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The Russian team in training yesterday - photograph AND BREAKING NEWS

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Some kind soul - an anonymous contributor - sent RRG a link to this photograph of our team in training just yesterday, listening carefully to the feedback of international judge and member of the FIG WTC Liubov Andrianova-Burda.  Another kind person - Natalia Kalugina - was present.  She tells me that Seda Tutkhalyan is working hard to overcome her psychological problems - and that we should watch her at the Games.  Aliya Mustafina is working hard.  Ksenia Afanasyeva (not in the picture; I believe that she is at a clinic in Khimki) can do floor, but her form isn't great at present as she is still in recovery.  Beam is going well for the team, vault and bars are OK, floor is still rather disappointing; the choreography is poor.

In the picture we can see (top) Anton Stolyar, coach, bars (middle) Marina Bulashenko, coach, beam; Seda Tutkhalyan, Aliya Mustafina, Daria Spiridonova, Natalia Kapitonova, Angelina Melnikova, Maria Paseka and (half in, half out) the choreographer, Olga Burova.  In front of the girls is Liubov Andrianova-Burda, and in the foreground (I think) we have Marina Nazarova, who in addition to being Afanasyeva's personal coach is also now a beam coach to the national team.

I know that things are uncertain now; WADA's McLaren report will be published at 9 am Toronto time today, so we are all on tenterhooks about that, and news of the scandal has reached the ears of our team.  It cannot be easy for them.  It's such a pressured time.  For reasons outlined in earlier posts, I think it is unlikely that the IOC will do anything drastic, but the uncertainty must be driving the gymnasts mad, and it's all so damned unfair.

Today (18th July) - Angelina Melnikova's birthday (send her good wishes on Instagram @gelyamelnikova)
                              - Press day at Lake Krugloye
                              - The McLaren Report will be published

Tomorrow (19th July)  - Maria Paseka's birthday (send her good wishes on Instagram at @maxah1995)
                                     - final team selections will be confirmed at a control competition.

Wednesday (20th July) - Final team selections will be formally announced at a press conference organised by the Russian Olympic Committee

Thursday (21st July) - Russia's case at the Court for Arbitration in Sport will be heard.  Russia is appealing the banning of its track and field athletes from the coming Olympic Games.

Sunday (24th July) - the gymnasts fly to Rio, and on arrival they will take up occupation of their accommodation in the Olympic village.

On the 5th August the Olympic opening ceremony will take place

E&OE, and all my own mistakes as I am writing this rather rapidly on my way to work.

One thing I would like to say, sports are once again the victim of politics here.  This is such a pity.  Sport has the power to create friendships and to transform international relations.  If this has been subverted by Russia's Government, then it is a crying shame.  But two wrongs do not make a right, it is clear that USADA and CCES have behaved abominally and in gymnastics the athletes are not to blame.  I hope and trust that the IOC will formulate a fair and workable solution to this nasty problem that will care for the innocent as well as punish the culpable, and finally enable our gymnasts to make their own case in Rio.

BREAKING NEWS

Valentina Rodionenko says in RSport (interview with Alexander Barmin) that the second control competition took place yesterday.  Ksenia Afanasyeva is in hospital with kidney stones and, as we know, Natalia Kapitonova has taken over the second reserve spot from Evgeniya Shelgunova.  Angelina Melnikova is struggling with her hamstring (an old injury) and stepped down from the floor mat halfway through her exercise - Rodionenko says she feels that this is lack of experience rather than severity of injury, and is something they need to work on.  Aliya Mustafina is working hard, and enduring pain. 

Only one of the gymnasts fell off beam during this control competition.  Of the three finalists, there were no serious errors.  Bars are still their strongest apparatus, and there the team's main competition will be China.  But competition is competition, we'll have to wait and see.

The FIG has weighed in - they are opposed to a blanket ban of all Russian athletes and say that the gymnasts should be allowed to compete based on their record of clean tests.

Related reading on RRG

No Russia for Rio?

'Our gymnasts will stand proud'

Related reading from Inside the Games

Russia holds its breath

And finally - precisly which Performance Enhancing Drug does a gymnast have to take, to be able to do this better?





Sport, friendship and the Olympics - reflections on McLaren reportimplications for Russian gymnastics

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BREAKING - President Putin on the McLaren report - http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/52537

What is happening today, is perhaps the end of an era.  The end of an era when sport was truly playful, and international.  Will we ever see our athletes in the same way again?

The findings of the McLaren report are devastating to me.  They made me think about the value and meaning of the Olympics.  People have written whole books and volumes of books about the history of the Olympics. I am not going to try to unravel all the different strands of the history of the Olympic movement from the Ancient Greeks to the present day.  I'll just reflect here on the current values of Olympism; you can see below an extract from the new Olympic Charter, which was published in 2015.


I certainly am inspired by the values of Olympism; I have followed the Olympics all my life.  But unfortunately it seems that they have been under attack, not just in Russia but internationally.  I will come to the dreadful behaviour of the Russian Ministry of Sports later.  But first of all, let me say, the way that USADA and CCES have behaved, trying to manipulate the results of the McLaren report to animate an Olympic ban on Russia, jumping to conclusions before the findings have even been published, and leaking information to leverage the support of their sporting allies against their sporting enemies, is far from Olympic.  Sport has become a victim of politics, and the athletes and the wider public are losing out. 

Russia has to take its fair share of the blame.  Russia has been doping on an immense, almost factory scale.  You can read the full WADA/McLaren report here, and you can watch Professor McLaren's presentation of the findings.   Positive tests have been swapped, hidden, subverted.  No one can imagine that anyone in the chain of command didn't know what on earth was going on.  It is shameful behaviour.  

