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Natalia Bobrova 1978-2015 RIP

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RRG is sad to report (via VK.com) the death on 2 April of 1993 World bronze medallist on floor, Natalia Bobrova.


Born in 1978 in Novosibirsk, Natalia competed for the local Dynamo club, working there as a coach after the end of her competitive career.  She recently moved to Tel Aviv for medical care, where the experts had hoped for a remission. Natalia had been treated for stomach cancer in Novosibirsk.


Natalia had won the bronze medal all around in the Russia Cup in 1993 and was Russia's first ever individual medallist in World Championships following the break up of the Soviet Union.  She will be greatly missed.


Our thoughts are with her family and friends.


http://youtu.be/KSRZ9fWFbfA



'The more you try, the more you will succeed' - Oleg Verniaiev interview

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I will never forget the first time I saw the new generation of Ukraine gymnasts - Verniaiev, Radivilov and Stepko - compete alongside each other.  They reminded me of the Soviets of old, with their proud bearing and determination to be the best.  With Kuksenkov, they were arguably Europe's best MAG team - stronger, more tight knit as a team than neighbours Russia; more charisma and originality than Britain.  Ukraine's tragic loss of a team medal at the Olympics in London didn't stop Igor Radivilov winning a spirited bronze medal on the vault, and he continues to reaffirm his status here and on the rings each year.   Oleg Verniaiev, a native of Donetsk, is gradually establishing himself as the world's leading rival to Kohei Uchimura, winning gold AA at the American Cup and repeatedly confirming his ranking as the world's best parallel bars worker.  He is also, surely, that rare and elusive thing - a MAG fan favourite.  

If you want proof that sport transcends world politics, you only have to listen to Oleg.  Two of his closest team mates - Nikolai Kuksenkov (Russia) and Oleg Stepko (Azerbaijan) have had to leave their home country to be able to pursue their sport.  Verniaiev and Radivilov have been able to remain true to Ukraine, but the friendship between the team mates in remote countries is unbroken.

Listen to this interview.  http://youtu.be/nxmbs-xyKGI

Good luck to Oleg and his compatriots as they prepare for the big competitions this year.

BBC TV coverage of the 2015 European Gymnastics Championships

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We are all looking forward to the Championships - quals start next Wednesday.  The BBC is covering finals - here is the broadcast schedule as per their website - http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/gymnastics/32173972

Friday 17 April 13.00-15.00 BST BBC2 (AA final, WAG)
Friday 17 April 17.30-2015 BST Red button (AA final, MAG)
Saturday 18 April 13.00-15.00 BST BBC1 (Event finals)
Sunday 19 April 13.30-16.00 BST BBC2 (Event finals)

Nominative registrations (list by name of all competitors) - http://www.gymnasticsresults.com/euro/2015/nomreg.pdf

You will be able to follow scores at http://www.longinestiming.com/Sport?sport=GA

Schedule below - (GAF - WAG; GAM - MAG)


Link to official website - http://www.montpelliergym2015.fr

ENJOY!  Good luck to all those who participate!



Sergei Starkin - 'Working with high level gymnasts like Ablyazin andMustafina is hard, but interesting'

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An interview by Oksana Tonkacheeva with personal coach to Russia's leading male and female gymnasts, Denis Ablyazin and Aliya Mustafina.

Summary below (not word for word) -

Next week we'll have the European Championships.  Denis Ablyazin will compete - but not, on this occasion, Aliya Mustafina.

- It wasn't just my decision to train Aliya - it wasn't as if Aliya out of the blue knocked on my door and just asked me to work with her. There was a meeting of head coach Andrei Rodionenko, the head coach of the women's team Evgeny Grebyonkin, and Aliya's father.  Everything had to be carefully weighed up - working with an athlete like Mustafina is primarily a responsibility - I thought long and hard. 

First, I had to explain to Aliya that there would be conditions, and that if she were not ready to fulfill them, we could not even begin.  I have had to make changes myself, not just inside the gym, but outside of it.  The result that we are all expecting from her requires maximum concentration and a certain discipline. In other words, now her entire life will be subordinated to the goal. Self discipline is vital - you can't just 'sit on the horse and gallop off'.

- (In response to a question about Aliya's famous temperament.) I asked Aliya to think carefully before making a decision. To which she replied that as far as she was concerned she had decided everything long ago. Why did I decide to take this on?  Well, first of all, a desire to help Aliya achieve the objectives she has set for herself.  And secondly, any coach would be interested in working with such a high level athlete. Such talents as Mustafina are rare - it's a great experience to work with her, you can improve your own skills.

- We don't have much time before the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. But to fulfill all our plans - to add difficulty to the routines and to find the right physical and emotional balance - is quite realistic.

- Before I found Denis, I had worked with girl gymnasts for ten years.  When Leonid Arkayev was head coach, I even had a chance to bring gymnasts to Round Lake.  I learned about the training system.

In my opinion, you need four or five months to bring Aliya to full form.  And about her character, by the way ... there is no problem. You just have to try to engage in dialogue, to explain every action, why you need to do one thing and not another. The principle of "I'm the boss - do what I say" does not work here. Aliya is a mature woman, an athlete, and if she has understanding of what she must do then there is no need to use force. 

