there a video out there of a 3 year old doing - I don't know - double axels?

I haven't found that yet, but I did chance upon a BBC story of a 4-year-old girl playing tennis:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediaselector/...tm&news=1&nbram=1&bbram=1&bbwm=1&nbwm=1&asb=1

She's already won a tournament after 4 months of playing, and her parents have to tell her "they're hoovering (vacuuming) the courts" in order keep her from playing all day everyday. :laugh: She has the cutest accent too, so adorable! Oh, and yeah, her racket, and her hair, are both bigger than her. :laugh:
 
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She's already won a tournament after 4 months of playing, and her parents have to tell her "they're hoovering (vacuuming) the courts" in order keep her from playing all day everyday. :laugh: She has the cutest accent too, so adorable! Oh, and yeah, her racket, and her hair, are both bigger than her. :laugh:

Yes, she's very cute. Confident, too.
 
The girl is adorable. Russian 11 y.o. Liza is adorable too.
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=_66EreCuhq8

To me, the thing with the skating wunderkinds is that their skating is about ... nothing, and therefore ... meaningless? I believe in skating with one's head and heart, not just with one's pair of legs. But yes, they are so adorable, and their dresses are so pretty. JMO. JMO. JMO.

She's adorable but her leg-wrapping jumps are like that of the japanese girl Yukari Nakano(?). Better correct it before too late.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp3Zf0vxYNo

She has amazing spins (even does Caroline's trademark "pearl"), great jumps, and I think I see lots of potential in her

I see a combination of Yu-na's jumps and Caroline/Miria/Mao's flexibility. I would look forward to seeing how Bingwa Geng and Miria compete with each other. They have more similarities IMO. Yu-Na vs Mao for the 2010 Olympics, and the others for the next.
 
The only thing they share I can think of is lack of flexibility:cool: Kimmie Meissner was a phenom herself, being a novice champion anb with her triple axel. I wonder what Yuna Kim was like when she was Bingwa's age. Was she not a prodigy for international standard? She surely didn't get her share of hype until she beat Mao Asada.

at the age of 12, Yu-na won her 1st world champion title.
Yes, Novice Champion.
Yu-na mastered her 4 triple jumps at 10 and 1 triple at 12
so she could all triple jumps at 12 and she had trained 3 axel at 13.
Her mother told that all story about this wonder girl in Korean media, 2 years ago.
 
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at the age of 12, Yu-na won her 1st world champion title.
Yes, Novice Champion.
Yu-na mastered her 4 triple jumps at 10 and 1 triple at 12
so she could all triple jumps at 12 and she had trained 3 axel at 13.
Her mother told that all story about this wonder girl in Korean media, 2 years ago.

4 triples at 10? Wow. So, she was a prodigy just as much as Tuktamesheva.
 
at the age of 12, Yu-na won her 1st world champion title.
Yes, Novice Champion.
Yu-na mastered her 4 triple jumps at 10 and 1 triple at 12
so she could all triple jumps at 12 and she had trained 3 axel at 13.
Her mother told that all story about this wonder girl in Korean media, 2 years ago.

Correct me if I'm wrong but I got little confused with your post and searched some articles back then, and it seems Yuna mastered her triple-toe at 10, other triples sauf loop at 11, her triple loop, apparently her weakest, at the age of 12. Still not bad at all.

The thing is, Yuna and her mother were never sure whether Yuna could do well in international competitions and it's such a shame that, since she is a unprecedented talented girl here in Korea that she couldn't find any precedences to help her build up her career. I remember Yuna saying that before she went to international competition(perhaps 2004??) she had thought she would go to college based on her national career and have a normal life. Her mother once said that after Yuna mastered 4 triples, she thought her daughter 'might' have a chance to be competitive in international competitions. So....any kind of hype couldn't intervene, neither here in her home country, I think it's actually japanese media who acknowledged Yuna first. :laugh:

But I personally don't think hype could have done Yuna good, I think her share of hype coming late helped Yuna to get mentally strong and mature first.

Still what a shame that we don't have many vids of little Yuna skating....:cry:
 
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Correct me if I'm wrong but I got little confused with your post and searched some articles back then, and it seems Yuna mastered her triple-toe at 10, other triples sauf loop at 11, her triple loop, apparently her weakest, at the age of 12. Still not bad at all.

Yep, turned out to be really good for her health - so "still not bad at all".

Seriously, after all these little girls who were so promising at a young age and as younger teenagers (Elizabeth Kwon, Naomi Nari Nam) - and who had to stop because of injuries, or couldn't cope with the puberty-miracle (because that's what it is, a miracle - you are turning from a little girl into a beautiful young lady --- monsters can be found in Tolkien's books) - we are still talking "how cute! how adorable! how precious! such a talent!"

So I think neither of these two girls will be on the top. Who of all those former promising ladies did really fulfil the promise they showed at a young age? And I mean long-term, who did really become a long-term star? Michelle Kwan. She had one really bad season at 17 I think, and came back.

The others, like Tara Lipinski, Oksana Baiul and Sarah Hughes (and Kimmie Meissner?) had one or two great seasons and that was it. They just timed their peak well.

But the Chinese and Russian federations didn't time these two girls well, too young for Vancouver - but already 17/18 in Sochi!

It's a bit of a lottery, after the olympics the federations should look at their 12-year-old novices and juniors. The most promising 5 to 7 girls get the maximum training, home-schooling as well as ballett and gymnastics (so all of them can be this perfect combination of Michelle Kwan, Sasha Cohen and Slutskaya). The best way to ensure 1-2-3 podium sweep at the next olympics (and that's why I think the US will really take at least two medals at the ladies in 2010 - damn good timing there, Zhang and Nagasu will be 16, Flatt 17...).

These days the most interesting thing in Laidies figure skating is for me to find out who "survives" growing-up. That's why I loved Miki Ando's win last year - she was a prodigée with the quad and all (even though she started skating quite late), nobody wanted her any more after the olympics and most shockingly she started to look like a woman - and then she takes that title in front of two baby ballerinas.
 
That combo is SO cheated! :no:

Cheated or not Mao was sugoi kawaii(very cute) skating to Casey Jr from the movie Dumbo. :love:

I think I can excuse a cheated jump from a 6 year old;)

and as for Bingwa Geng I wish her luck at Jr Worlds, she looks like a talented skater. Hopefully the growth monster doesnt mess her up.

I cant wait for Jr Worlds..I want to see Mirai:love:, Caroline:love: & Rachel:rock: go head to head again :clap:
 
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Jw

I don't think it's a wise decision to send her to JW. Her worst jump is 3loop, she has never gotten that jump ratified in domestic competitions. 3loop is required jump in short program, and if she does not do well in short program, judges won't hand out high PCS to her even if she's impressive in long.

She should debut at JGP.
 
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