But, I should point out that while his findings are devastating to Russian sport as a whole, at no point in the document is gymnastics mentioned.  Our team is clean.  Aliya, David, Nikita, Seda, Daria, Ksenia, Natalia, Nikita, Nikolai, Denis, Maria, Ivan, Evgeniya, all of the rest of them, the coaches, the doctors, all of them are wonderful Olympians, and have been all their lives.  They set a good example, they create a way of life based on the joy of effort, they show respect for ethical principles.  They shine like new pennies.  They inspire me, for one.  I will follow them, support them, remember them and their ilk till the end of my time.  I will never let people forget them whether they compete in the Rio Olympics or not.  Remember Olga Mostepanova, who never competed at the Olympics thanks to political boycott, and yet was the most perfect. astonishing, beautiful gymnast of all time.

On a broader sporting scale, however, Russia's behaviour has been execrable, far from Olympic. Who could say that the Government of the Russian Federation, the FSB, RUSADA, have set a good example, created a way of life based on the joy of effort, shown respect for ethical principle? They have shot Russian sport in the foot, destroyed twenty years of imagination and vision, and Russia's gymnasts, and the sport of gymnastics, will be the victims of their behaviour if the IOC applies the heaviest sanction.  The name Grigory Rodchenko, the Director of the Laboratory who enacted much of the cheating under the direction of the Ministry of Sport, and who blew the whistle on the whole thing, will become notorious in the history of sport.  I wonder who appointed him to the role?  How on earth will Russian sport ever recover from this position?  It is, surely the end of an era. 

It would be tragic if the sport of gymnastics suffered as a consequence of this episode in sports history.  If Olympism is about international relations and friendship, then gymnastics is a truly Olympic sport.  If you read this or any blog on the gymternet, if you contribute to social media, if you read quietly and don't speak, if you rant about this or that, you are a kind of friendly Olympian, even if you can't run or jump or throw.  If you attend competitions, if you do silly tumbling into the pit even though you can't hit splits or land upright, you have the spirit of the Olympics inside you and around you.  Under the umbrella of sport and culture you are creating a network, you are contributing to the 'harmonious development of humankind', you are learning about other cultures and learning to tolerate and grow together through all the differences, difficulties, and joyful things that exist in sport. The sport of gymnastics and its spirit of Olympism has created our networks and our friendships.

If you live in the West, how many Russians do you know, how many of them are gymnasts (or coaches)?  How many Russians would you know if it weren't for gymnastics?  How many different countries do your various online friends come from?  Maybe I am going a little bit mad - it is hot and humid in London.  But it seems to me that sport has the power to enhance and improve international relations, to create friendships on the ground.  To help people realise that in the end, all any of us really want is friendship, love and happiness.  For God's sake, let sport and friendship be an antidote to War and the big things that Governments make happen, that none of us can really control.

And that is where I come full circle.  Because Russia has made this awful thing happen, and there has to be change.  The innocent Russian gymnasts, the flowers of Russia's sporting culture, may suffer because a few of their countrymen, most of them in powerful positions, do not share their wholehearted following of the culture of Olympism.  The USA and Canada, in using the McLaren report so aggressively, has also degraded the value of Olympism and used it as a kind of act of War.  At no other time in my life, including the notorious boycotts of both the 1980 and 1984 Olympics (by the USA and Soviet Union respectively) have I suspected that sport, the Olympics, may be about to degrade completely.  

I look at the sport of gymnastics and yes, I consider it to be wholly admirable.  Not just the Russians, all of the countries competing, make me proud to follow this amazing sport.  Look at the honest, smiling faces, the friendships between the competitors all of different creeds, colours and religions, look at the way that they work, celebrate, entertain us. The Olympic spirit of gymnastics has survived, but sport is on the rocks.  If this is the beginning of a new Cold War, please let's not flush our friendships down the toilet pan.  Let's keep our Olympic flame of friendship burning bright.

Back to more prosaic matters, a key word that is emerging in Russia's response to the WADA report is 'credibility'.  The Russian media (I have been watching Russia Today in particular) say that Professor McLaren needs to be able to provide concrete evidence of all the practices and cheats that he says he has uncovered in the report.  There is no time to investigate the investigations properly before the Games, they are saying.  

Sadly, however, their pleas may be too late, and falling on deaf ears.  The seriousness of the situation seems to be escalating.  First of all WADA, having scolded the USA and Canada for pre-empting publication of the report, have called on the IOC to ban Russia from all Olympic competition.  Secondly, the IOC President, Thomas Bach, has issued a statement, saying that the IOC 'will not hesitate to take the toughest sanctions available against any individual or organisation implicated'.  This doesn't sound good for Russia.  There will be a telephone conference organised by the IOC tomorrow morning, which 'may include provisional measures and sanctions with regard to the Rio Olympic Games'.    

I just hope that the IOC pays heed to the FIG - who have issued a supportive press statement explaining their concerns about the application of a blanket ban. 'Before any actions are taken against FIG's athletes, facts must be presented and doping offences must be proven', they say, 'FIG's Russian gymnasts have been subject to controls equal to those of our other leading gymnastics federations.  Clean Russian gymnasts must therefore be allowed to compete at the Games'. 

Bruno Grandi then adds perhaps his greatest ever contribution to world sport : 

'The rights of every individual athlete must be respected.  Participation at the Olympic Games is the highest goal of athletes who often sacrifice their entire youth to this aim.  The right to participate at the Games cannot be stolen from an athlete, who has duly qualified and has not been found guilty of doping.  Blanket bans have never been, and will never be just.'

That just about says it really.  Now is the time to try to get some sleep, and hope for the best tomorrow morning.  Only one thing I can helpfully add.  We still love you Russian gymnastics.