- I work to the same principles with Ablyazin.  Working with such high level gymnasts is not only about learning the technical subtleties. We have to find a common language.  In the hall, and beyond. If you begin to treat the athlete as an object, he will immediately notice it. I am present in their lives as much as they need. For example, sometimes on a day off we can dine together, to talk about something in an informal atmosphere ...

- The first person with whom I consulted on this issue before making a decision, was Denis. Whatever changes may occur in my life, they should not be reflected in my work with him. Therefore, if he had said "no", I would have said the same thing to Aliya.  He immediately reacted positively to this idea. I tried to schedule training so that the gymnasts do not overlap and each receives his share of individual attention.  It is not easy, to be honest. Do I sleep at night? I'm so tired that I just drop off.

Follow live scoring! Links for today

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Picture of Ksenia Afanasyeva courtesy of Daria Skrypnik on Tumblr

WAG qualifications, European #Gymnastics, begin in just over an hour at 10.30 Montpellier time.  Follow live scoring at http://www.longinestiming.com/Sport?sport=GG


Alla Sosnitskaya has an ankle injury and has returned to Moscow for a check up.  Maria Paseka will replace her on vault and uneven bars while Daria Spiridinova has been scheduled to do all around.


Paseka and Afanasyeva will go in the first subdivision.  Spiridinova, and Maria Kharenkova, appear in sub 3, which starts at 4.30 local (Montpelier) time (1 hr ahead of BST).  Link to the start lists is here - http://www.longinestiming.com/File/Download?id=00000E0000000100FFFFFFFFFFFFFF00


Good luck to all the gymnasts!  We will be supporting you!


Alla, get well soon!

Europeans quals - results

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The Russian team delivered!  

Ksenia Afanasyeva and Maria Paseka to V final
Daria Spiridinova and Maria Kharenkova to bars final (although it is possible that Paseka will replace Maria K in the final; it has been hinted that Paseka has upgrades to come.
Maria Kharenkova to beam final
Ksenia Afanasyeva and Maria Kharenkova to floor final
Maria Kharenkova and Daria Spiridinova to AA final.

All the girls had little errors in their qualifying routines, so there is room for improvement.  This comp will be a good test of Afanasyeva's fitness as she recuperates from injury.  Spiridinova will need to keep her nerve in Friday's AA and in the uneven bars final.  We will have a chance to see Maria in her first senior individual AA in which she is competing for a medal - this could be the firing of a leader.

It is a long time since such a well balanced Russian team came to Euros.  Without Iordache and Mustafina, the international field is significantly looser here than at Worlds, but there are still opportunities to see good gymnastics and the fight for medals will be strong in every category.

Let's see how finals go.  And don't forget tomorrow's MAG quals!






Good luck to all the teams!!!

'Today, I did everything I was capable of' - Daria Spiridinova

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Lauren Cammenga has translated this interview with Russian bars specialist and AA candidate, Daria Spiridinovs.


"I was actually on standby for the all-around. We trained the all-around before the European Championships; I was ready. But, on the other hand, my all-around difficulty isn't very high at the moment, and it's hard to compete. Although I am trying very hard to add difficulty bit by bit on every event. But today I did everything I was capable of.

Of course, I had a little bit of nerves today, but not a lot. I don't know what happened. This isn't the first time I've had that mistake on beam – I also had it at last year's European Championships. I don't understand the reason. After beam I was really disappointed, and understood that I would already be way behind the leaders. Now I just have to let it go – what happened, happened. I should qualify to the bars final, and what's more, I still haven't shown everything I can do on that event! And there's still a chance I will get through to the all-around final. And there we'll battle it out."

'I'm sure I'll have enough strength' - Maria Kharenkova

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Lauren Cammenga translates Maria's words in this interview - http://m.rsport.ru/artist_gym/20150415/823416826.html

 "Today I wasn't too nervous, and basically all the events went well with decent results. But on beam I could have performed better. At the beginning on that event I have no nerves at all, but then when everything starts going well, close to the end I always get more nervous on combinations. Everything else was good.

I'm competing in the all-around for the first time. I won't say that's it's been difficult, but then I worked on all events constantly during my preparations, so I had time to become accustomed. I understand that I have a chance to fight for medals, but all the same I just tune into doing what I need to – no better, no worse. Tomorrow we'll train a little less, because I should rest a little before the all-around final. But I'm sure I'll have enough strength."

Lauren has done translations of interviews with Ksenia Afanasyeva and Maria Paseka, too.  You can read them here - http://russiangymnasticsnerd.tumblr.com/post/116495346336/russian-interviews-w-r-sport

Verniaiev, Belyavski take 1, 2 in European Championships

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Ukraine's Oleg Verniaiev confirmed his position as Europe's leading male all around gymnast yesterday with a strong performance at the European Championships in Montpellier.  Verniaiev, who was competing with a tender ankle, is making a case for himself as a rival to reigning World and Olympic Champion Kohei Uchimura.

David Belyavski performed reasonably steadily here but for a stutter on pommel horse, finding a silver medal to complement the gold medal he won in Moscow two years ago.  If the elegant gymnast from Ekaterinburg can ever finally manage to hit all six apparatus in a row, without errors, he too could fight for gold at Worlds, alongside his Ukrainian friend and competitor.  He reminds me of Soviet Valentin Mogilnyi, 1990 European Champion, whose beautiful line on the apparatus was often marred by unpredictable errors.

Britain's Daniel Purvis competed wonderfully for third place.  Russia's second all arounder here, Nikolai Kuksenkov, was rather unsettled on the apparatus and ended up in 11th place.

You can find the full results here.




Maria Kharenkova - 'No limit to perfection' says Andrei Rodionenko

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16 year old Maria Kharenkova with coach Olga Sagina after yesterday's all around final at the European Championships, in which Maria won a silver medal.  Maria comes from the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, and follows in the footsteps of such gymnasts as Ludmilla Tourischeva, Svetlana Grozdova, Natalia Shaposhnikova, Natalia Yurchenko and Elena Produnova who all trained at the same gym as her. 

Maria said: 'I’m a little bit sorry that I lost to the Swiss gymnast [Giulia Steingrueber], but, on the other hand, I’m not terribly disappointed – after all, she is a lot more experienced and stronger than I am, and it’s my first time in the all-around'.

Maria has grown physically and developed as a competitor since her last showing at the Nanning World Championships.  With her longer limbs is coming a greater grace and power in her moves.  'You can lose by mistake, but you can't win by chance', said head coach Andrei Rodionenko in an interview published today.  'Masha will continue to work, and show a higher level - there is no limit to perfection'.  Full results of the competition can be found here - Britain's Ellie Downie, a first year senior, won the bronze medal!            
                                                                                                      
Russia's second all arounder here, the graceful Daria Spiridinova, had rather a difficult time with multiple errors on floor and beam and a below power vault leading her to finish in what she considered a rather disappointing thirteenth place.  'Dasha has only worked all around in this competition, she wasn't fully prepared for this.  She has two apparatus - beam and bars - that will be good, and on the rest she is really only there to support the team.  We tried all around, but it didn't work', explained Andrei Rodionenko.  Daria is growing taller every day, added Russia's head coach, and the forces of physiology are difficult to predict.

Spiridinova - known as 'elf' for her pixie-like appearance - will compete later today in the bars final.  

The selection of the team here in Montpellier was complicated by a last minute injury to Russia's leading all around, vault and floor competitor, Alla Sosnitskaya, and the fact that the UEG competition format does not allow for a travelling alternate. Thus the fourth member of the team now here, Maria Paseka, only arrived late on Tuesday afternoon prior to competing in qualifications on the Wednesday morning.  Paseka, who will compete for a medal in today's vault final, was a controversial selection as some consider the sun to be setting on the 2012 Olympian.

I have gone on record on this blog as preferring first year senior, Seda Tutkhalyan, as a strong all around replacement for Sosnitskaya.  However, Paseka's inclusion on the team is predictable given Rodionenko's pattern of preference for low risk selections.  It is easy to understand that flying in to compete at such short notice could put significant stresses on a young, inexperienced athlete, and it is conceivable that young Seda wouldn't even have the right visa at this time of her career - so perhaps that wasn't such a bad decision.  Let's hope, however, that the gifted gymnast is considered fairly for inclusion in the team for the European Games, where her all around talents may provide great support for the likes of Mustafina.



Afanasyeva completes Russian hat-trick with classical gold

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It was almost a symbol of the contemporary struggle for the identity of gymnastics.  First, we saw Britain's Claudia Fragapane, completing with verve and energy the powerful tricks and tumbling that gained the diminutive gymnast the title 'Pocket Rocket'.  Next, we saw the elegant line and gravity defying artistry of the regal Ksenia Afanasyeva, graceful in both her gymnastics and her manner.   They were both compelling, but only one gymnast showed the purity and harmony that was once de rigeur in the sport, and that has frequently elevated artistic gymnastics above a form of energetic, cheerleading contortionism.  Thankfully, at least, the judges recognised the differences in what they were seeing.  Just.  Finally, as the last performer of the day, the 23 year old Afanasyeva was crowned Europe's Floor Queen once more, repeating the award she won two years ago in Moscow.  She was delighted, danced a little jig, and threw herself into the fatherly embrace of Dr Timonkin, Russia's team doctor for many years, who has helped his gymnasts through so many turbulent times.

Afanasyeva's posture, lift and expression has always been unquestionable; today it was added to with a serene determination.  Almost perfect in all but one skill - her triple twist, in which she took half a step backwards - Russia's returning champion quietly asserted her right to gold with a comeback performance that all but matched her gold medal winning routine at the 2011 World Championships.  Choreography and expression is less about performing tricky gimmicks with a brash smile than it is about rising above the difficulty to perform an exercise that is a consummate whole.  Afanasyeva's bearing told the whole story here; simple dance only emphasises the unique quality of movement that stems from having trained in the classical tradition from day one of her career, now some nineteen years ago.  She will never lose that shine.