And before I end this post and go to get my supper, I wanted to correct an error in my earlier post.  A serious error of omission.  Amongst all the dates listed, I forgot to mention that today is the 38th birthday of coach Sergei Starkin.  Sergei plays a pivotal role in Russia's Olympic preparations as personal coach to both Denis Ablyazin and Aliya Mustafina.  RRG wishes this great coach a very happy day, and very much hopes that he will be travelling to Rio in the next few days along with his amazing gymnasts.  He deserves all the hard work that this will involve.

Happy Birthday, Sergei Starkin! 
Further reading on RRG :

No Russia for Rio?

Our gymnasts will stand proud

The Russian team training update, and breaking news about the WADA report












BREAKING - IOC STATEMENT; IOC decision on Russia's participation in Riopostponed

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Via the Artistic Gymnastics group on vk.com

Statement from the IOC.  VERY IMPORTANT TO READ.  Participation on an individual or country basis has still to be decided based on legal considerations.  Administrative sanctions such as the removal of competitions from Russia are just some of the interim measures.

No indication of when the decision about participation will be taken.

https://www.olympic.org/news/statement-of-the-executive-board-of-the-international-olympic-committee-on-the-wada-independent-person-report

IOC decision on Russia's participation in Rio will not be made until the weekend, says TASS.  http://tass.ru/en/sport/889324

All my thoughts are with our gymnasts.  Stay strong, team.

FIG Athletes Commission supports Russian gymnasts in participating inthe Rio Games

Should the Russian gymnasts be allowed to compete in Rio? RRG's view

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We are waiting for the IOC's decision, this weekend, while they seek legal advice about the implications of a blanket ban.  I just wanted to add my thoughts about this to the pot. It isn't a purely legal decision, it is also ethical, and it is about the future of the Olympic movement.  Just my ideas, and please add your own in the comments.


Clean Russian athletes cannot speak out about their country's behaviour; have you seen what happens to dissenters?  Russian people are seeing life through their own media mirror that only partly reflects the way that we see things.

The gymnasts can only speak through their performances.  They are part of an international community of peers who support their participation in the Games.  If Olympism is about promoting harmonious relationships and world peace, if what we are seeing on a broader level is the beginning of a new Cold War, how awful to isolate these individuals from their wider community and to deny them the right they have earned - through their own ethical and fair behaviour - to play their part in the world's Olympic movement, to create connections between Russia and the wider world, at a time when Russia is shrinking and drawing away from the international sports and Olympic community.

Would you deny press accreditation to Russia's most free thinking journalists on the basis of their country's poor record of censorship and press freedoms?  

If Olympism is still alive and well, the IOC will take this opportunity to support the Russian gymnasts, and make it possible for them - all clean athletes, and demonstrably so, supported by their own international sports governing body - to compete fairly at the Olympic Games, under a neutral flag bearing the Olympic Rings.  This would be promoting harmonious relationships between individuals from different countries.  The power of the Olympic community to overcome divisive forces would be enhanced.

The Russian team for Rio - full list of all competitors in all sports

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The Russian Olympic Committee today met to discuss a number of matters, but most importantly to endorse the team selections in all sports.  Andrei Rodionenko will announce the names formally tomorrow, but in the meantime, we already have the official list and more.

  It pretty much confirms what we already know - in Russian alphabetical order according to the list - Ablyazin, Belyavski, Ignatyev, Kuksenkov, Melnikova, Mustafina, Nagorny, Paseka, Spiridonova, Tutkhalyan.  Reserves - Afanasyeva, Kapitonova, Polyashov, Stretovich.

You can access the full list for all sports here - http://olympteka.ru/olymp/rio2016/news/1367.html - with many thanks to our anonymous contributor.

Tomorrow the Court of Arbitration in Sport will issue its findings about the legality of the banning of Russia's entire Track and Field athletics team from the Rio Olympics.  The IOC will take the CAS findings into account when making a decision about how they will act on the revelations in the McLaren report.  If CAS supports a ban of the whole athletics team without individual exceptions, then the  IOC might take this as an endorsement of its proposed blanket ban of all Russian sport.  

The legalities of agreeing a blanket ban are difficult, as this would essentially involve a subversion of the usual fundamental principle - innocent until proved guilty.   

The ROC has categorically ruled out the idea of any boycott of the Olympic Games.  President Alexander Zhukov says this is because a boycott may well precipitate the death of the Olympic movement.

There are two options besides the total ban that are being discussed in the press  - (1) Individuals are offered exemptions on the basis of their clean doping records (2) sports are offered exemptions on the basis of their clean records, with the individual sports governing body making the call.  Either of these would be good for gymnastics, but we will have to wait until Sunday to find out.  Which is the day that the Russian team fly out to Rio.

Denis, David, Nikita, Nikolai, Angelina, Aliya, Nikita, Maria, Daria, Seda, Ksenia, Natalia, Vladislav, Ivan - you are all great Olympians.  We will be with you every step of the way!  Good luck with your preparations!  Keep training well and the results will come.  Davai!

Ksenia Afanasyeva takes retirement

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Leading Russian gymnast since 2007, Ksenia Afanasyeva has retired from gymnastics for medical reasons, reports Alexei Fililov from R Sport.  

Valentina Rodionenko explained that Ksenia has a serious kidney illness. She is in hospital and will take not just days but weeks to recover.

Afanasyeva is not just a brilliant gymnast but also a kind, humourous and intelligent team captain.  Her presence will be missed by both spectators and fellow competitors in Rio.

Ksenia's place on the Russian team travelling to Rio on Sunday will be taken by the experienced and well prepared Evgenia Shelgunova.