With this medal Afanasyeva became Russia's biggest medal winner at these Championships, her gold  complemented by a bronze on vault (where she presented a surprise Amanar).  This surely cements her candidacy for a place on the Russian team at Worlds in Glasgow this autumn, provided she can remain in good health.  

Congratulations to all the team - every single gymnast took a medal.

Maria Kharenkova - silver all around
Maria Paseka - gold in vault with another surprise Amanar, and a rather messy Cheng ('She is a lucky gymnast', said head coach Andrei Rodionenko, 'She wasn't even in the line up for the team, flew out the night before qualifications, then got a gold in finals.'.  I am not sure if this bodes well or otherwise for the pretty Muscovite, when it comes to selection for Worlds ...)
Daria Spiridinova - gold on bars with a beautiful routine.

Commiserations to young Kharenkova for her mishap on beam today - so near, and yet so far.  Maria fell on the layout back somersault that is a highlight of her fast paced work, then missed out her required leap series, losing what otherwise would have been a clear gold for her.  It's all grist to the mill, though.  Maria will learn from her mistake and come back next time, stronger.  Coach Olga Sagina will help her along the way.

So Romania's Andreea Munteanu gave her country's system a boost when she won a relatively unexpected gold.  This left the gold medal summary at event finals looking as if there had been a time warp - Russia, Russia, Romania, Russia.  

But the big gold, the one they all wanted, went to Switzerland's Giulia Steingrueber - I wonder who will win it next year?

You will find all of the results here - http://www.longinestiming.com/Competition?id=00000E0000FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF&sport=GA&year=2015a

Video of Ksenia on floor - http://youtu.be/UjYa-GcEsic

Coach Elfimov: Komova is preparing all around

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In a Sports Express interview with Elena Vaitsekhovskaya, coach Gennadi Elfimov has confirmed that he and Komova are working together, thus confounding rumours that they had split up for good.  He says that Viktoria is preparing all around for the European Games in Baku, which will take place in June this year.

Why on earth do I keep this blog?

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I had to ask myself this question, this morning, after receiving a pretty nasty comment on my post about yesterday's floor final.  I usually make it a rule not to publish rude, poorly argued, unpleasant or profane comments; I went against that principle.  I trust that whoever 'wrote' that comment is highly embarrassed.  I can't imagine that she or he would speak like that to anyone in person.

It is an unfortunate fact of life that the wider internet - social media - encourages the covert, cowardly bullying that is often disguised as argument and opinion on the various gym forums.  Some of the people posting there just don't know how to regulate their behaviour, and moderation can only work retrospectively.  I wish people would think before they post ... would YOU like to read something so rude?  Disagreements are allowed, and you don't have to like someone's writing style, but good manners cost nothing and are at the heart of a civilised society.  This is gymnastics, not war.  If you spoke like that to a stranger in the street, you would most likely be arrested for breach of the peace; or worse, if you chose the wrong person to abuse or attack. 

I already moderate all comments, and don't want to make it difficult for people to post here, as so many of the comments - the vast majority - are interesting, honest and well considered.  Blogger isn't the easiest platform to comment on without registering, so I have left the 'anonymous' option open in order to encourage participation.  One or two people have abused this freedom, but I don't want to remove it when so many are contributing appropriately.  I like it when contributors sign off their pieces with their names, eg Todd and John - this is good practice that others could copy, if they remember.  If you are unsure, there are also participation guidelines available to read - follow the link in the header banner.

Gymternet bloggers - we all do it for love, and not much else.  RRG has managed to keep going for five years - and will go on.  I coordinate and write most of the material myself, but I have to thank a lot of other people for their input - blogs, photographers, the RGF, translators, other fans on the gym sphere, academics, writers like Vladimir Z.  My fantastic readers who almost always make intelligent comment and foster an atmosphere of positive questioning.  

I am not a journalist, and this blog isn't a money making venture.  I do it to disseminate information on the gymnastics programme that I believe still produces the best classical gymnastics in the world; sometimes, out of sheer bloody mindedness, I do it to remind whoever is bothered to read that the sport of artistic gymnastics has an amazing heritage, and is so much more than this year's World Championships, or last year's Code update.  Most importantly, I do it to learn more myself, and to enjoy the intellectual challenge of analysing how it has all come to be.  I am proud to say that this blog has been behind the writing of some original work that is now appearing in peer reviewed publications and conferences.  

The sole focus of this blog is the Russian and Soviet system, set within a framework of elite international artistic gymnastics.  It will remain so.


The pictures above tell of just a few of the reasons that I keep updating this blog.

Afanasyeva congratulated by regional Governor Vladimir Gruzdev

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Politician Vladimir Gruzdev, Governor of Tula Oblast, Afanasyeva's home region, has officially congratulated the senior national team member for her outstanding performance, winning a gold medal on floor and a bronze on vault, at this weekend's European Championships.

"The gold medal in the floor exercise was the result of hard work, perseverance and determination. Your countrymen are proud of your achievements!

I am confident that a strong character and skill will continue to serve as collateral for your athletic success."

Vladimir Gruzdev wished Ksenia health, luck and new bright victories!

Tula and local coach Marina Nazarova have long been important to Russian gymnastics.  As well as Afanasyeva, Tula is also home to 2009 world bars champion and 2010 team world champion, Ksenia Semenova.  Maria Zasypkina, 2001 world team silver medallist, also trained in Tula with Nazarova.  This is an impressive track record.  

The high profile victories of the Russian gymnasts in Montpellier will no doubt be important as the various Olympic sports struggle to secure the best possible funding for their training for Rio.  Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko has already suggested that warm weather training might not be made available to all Olympic sports - so government support for gymnastics will be of material importance as resources are allocated over the coming months.  Head coach Andrei Rodionenko stated his wish last year - that facilities built in Sochi for the Winter Olympics be made available to the gymnasts as acclimatisation for the weather conditions the gymnasts will experience in Brazil.



The magnificent Afanasyeva, rule breaking and other early morning musings

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Ksenia Afanasyeva during qualifications last Wednesday, in Montpellier.  Courtesy RGF




It's way too early in the morning to be blogging, really, but unless I seize the day and get down to a bit of writing I'll never be able to update you.  I'm bang in the middle of grading season so my hours and thoughts are mostly taken up with concerns for my students at the Uni where I work full time.  But, for my blog, I will find a few quiet moments in the earliest hours of the day.  I should really be asleep, but it's that kind of London morning when the birds are tweeting and the mist is drifting gently over the gloomy skyline.  You can smell the faint tinge of vehicle emissions in the polluted air.  It aggravates my asthma.  But the promise of spring is still there, predicting a summer when perhaps I will finally find the time to make the changes I need, to find somewhere to live that doesn't make me cough and make more space and time for the writing and creativity that I now want to be at the centre of my life.

There is some very good gymnastics news for those of us who love the Russian team.  For a start, Lifje tells us that Aliya Mustafina and Larissa Iordache are planning an outing to a friendly team competition between Italy, Russia, Romania and Columbia, to be held in Turin on May 30th.  This will no doubt be a good warm up for Aliya as she prepares for the European Games.  Hopefully if there is live streaming or videos, we will get a chance to see how her gymnastics is developing.  I have other, exciting news about Aliya which I will be featuring on this blog in a few days' time.  Some of you may already have seen some of the teasers but I have fuller information on the photoshooot/interview she has done for Alexei Nemov's magazine, Bolshoi Sport.  Watch this space.

On a somewhat less encouraging note, poor Alla Sosnitskaya, who injured herself during training in the days before the European Championships, is in a boot, having injured some of the ligaments in her ankle.  She will miss the European Games, where she was scheduled to compete all around, and hopes to recover in time for Worlds, but we don't really know.  Valentina Rodionenko has suggested that eternal reserve Evgenia Shelgunova might take her place, if she is ready.  The Russians need an all arounder to fill that final spot behind Aliya Mustafina and - if she can - Viktoria Komova.

Given Komova's long track record of will-she-won't-she behaviour and circumstances, Russia might well be looking for two more all arounders to fill the team beside Mustafina, and it will be interesting to see who makes the final three.  Of course, the gymternet excitement is focussed on the dynamic Seda Tutkhalyan.  I think most of us would love to see Seda's face on a Russian senior team.  My thoughts about Seda at the present time, having reviewed her Youth Olympics performances, is that she has potential as a beam and vault specialist but still has - or had - a little way to go on floor and bars.  I'm beginning to see why she hasn't quite made the team as yet, although I am willing to believe rumours of upgrades.  I like this determined and energetic gymnast just as much as any of you and hope she can find consistency on the grand stage - she seems to me to be temperamentally fit and may well be the girl for the big occasion.

Speaking of our favourites, I was very glad to see an interview with Ksenia Afanasyeva by a journalist who I think is probably a growing favourite with the national head coaches, Maria Vorobyeva.  Ksenia had a lot of interesting things to say - these are the main things that I found of interest :
  • The recovery from her injury was very difficult.  After competing in the Olympics and the Universiade, the pain in her ankle gradually became worse - it was the first time in her life that she ever felt that she just couldn't do anything.  At first, after the operation, she didn't know if she would want to return at all.  One day she would feel better, the next worse. 
  • Her return to competition, at the Russian Championships, was a kind of turning point.  She felt she was ready, but her legs and arms still felt weak.  It was really since this competition that she had begun to train much more assiduously.  She said that at 23, her age really made a difference to her gymnastics, and that she feels that she is a lazy gymnast (I'm sure this isn't true!).  
  • She really didn't think that she would win floor, as the tumbling of Claudia Fragapane and Giulia Steingrueber would surely mean that one of them would record the top score.  Also, she mentions not liking the floor mat in Montpellier (something that Denis Ablyazin also mentions elsewhere).  But in the end, she says,'my victory made it clear: on the floor it is not only power that matters - there is also dance, choreography'.
  • Other thoughts on this : 'I believe that floor must include beautiful choreography, complex jumps, turns and acrobatics. That's why I'm glad that the judges appreciate all three of these components, but do not focus on one of them.'
  • She says that at first she thought her floor score (in quals) was low, but then she looked at the marks overall and realised that everyone had been marked the same.  The judges were very strict in Montpellier.
  • This competition was only the second time that she had competed the Amanar!  She hadn't planned to use it, but realised that if she did the DTY she would only be equalling the difficulty of her main rivals, so to win medals she needed the Amanar.  She won't be training it all the time, to save her legs and ankles.
  • She has to be patient to get to the finishing line - Rio.  Her injury still really worries her - it is something that could affect her for life.
  • The coaches are trying to persuade her to do beam, but she isn't sure about this - she is very nervous of competing beam.  She might have to do so for the team at World Championships.  As far as bars is concerned - enough is enough.  The coacbes would like her to do all around, but she would prefer to be a specialist, even if that does include working beam.
  • She is trying not to think of Rio.  Just live for today.
Afanasyeva has such a graceful demeanour, not just on the exercise mat but also as a person - I remember a conversation I had in Moscow in 2013, with Brigid of the Couch Gymnast.  Brigid had attended the Pacific Rim competition at which a young team of Russians had competed, captained by Ksenia.  She said how kind and caring the European floor champion was towards her younger team mates.  I think that is something that somehow shines through, in everything that the gymnast does - a thoughtful nature and very much a caring person - she will make an excellent team captain alongside the fiery Mustafina. 