RRG would like to wish Ksenia a full recovery.  Get well soon, Ksenia and we will look forward to hearing about your next steps in your new life.

http://m.rsport.ru/artist_gym/20160721/993115276.html

'We will only compete under the Russian flag'

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As background, it is possible that the Russian gymnastics team may be affected by an IOC ban of all Russian sports, because of evidence of state-sponsored doping.  But gymnastics, along with ten other sports, is not mentioned in the McLaren Report into this evidence.  Gymnastics' governing body, the FIG, has made public that it has clean tests for all of the gymnasts.  It is hoped that the IOC will take a decision to allow clean sports to participate in the Games.  It has been mooted that this might be under a neutral, Olympic flag.  Since the CAS ruling this morning that the blanket ban imposed by the IAAF on Russian athletics is lawful, it is considered less likely that exemptions to the ban will be policed on an individual athlete basis.

TASS has published some brief statements about this -
 
- For me it is crucial to act under the Russian flag. I was born here and I will defend it, - said the captain of the men's gymnastics team Nikolai Kuksenkov
 
- We can't really talk about this, but we will be very upset if the wrong decision is taken.  At the same time, we are optimistic and believe that good sense will prevail in the IOC.  But it will be hard for us to compete under another flag, we do not want to compete under the IOC flag, said the coach.
 
- We need to close our eyes to these things and just do our job.  Despite all the difficulties, we need to overcome it and we will be rewarded. We will only compete for Russia, - said Aliya Mustafina, captain of the women's team artistic gymnastics.
 
Source: tass.ru/sport/3474804

In another TASS interview, Aliya has said - 

The hype around the team will not affect my mood because I have not read the news.  My main goal is to help the team.  I have not looked at the internet.  I have a goal simply to fight to the end, if we are finally allowed to be there.  If not - I will be very upset, but I still need to work to the final moment..

http://tass.ru/sport/3475083




The Lost Generation of the Olympics: Gymnastics and the Holy Grail

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Once upon a time, there were six little girls ...

The little girls became gymnasts, and the gymnasts became Champions - but never Olympic Champions.

Politics got in the way. 'Their' Olympics, the 1984 Los Angeles Games, disappeared as their country boycotted the Games for political reasons. History vanished. They became a lost Olympic generation.

Irina Baraksanova



Tatiana Frolova



Natalia Ilienko



Olga Mostepanova



Natalia Yurchenko



There was one exception. Elena Shushunova went on to compete at a second Olympics, becoming All Around champion at the Seoul Games in 1988



The 'little gymnasts' (in fact they were extraordinary athletes) competed at the Oloumoc Friendship Games instead of the Olympics. At these Friendship Games, Olga Mostepanova became Champion in the AA, Floor, Vault and Beam, scoring an unequalled total of 40 in the All Around; a level of perfection never seen before or since. There is very little video of this competition available, and what does exist is very poor quality. This competition is known to gymnastics fans as the 'Holy Grail' of gymnastics.

Some video of the 1984 Friendship Games



The Russians are not threatening a boycott of the 2016 Olympic Games. Nevertheless, if their gymnasts missed the Games this year it would be for political reasons outside of the gymnasts' control. Clean athletes would be suffering because of political games, history would once again disappear. In gymnastics, few, if any, of the athletes - particularly the women - ever get a chance to compete at a second Games. And history is irreparably damaged as Olympic potential vanishes into thin air.

Irina Baraksanova, born 4 July 1969, Tashkent. Soviet national team 1983-86 0 Olympics
Tatiana Frolova, born 26 April 1967, Bryansk. Soviet national team 1980-85 0 Olympics
Natalia Ilienko, born 26 March 1967, Alma-Ata. Soviet national team 1980-84 0 Olympics
Olga Mostepanova, born 3 January 1969, Moscow. Soviet national team 1984-87 0 Olympics
Natalia Yurchenko, born 26 January 1965, Norilsk. Soviet national team 1980-85 0 Olympics
Elena Shushunova, born 23 April 1969, St Petersburg. Soviet national team 1984-88 1 Olympics

'No regrets' - Aliya Mustafina reflects on her career - interview withElena Vaitsekhovskaya

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An interview by Elena Vaitsekhovskaya with Aliya Mustafina, captain of the Russian artistic gymnastics team in Rio 2016.  With many thanks to Marina Vulis for the translation.

Just like four years ago, she is the team leader and knows it.  Aliya Mustafina.  The gymnast who, six years ago, became All Around World Champion, then in 2012 won four medals for Russia at the London Olympics.

Aliya Mustafina, born 30 September 1994 in Yegorievsk.
Merited Master of Sports of Russia
2012 London Olympics - four medals, gold, silver and two bronzes
Three times World Champion (2010, 2013), five times European Champion (2010, 2013, 2016), three times champion of the Baku European Games (2015).  

Neither of us really felt like talking about the coming Olympics, the competition and rivals - too stressful, especially now, when we have only a few days left before the Russian Gymnastics team leaves for Rio.

[Elena] - You were remarkably good this season at the European Championships in Berne, especially your performance on the beam.  This came across during your combinations, especially the choreography, which you now link to your acrobatics.

[Aliya] - It is easier to do acrobatics on this apparatus, or at least it is less complicated than on the floor exercises - there are no double somersaults, or complicated rotations.

- Would you agree the phrase : 'The beam is my favourite apparatus'?

- More like, it's the easiest.

- Easy?!

- Well ... how can I explain?  Put simply, I have been doing gymnastics for sixteen years and in all these sixteen years I have walked on the beam.  It is familiar to me - although there is always some fear and worry.  After all, the likelihood of a fall from the beam at any moment is always high.

- What is the most important thing on this apparatus?

-  Concentration.  Everything has to be precise, you can't be loose or deviate [from the correct technique].

- Three years ago, you called your victory in beam finals a miracle.  How did you feel this season, during the Europeans?

The same.  You always have to have a certain amount of luck on apparatus like the beam - after all, there is only ten centimetres beneath your feet.  If your arm moves below its usual position, you will begin to wobble - and often this is a guaranteed fall, or at least a loss of balance.

- During your most difficult acrobatic combinations, do you manage to 'spot' the beam for your feet?