Finally, I had a thought about risk taking and rule breaking in gymnastics, almost before the sun rose this morning.  Gymnastics has changed by more than a few tenths in the Code.  Today, it is about following rules, whereas in the - increasingly distant - past, it was about rule breaking.  Innovation is bound to the ground rules established in the Code, so we see originality as adding a twist to a somersault or turn.  There is relatively little of the true ground-breaking innovation such as the first Tkachev, the first Kovacs and so on that developed so rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s.

So is the sport - the athletes and coaches - limited by the imagination of whoever drafts the Code?

I'm beginning to think so - but what do you think?

Have a lovely day!





In search of a butterfly ... the complexity and contradictions of gymnastics

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Olga Korbut in flight. Effortless, like a swallow.

The fundamental contradiction of gymnastics is that it is a sport in which we can all participate; but which at the elite level is all but impossible for most of us.  Its fundamental principle is that it takes movement, however simple or difficult, to a level of refined and aesthetic perfectionism.  A child of 6 doing a handstand in the playground might have flat feet, an arched back, shoulders at an angle, hands pointing in different directions.  Take him or her into the gym, and you hopefully transform the movement into an object of beauty, perhaps something capable of being used as a progression.  The child's pride in achievement is clear, and the only difference to the playground is that the handstand has been coached and coaxed into a state of alignment, the health of the body sharpened to encourage strength, poise and coordination that will serve the child for life.

Most of us couldn't attempt the high difficulty moves executed by elite international gymnasts, but the principles are the same whatever the level - or era.  A good artistic gymnast will make the impossible look effortless.  Movement will guide the eye through a panopoly of original shapes that appear simple and unrushed yet at the same time beg the question - 'how on earth is that possible?'.  Leaps and somersaults soar into space without the slightest hint of effort, 'bounce' or rebound.  Flight is the gymnast's metier; the flight of a swallow at times, the vertical pyrotechnics of a rocket less often.  The principles of good line and effortless flight apply regardless the level of complexity; the aesthetic is as important during acrobatics as it is during dance.  In fact the quality of movement throughout the whole routine informs the overall impression more than individual moves.  This is less about pointed toes and a perfect split than it is about the way that the gymnast masters the complexity of individual moves, and finds a way of making the transitions look spontaneous.

A Code that attempts to measure the individual elements and calculate scores on the basis of execution deductions will always fail because it (a) is missing the point of the consummate nature of good gymnastics throughout the entirety of an exercise (b) is destined to become impossibly complicated and (c) is assuming a level playing field in terms of quality of movement.

Economy of line, effortless movement, apparently overcoming gravity, complexity - these are the principles that have always guided gymnastics, and this remains the same today if we want gymnastics to progress.  The sport will always survive and change, but we ignore these principles at risk to the sport's progress.  Development that ignores these principles will ultimately find its own limits and result in gymnastics that is unrefined, lacks aesthetic appeal and is damaging to the health of the participants.  An example would be the handspring double front somersault that some women have attempted, or the approach to floor that some are currently taking that emphasises acrobatic difficulty at the expense of effortless movement, economy of line, and a balanced approach to complexity.

Naturally, gymnastics has changed significantly and will always be in a state of evolution.  Earlier on this blog, I have argued that, in the context of cultural theory, the sport changes over time in response to the 'sieve of taste' and influences in the socio-cultural, political and economic domain.   I have debated the merits of contemporary gymnastics from an aesthetic and artistic perspective. Those of you who have read the blog regularly will also know that, aside from an admiration for a handful of gymnasts, principally Simone Biles, and a devoted loyalty to the Russian team, I don't have much hope for the sport at present.