-  Most of the time I don't see it, and do most of the movements blind.  The only acrobatic element whose landing can be visually controlled is the front aerial walkover with turn.  I often used to think, how can you work practically blindfold and not miss?  Perhaps your body just gets used to the fact that you have to complete this element without an error.  After all, quality comes after numerous repetitions; the more times you do the combination, the more confident you feel.  

-  Do you condition as much as you used to when you had to recover, after surgery?

-  You have to do it all the time.  True, when you do gymnastics all your muscles are working, but conditioning contributes to additional strength development.

-  Maybe this is a strange question to ask an athlete, but do you feel you have 'too many muscles'?

Sometimes, but not often.  Only when you put on a dress, but it does not fit.  There are always problems with dresses - if it fits on the shoulders, the waist will balloon out like a parachute.  If it fits on the waist, it won't fit on the shoulders.  I like dresses, especially in the summer, but I do not get much of a chance to wear them.

- Do you more frequently wear tracksuit and sneakers, are they more comfortable?

I wouldn't say I like to wear athletic clothing.  I don't wear it at home or while relaxing.  Sneakers are an exception - I wear them with dresses to rest my feet.  Shoes or sandals are much worse - you can easily get a blister, and it is hard to train with blisters on your soles - not the most pleasant thing.

-  At what age does a gymnast realise that her feet must be protected?

As soon as you begin to perform seriously.  And not only your feet - in our sport, there are no secondary parts of the body.  If something hurts, it will affect your result.  Ears maybe are an exception - if they hurt, you can ignore it.

-  That's a controversial idea

Well, I meant to say that your ears are the least worry.  It is much worse to have sore wrists or ankles.

-  You are an all around gymnast.  In the all around, do you have permanent preferences for the apparatus, or do they change?

I don't like to talk about preferences.  I often think I just tolerate them.  When you are performing, you do not think of or experience pleasure; all your thoughts are about not falling during your combinations.  There is always a fear of the responsibility.

-  Was it always this way?

Perhaps during my first titles.

-  What is more important - being watched by the public, or your team?

The team.  I already went through what the young girls are going through.  I understand what they are frightened of and what they are thinking of, and I know how important it is to have an athlete to measure yourself up to.  So I do not care how I look in girls' eyes.

-  For many years, you have not had to fight for your position on the team.  Is this psychologically easier for you, or more difficult?

It is an individual thing - easier for some, harder for others.  I never think about it - the point is not making the team, but other things.

-  Have you been to Brazil?

No

-  And would you like to visit?

I don't see Brazil as an exotic place to visit; competition comes first.  For me it isn't actually important where the gym is.

-  But when you think of the Olympics in Rio, what do you think of?

That there is very little time before the competition.  For us, the Olympics begin when we get to the Olympic village.  After that, time flies so fast you do not notice it.  But now I am thinking more about the end of the competition - I am very tired.  

-  From training, or pain from your injuries?

From everything, but more from the injuries.  When you constantly put up with pain, it is exhausting and you get tired of it.  Then you come to the gym in the morning and always experience pain, pain, and you must force yourself to work through this pain.

-  Then you will leave gymnastics without any regrets?
 -  I think so.  In London, I thought about staying a few extra days, just to have a walk around the city.  However, I am not at all sure that I will feel the same way about Brazil.  Most likely I will jump on the first plane, go to 'Lake Krugloye' [the national training centre], take all my things and leave.  I do not think I will be bored without gymnastics.  I have had a good career, with nothing to complain about, and I certainly haven't been unlucky.

-  Are you comfortable that you are a star?

Where do you think I feel like that?  In the gym?  We are all equal here, not one can even think about being unique.  I am rarely out of the gym, I only come home on my days off.  That is why I am probably still shy when someone pays special attention to me.

-  I remember some time ago when you wanted to get out of Krugloye more often

At the moment, I simply can't afford the time - I do not want to spend time travelling if it can be used to rest and recover.

-  After the London Olympics you led a 'normal' life, filled with invitations, photo-shoots, public events.  What was the most difficult part about leaving that behind, when you decided to continue with your career?

It was nothing like that.  I am not a very public person, more of a home bird.

But is there something that would inspire you?  Like professional dancing, skating, tightrope walking in the circus, acting in a movie?

For many years, I wanted to participate in 'The Large Races' [Russian TV show].  Most obstacles can be done using your gymnastics skills, but this didn't work out.

-  What about more extreme shows?  'The Last Hero'?  'Fort Boyard'?

-  Eating spiders and crawling in the mud?  I am certainly not ready for that!

-  You once said that serioius training does not combine well with other pursuits, such as serious studies for example.  What is the situation now?

-  It is much more difficult now, and I have postponed my studies until a better time.  At the moment I just don't have the time, energy or feeling for it.

-  Will you think about it after the Olympics?

-  First of all, I will need a good rest; not like after London, when after a month we had to go to a training camp, but a proper rest.  Then I will begin to make a decision about my future life.  

Possibly it will be family related, although I would like to see the world.  I would like to go to the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchange, to Switzerland, to the USA - to go on the rides at an attraction.  To see the ocean.

- How about clothes?

Well for those I'll have to go to Milan.  Then I'll build a house, plant a tree ...

-  And have a boy and a girl?

I would like to have twins.  In general, I would like to have three kids ...

-  In which city?

A warm one.


Note from RRG - Dear readers, I have posted some pictures on Twitter using the hashtags #clean Russian athlete #WADA #IOC - please see my profile.  If you support the Russian gymnasts - all clean athletes - and want them to compete in Rio, could you please retweet the pictures?, or tweet your own favourite pictures of the team members using these hashtags?  I want us to try to keep the gymnasts in plain view of those interested in the debate taking place about Russia's participation in the Games.