I mentioned in yesterday's post, very briefly, the current situation where the form of the sport is directly, almost exclusively, influenced by a very small group of people.  In the mistaken belief that gymnastics can be measured objectively, they have adopted the position where they have tried to deconstruct the sport and narrowly describe the contested ground of artistry.  The resulting Code of Points has handed the creative lead and initiative to the Technical Committees.  Gymnasts can submit new moves to the Code, but the overwhelming balance of power rests with the administrators of the FIG.  This is pretty undemocratic when you think how few members of the FIG Technical Committees there actually are, and how unrepresentative they are of the gymnasts and coaches competing at the very highest level in the sport.  The monocultural approach that this promotes probably explains why there is so very little depth in the sport, above the very top layer of gymnasts competing.  For example, in the whole of Europe, only 28 gymnasts opted to perform two vaults in this month's Championships. 

So what do you think about this?

I went in search of a butterfly to try to understand where things have gone wrong. I hear that Britain's Claudia Fragapane is considering submitting her full twisting version of the 'skill' to the FIG for validation at the next World Championships, and I wanted to see how the original - without the twist - compared.  It took me a long time to find; there aren't many butterflies about these days.  You can see one, performed by Vera Caslavska, in the series beginning at 10.40 in this video of the 1966 World Championships event finals.



I won't link to Claudia's floor routine on this blog; you will be able to find it easily enough on Youtube.  Can you recognise the move she is calling a full-twisting butterfly?  Which do you prefer, and why?

At 15.04 you can see a floor level sequence performanced by Zinaida Druzhinina (Voronina).  Interesting also to reflect on how this sequence inspired some of the choreography in Aliya Mustafina's 2010 floor exercise, and on the differences in presentation style.  

I remember a conversation I had on the way home after the event finals of the 1993 World Championships.   The men's floor exercises had impressed me, but I remarked that for all the acrobatic difficulty presented, what had made the crowd gasp most had been Grigory Missiutin's full twisting dive roll, at 0.59 on this video.



Please do participate!  We would like to read your ideas!

Aliya Mustafina to feature in special edition of 'Bolshoi Sport' - how to buy a copy

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Aliya Mustafina, courtesy of Bolshoi Sport
On June 15th Bolshoi Sport, a full colour magazine produced under the direction of Olympic champion Alexei Nemov, will publish an interview with Aliya Mustafina, complete with new photographs of Russia's returning gymnastics champion.

Mustafina will turn 21 in September 2015, just in time for the Glasgow World Championships which will be the qualifying event for her most important competitive target to date, the 2016 Rio Olympics.  And on the 14th June, all being well, she plans to begin her competition in Baku, Azerbaijan, in the very first European Games.  This will be the third multi-sports event of her career, following the London Olympics of 2012 and the 2013 Universiade, held in Kazan, Russia.  Mustafina won gold at both of them.  A mere 417 days will then elapse between the beginning of Aliya's attempt at the European Games title, and the opening ceremony of the Rio Olympics.  Every single day will count.

So as not to spoil, I have chosen but one of the three photographs of Aliya that have been circulating the internet - this one from the magazine's own website.  You will have seen some of these pictures already, but I know that many fans will be interested in seeing the finished article and the complete photoshoot when it is published.  The publishers have been kind enough to send me details of how to access the issue online, or buy a hard copy.

ONLINE ACCESS (free of charge) - you can go to the Bolshoi Sport Archive of past issues.  Click on the cover of the magazine you want (remember that Aliya's interview will be appearing in the issue published on the 15th June) and you will be able to access the article online.

TO BUY A COPY - go to Zinio where you will be able to buy the issue of Bolshoi Sport with Aliya's interview in it.  This costs 82 Roubles - which is only just over £1 sterling - but there will be postage costs on top of that.  I will be trying this myself but haven't used Zinio's website before and as I don't speak Russian it will be an adventure.  However, once I have tried it myself (not before the 15th June) I will post any information that I think will be useful on the blog.

Please respect the copyright in the photographs and article published by Bolshoi Sport - do not forget to link to their website and to mention them if you are sharing this information.

Finally, Valentina Rodionenko has announced the provisional teams for Baku - she says that Mustafina and Komova will compete, with the third remaining spot going to Tutkhalyan, Kharenkova or Shelgunova.  Ignatyev, Belyavski and Kuksenkov will make up the men's team.  The competition format for teams is three up, three counting, so all gymnasts will be all arounders.  Today, Andrei Rodionenko elaborated on this, explaining that Mustafina and Komova are on the preliminary team, but that 'there is no rush to make a decision' about who will compete in Baku.  Indeed, there is more than a month to go to the Games so any speculation about team membership is rather premature.  We'll just have to wait and see.

Happy Birthday, Leonid Arkayev!

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Leonid Arkayev at a recent congress of the RGF

Leonid Arkayev, rock of the Russian and former Soviet gymnastics systems, turns 72 today.

Now directing his own gymnastics empire at the Leonid Arkayev School of Gymnastics in Saransk - where he works alongside choreographer Natalia Karamushka - Leonid's zest for the sport remains undiminished; in addition to performing as Head of this developing centre, he also still coaches his young gymnasts and remains involved at grass roots as well as national level.  He regularly attends the major international competitions.  

The Russian sports establishment needs his unique insight, incisive opinions and inspirational presence, expressed most recently in a characteristically candid and direct interview with leading sports commentator Elena Vaitsekhovskaya.  Of the new generation of Russian up and coming coaches, only Sergei Starkin seems to embrace Arkayev's philosophy of total dedication and limitless energy.  Starkin acknowledges Arkayev's influence on his training techniques, going back as far as Soviet training camps he attended as a young coach at Lake Krugloye during the 1980s.

Arkayev knows that world-beating gymnastics is created only in conditions of total discipline and focus on the main goal.  His methods brought the Soviet men's and women's teams to a point of perfection during the 80s and 90s that has yet to be matched.  He led the Russian men's team to Olympic gold in 1996; his brilliant women's teams, in 1996 and 2000, had to be satisfied with silver when they fell prey to the inconsistency that has become all too characteristic of Russian gymnastics.  Never mind, to compare former Soviet with current Russian success would be roughly akin to comparing USA to Texas in terms of demographic and resource potential.

Leonid left the national team in 2006; gymnastics had faltered in the massive political and social changes that had taken place in Russia during the post-Soviet era.  His methods of total control were out of kilter with Russia's declining sports ambitions and he had to accept a change.  Today, he admires the spectacular gymnastics of Simone Biles and Epke Zonderland and regrets the failing motivation and morale that has left 'his' team with meagre rewards at recent World Championships.  His word remains strong and influential in Russia, even if he admits to be relieved that he no longer has to bear the stress of being head coach.  

My guess is that, given a chance, he would do it all again.  I'm sure he wishes for Russian gold in Rio, both men and women.  Who knows, perhaps a future Olympian - if not for 2020, then for 2024 - is in training today in Saransk.

Read Elena Vaitsekhovskaya's interview with Leonid here - http://rewritingrussiangymnastics.blogspot.co.uk/2014/12/leonid-arkayev-interview-with-elena.html


Komova, Tutkhalyan will fight for a place on Russia's Euros team

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Head WAG coach Evgeny Grebyonkin has confirmed further details of the Russian team for April's European Championships, reports Allsport.

On the basis of their performance at the Russian Championships, Ksenia Afanasyeva, Maria Kharenkova and Daria Spiridinova have been confirmed for the team.  Fighting for the final place will be Alla Sosnitskaya, Viktoria Komova, Maria Paseka and first year senior Seda Tutkhalyan.

The Russian coaches face some tough selection decisions as they attempt to balance a relative paucity of all around talent this year with the diverse specialisms of such gymnasts as Spiridinova, Afanasyeva and Komova.  Both Sosnitskaya and Tutkhalyan (whose D score AA of 23.7 ranks third in the international ranks so far this year, behind Simone Biles and Evgeniya Shelgunova) offer potential at both specialist (respectively vault (Sosnitskaya) and beam (Tutkhakyan)) and AA level.  Much will depend on the nerve of the coaches and the way these gymnasts respond in preparation at Lake Krugloye.

Given the exigences of training and the time frame now involved before Montpellier, we should expect there to be changes to the line up. Grebyonkin did mention that others are in the mix.  My guess would be that Shelgunova, with her 23.8 D value, will be on the fringes, but another fast-improving gymnast is Anastasia Dmitrieva.  Grebyonkin emphasised that the selection would take into account the results of control competitions held during the training camp at Lake Krugloye, and said that the girls were constantly working to improve.  He was pleased with the performance of the first year seniors, who had overcome significant psychological challenges in making the step up to challenge those they might consider gymnastically to be their 'big sisters' (my words).  Some of the team might even add new combinations to their routines for Montpelier.  

In another interview, Daria Spiridinova explained how she was returning straight to Krugloye to continue her preparations right after the Championships, without even returning for a short break at home.  Not all of the gymnasts are doing the same, but this demonstrates the serious attitude Spiridinova has towards this competition.

I hope Russia will consider blooding some new talent at the EC.  It would be fine experience and preparation for the forthcoming World Championships, which are a qualifying event for the Olympics. 

Good luck to all the team!  Work hard, and be happy!

Source: http://allsportinfo.ru/index.php?id=90880
Interview with Daria Spiridinova - http://www.allsportinfo.ru/index.php?id=90805

Seven men compete for six places at Euros - Valery Alfosov

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The top seven gymnasts at Penza will compete for the six places on the Russian team for Euros, confirmed head coach Valery Alfosov today to Allsport.

On the basis of the results of the national championships, the following gymnasts are in contention: 

All Around : David Belyavski and Nikolai Kuksenkov
Denis Ablyazin : floor, rings and vault
Nikita Nagorny : floor and vault
Mattvei Petrov : pommel horse
Nikita Ignatyev : rings, p-bars and high bar
Mikhail Kudashov : rings (he has a D value of 6.8 but was unable to show his best as he was still recovering from the effects of flu)

At present, the reserve is Dmitri Lankin, who has potential on floor and parallel bars.

As with the women, other gymnasts will be training for the competition and new names may still be added to the roster according to the results of control competitions.

Alfosov stressed that almost the entire team had performed below par in Penza thanks to the effects of a nasty flu bug.  With another four weeks of training before travelling to Montpelier, the team would be targeting stability, better execution and higher performance quality as well as increasing the complexity of their programmes.  David Belyavski, for example, has the potential to increase his D value on p bars from 6.8 to 7.



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