Use Twitter for this activity as it is the platform used by the governing bodies and the media. You must also tweet, or retweet.  A simple 'like' does not make the post any more visible, and visibility is the important thing.  Thank you.





Timetable for IOC decision about Russia's participation in the OlympicGames

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The Guardian sets out the timetable for the IOC decision and summarises the different viewpoints

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/jul/23/russia-olympic-judgment-rio-2016-doping?utm_term=Autofeed&CMP=twt_b-gdnnews

No blanket ban on Russia at Rio Olympics

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Blanket ban has been rejected.  Decision on individual participation to be taken by sports' governing bodies, in gymnastics' case the FIG.  No one with a prior record of doping, even if they have served their sanction, can compete.

So this looks positive for the Russian gymnasts.  I am going to take some time to digest the IOC statement and see what the FIG do, then I will post a little more.  I have a lot to say about the often simplistic and inappropriate way sections of the media have handled this.  

Russian team have been seen on BBC News channel, from much earlier this morning, at Sheremetyova.    They are currently in the air and will land in Rio at something like 11pm BST (estimated).  Valentina Rodionenko has been quoted on BBC TV! and the Russian gymnasts have been shown in training by Russia Today news.



FIG statement about participation of Russia's gymnasts in the OlympicGames

The IOC decision - (just) my reflections and opinion ...

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Some people aren't really thinking clearly about the IOC decision to delegate decision making to the governing bodies.  Some track and field athletes in particular have made outspoken statements against the Russians and the IOC supporting a blanket ban and saying that the IOC has fudged matters.  I can  understand why people who have been disadvantaged by doping cheats in the past may react this way, but they aren't being wholly fair and seeing the complete picture.  This is not a single factor argument, it involves a complex judgement and there is no unique answer.  The IOC had to deliver justice, not revenge, and they were put in an impossible situation by WADA, who bungled their investigations and left things too late.  Yes, Russia should pay, and the national sanctions imposed are strong and clearly targeted.  But how to deliver quality justice to all the individual athletes, clean and otherwise?  This should have been WADA's focus.

There are enormous problems with the idea of a blanket ban.  In what other context of justice would you presume guilt rather than innocence?  Expect innocent individuals to take the same punishment as those who are deliberately culpable?  Even war criminals are given a fair trial - and they stand in the dock as individuals.  

WADA has taken too little time to gather and analyse the Rodchenkov evidence, and to judge the outcome.  The quality of the evidence is questionable - anecdotal, over reliant on one source, a lack of triangulating evidence from multiple sources.  A lack of criticality in interrogating Rodchenkov's claims.  WADA needed to understand the limitations of their data, to verify their findings and to define the scope of their work more clearly.  They also needed to take a more thorough approach to accessing and analysing the data in the hands of the sports' governing bodies.  Some of the report was sloppily completed - for example the use of the term 'all sports' when there are ten of the Olympic sports that are not even mentioned.

Track and field athletics has huge problems - and not just in Russia.  There are approximately 320 athletes currently serving sanctions for drug abuse, from many different countries.  Of course the IAAF was forced to take drastic action - their sport is, sadly, corrupt.  However, I would add the caveat, have other countries been subjected to the same scrutiny as Russia?  There has been a witch hunt against Russia.  Is the quality of justice truly equal across all countries?  Blanket justice has only weakened the IOC, IAAF and WADA - because there is no longer a level playing field between Russian athletes and the rest of the world.  WADA can only do its job on the level of the individual athlete.

Is it possible, given the limitations of the evidence, to make judgements across all sports disciplines that are fair to the individuals involved?  And - there's the rub - if the investigation's conclusions are correct, and the Russian doping labs are all corrupt, how can Russia prove the innocence of its clean athletes?  This is the strongest card the advocates of a full ban have to play.  But, fortunately for the ten sports that are not mentioned in the McLaren report, there are other sources of data besides those nationally collected.  This is why the IOC has had to turn to the sports' governing bodies - only they can answer the question of whether an individual athlete is clean or not, by scrutiny of their internationally collected doping records.

What most sources are failing to point out is that this situation questions the competence of WADA.  Isn't it their job to draw judgements on individual athlete cases?  Isn't collecting data on the athletes, and monitoring standards of scrutiny around the world, what they should have been doing all along?  Why has it taken them until now, precisely the most disruptive moment they could have chosen, to investigate and publish their findings?  Does the report comment on lessons learned, and identify best practice that can be adopted in other cases?  Why did they have to wait for a whistleblower to come forward before they questioned the Russian system?  And what implications does this have for the standard of their work in other territories?

In the end, WADA messed this up, and may well have let cheating athletes off the hook.  They left the playing field way too open, and asked the IOC to do too much in too short a period of time.  All that the IOC could fairly and practically do with such short notice was to fudge and to delegate the decision to the governing bodies, who are the ones with the evidence that WADA should have been interrogating and analysing all along.  Russia must bear responsibility for its corrupt and ineffective anti-doping standards, but the buck should stop with WADA and clean athletes should not have to suffer.

There must be further work done before the next Olympics to improve the quality of data collected by WADA, the process, principles and ethics of their systems and the fairness and effectiveness of their work.  Russia must also take responsibility and clean up its act totally.  The rest of the world should also stand up and assist WADA and the IOC.

Just my opinion.

Russian team departs for Rio - video

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Television channel Russia 1 covered the departure of the Russian team from Sheremetyevo Airport, Moscow, yesterday.  The Russians are now safely arrived in Rio, [the pictures are of their arrival, from the Asahi TV channel website] and installed in the Olympic village - even if conditions aren't as good as they might be.  Valentina Rodionenko has had a few words to say about that, and I'll be covering them later on but in the meantime enjoy this video - and there is a brief summary of the main points in English below. 



Even though they didn't know whether or not they will be allowed to compete, the Russian athletes have continued training for the Olympics.  The first representatives of the national team are on their way to Brazil.  The sport is gymnastics, and they took off from Sheremetyevo this morning. 

There is a fighting spirit, and a will to win.  Behind the scenes, they are working to their limits, overcoming injuries - and two months ago they showed they are the best in Europe.  Now they are flying to Rio, to have a say in whether they can be considered to be amongst the best in the World.

"We are in a fighting mood," - says Daria Spiridonova.

The main team is made up of ten people - five boys, five girls.  Then there are four travelling reserves.  To earn a place on the team took blood and sweat.  At the last minute silver medallist at the London Olympic Games, Ksenia Afanasyeva, had to retire with an ankle injury.  She was one of the best in the world on the floor exercise.  Maria Paseka, world champion on the vault, had to take a break from training with injury, but managed to confirm her title as Queen of the apparatus three weeks ago at the Russian Championships.  There, in the all around, the confident 15 year old Angelina Melnikova won - the Olympic Games will be just the fourth senior competition of her career.  

"There is a fighting spirit and I very much want to compete.  The most difficult thing is to manage the nerves and excitement. Everything is going well!", said Angelina Melnikova.

Aliya Mustafina, captain of the women's team and winner at the last Olympic Games of a gold medal on the bars, had to take a long break from the all around with a knee injury.  Doctors would not allow her to compete on vault.  In order to recover, she has had to show complete commitment - in the past few months, you could almost say that she was living in the gym.

"Now everything is all right, I have recovered. All we have to do now is to go to practice and get used to the apparatus"- says Aliya Mustafina.

The male half of the team has shown consistently good results, according to the coach, and is now on top form.  Nikolai Kuksenkov, team captain, looks focused and confident. At the Russian Championships, he confirmed his position as the best gymnast.  At one time, he was almost barred from participating in the games due to a positive doping test for meldonium.   But then the news came at the last minute, the case against him has been dismissed.

"I've been training with the team and I think everything is going well, so I hope for the best results. You shouldn't think about medals and the marks as being the main thing - you should just do your job, that's all, and leave the rest to the judges to decide ", - said Nikolia Kuksenkov.

The gymnastics competition, where 14 medals will be awarded, will be held from 6 to 16 August. The head coach of our team, Andrei Rodionenko, has every confidence in the team.  He jokes that the most difficult thing is the long flight.

"All being well, we'll catch a transfer flight from Amsterdam and then it will be another twelve hours before our arrival in Rio.   The gymnasts just need to do what they can do," said Andrei.

The team's arrival has been planned to give them time to rest and get back into shape and used to the new apparatus.  Russia's fencing teamwill fly out a few hours later.  It's still not known whether the athletes will suffer the same fate as the athletics team.  Later today, the IOC will announce its decision and then we will know whether Russian athletes will be able to compete for Olympic medals. 




Natalia Kapitonova - personal travelogue to Rio

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Natalia, seen left here in this personal picture with team mates Angelina Melnikova and Maria Paseka, is a relative newcomer to the senior national team, but not its youngest member - having turned 16 in May (Angelina only celebrated her 16th birthday a few days ago).  She is Russian Cup champion on the uneven bars - and strong enough in the all around to provide a good back up, as first reserve, if back up is needed.

The famous gym club in Penza - home to 2014 World floor champion Denis Ablyazin - is where Natalia has trained since childhood under the direction of the Starkin family - who also direct the training of Russian team captain, Aliya Mustafina.  Despite her relative lack of experience internationally, Natalia has shown herself to be a steady and optimistic team mate.  

The flight to Brazil - over 12 hours - was the longest of her life.  At first she slept, but she also read, watched movies and listened to music.  She says that the team weren't too worried about whether they would be allowed to compete; they felt reasonably confident about the IOC decision.

'I can hardly believe that I am in Rio!' said Natalia to local newspaper Penza Sight.  Everything has happened very quickly.


Natalia is sharing a room with Evgenia Shelgunova, and the two reserves are housed in a separate accommodation bloc to the main team.  They haven't had a chance yet to see much of Rio - just the gym, the supermarket and their hotel.  The main thing now is to stay in good form for the Games - no time for much rest.



Please visit RRG's Facebook page for more pictures of the team in Rio, and follow my Twitter feed (RussianGymnast) for quick updates.  With thanks to the Gymnastics group page on vk.com.

Russian artistic gymnasts - all clean, cleared to compete in Rio!Breaking news - injury alert

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BBC radio just announced that Russian artistic gymnastics team has been officially cleared to compete in Rio!  #cleanrussianathletes #IOC #WADA


Oh happy, happy day!

Valentina Rodionenko alert ...
1. Maria Paseka's back injury is troubling - her participation will only be decided after a doctor's check up on 3 August
2. Angelina Melnikova has injured her hamstring and will be competing watered down routines
3. Extra care had to be taken in proving Natalia Kapitonova's doping record for the Games.  The young gymnast hasn't competed much abroad, so it took time to gather the necessary evidence.

http://tass.ru/sport/3489095

Russian gymnastics and the Olympics - success through adversity - andsome recommended reading

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It is interesting, in my opinion, to read this article (link below) and to understand how the Russian doping scandal is understood by Russian citizens and athletes.  It shows that 'another' perspective on President Putin and on the blanket ban of track and field is shared by a lot of people.  

It is also true that Russia's whole strategy of sports development and of using mega events to develop the visitor economy has been cast into doubt by the IOC response to the cheating that has evidently been going on.  The brouhaha surrounding the blanket ban, its pros and cons in different sports and all the rights and wrongs have masked the fact that for the first time the IOC has imposed the equivalent of economic sanctions on Russia by removing so many sporting events due to be staged there.  Sport has imposed itself right in the middle of world politics.  I hope that the end result is greater peace in the world.  

I hope that the Russian Govt's pledge to renew the testing regime is followed through in a positive way, and that the work involved can be a true collaboration within the international Olympic community.  To me this is the second step in Russia's rehab into the international sports community.  The first is to admit wrongdoing, which may be more difficult while licking the wounds of such an enormous sanction.   I would like to see Russia back safely in the Olympic fold, where they belong.

I've always thought that gymnastics is the most Olympic of sports.  The friendships that manifest themselves between athletes, coaches, officials and fans are always there through thick and thin.  It is remarkable when you consider the wider political history and some of the controversies.  The nature of gymnastics as a sport where you challenge yourself more than others is part of this.  A gymnast can only compete to the level prepared.  I love it when the gymnasts share the joy of accomplishment regardless of whether the gymnast won a medal.  They really support each other and to me this is one of the really important things about the Olympics - we are all fundamentally equal, and we all deserve respect for our efforts.  Gymnastics embodies this at least as much as any sport.  It is Olympism made real.  

I really hope that this Olympic spirit is shared with the audiences in Brazil.  Our gymnastics teams have a big job - not just to do their best gymnastics, but also to win over the crowd and reassure the world of their inimitable Russian charm and charisma.  I have every confidence that they will succeed, and regardless of the medal count I think this will be a vintage Olympics for the Russians.  Success through adversity!

Video interview with Ablyazin, Starkin, Alfosov - translation

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Translation by Liubov Baladzhaeva




Athletes are escorted throughout the airport so that they can get to the Olympic village without delays. There are a lot of soldiers with assault rifles for security reasons.

The first training for the gymnasts starts at 9:00, they usually take a bus to the gym although it’s walking distance from their accommodation. Journalists are not allowed into the Olympic village.
Aliya talks about their rooms and the village: they didn’t really have time to walk around, because they train twice a day and have to rest in between. The rooms are on the smaller side, but cozy. She’s happy with the living conditions, no complaints.
Denis Ablyazin will turn 24 in Rio. He’s one of the Russian MAG hopes for a gold medal, which they didn’t have since 2000.  Asked about who are his main competitors, he says that he sees every single gymnast in Rio as a competitor. Other than that they just take everything one training at a time and try not to think about the competition yet.  The Russian team shares the gym with the Japanese for the first hour of training, the reporter says that the Japanese are watching Ablyazin on vault.
Starkin says that for the MAG team the main competitors are US, Japan and China [weirdly, doesn’t mention GB) and the competition in MAG is extremely hard. It’s hard to get any kind of medal, not even talking about gold, but they are aiming high with Denis.
Alfosov says that EFs in MAG are going to be very interesting, because it’s a clash between European and Asian kinds of gymnastics 

Video interviews with Valentina Rodionenko and Nikolai Kuksenkov - translations

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Video interview with Valentina Rodionenko and Nikolai Kuksenkov
Translation by Liubov Baladzhaeva
Interview took place before the IOC decision to allow clean Russian athletes to participate in the Games, but after the publication of the McLaren report and WADA's recommendation of a blanket ban.



Valentina Rodionenko: right now the gymnasts are training with even more motivation, despite the doping scandal, and they really want to go to Rio. If they’re banned, four years of training would be for nothing. Four years of their life were spent on preparation and they didn’t do anything else. 
But we’re going to fight, because Russian people only get stronger facing hardship.
 
Meldonium isn’t a performance enhancing drug, it’s used for recovery only, it shouldn’t even be considered doping and banned. No one really tested if it enhances performance, but it got banned nevertheless. There are changes on the doping list all the time, you blink and another substance gets banned, no one really knows what doping is anymore, there should be proper studies before anything gets banned, to make sure that it’s really a performance enhancing drug (PED).

Gymnasts don’t even need to use PEDs, it’s of no use to us, because you need precision and not adrenaline rush.

When asked by the reporter: why WADA started these investigations only now?

Valentina: well, I hope you understand why. It’s all politics.

Then she talks that the investigations and the possible ban are all a continuation of the economic and political sanctions imposed on Russian because of the situation with Crimea and Ukraine. She says that when they went to Berne for Euros, they felt adversity from Europeans because of this situation. And she thinks it’s not fair, because it has nothing to do with the sport, but athletes suffer because of politics.

When asked about how to change the current situation in sport and to restore Russian image: she thinks that Russia should be more diplomatic, to have more sports professionals from Russia in international federations, so that they would also take part in making decisions. Sport is hurt by the fact that often people who are responsible for it don’t really know anything about it. Nowadays in Russia everyone thinks they know everything about sports and they don’t consult professionals when making decisions.
Nikolai Kuksenkov

He believes gymnasts won’t be banned, because they’re clean.
He says he was shocked to learn about the Court for Arbitration in Sport (CAS) decision regarding the track and field team, because he’s really sorry about all the clean athletes who now don’t get to go to Rio and have their dreams and goals completely crushed.

He also thinks it’s all politics and sanctions against Russia, while there are no real grounds to ban Russian athletes.

He believes there’s a chance the gymnasts won’t be judged fairly in Russia, because of the political situation. He says that in this case they will just accept it, because there’s nothing the athletes can do, and they will just try to do their best.

He talks about London Olympics and says that his bronze medal was “taken” from him [I’m not sure whether he talks about the team medal for Ukraine or his all-around medal] and that was a clear example of unfair judging, so now he doesn’t believe in fair judging anymore.

Translation by Liubov Baladzhaeva




Valentina Rodionenko: we don’t believe that we’ll be banned from the Olympics, this just can’t happen. Our team never used doping, so it just wouldn’t be fair to ban gymnastics.
Athletes are deprived of many things in life, the gymnasts train twice a day, six days a week, they are going to Round Lake all the time, they live under a lot of pressure. Olympics is their main goal and if they are told they can’t go – that would be very scary for them


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