Skip to main content

Yuna Nefedova wins international competition

Young Russian gymnast Yuna Nefedova recently won an international competition in Helsinki, Finland, just ahead of her 15th birthday.  Yuna is one of a new generation of gymnasts who comes from Tula, home of the two Ksenias Semenova and Afanasyeva.  Her coach is Olga Baranova and she is currently training at the Central Army Sport Club, Vatutinky.  

A link to a video and pictures of Yuna can be found here, and there is a brief report on the Russian Federation's website here

Well done Yuna!

Comments

  1. queen elizabeth...what are your thoughts about athletes as young as yuna being pushed (and pushing themselves) to succeed?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I hadn't realized that she was 15 - a possible contender for an Olympic berth?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Queen Elizabeth14 June 2011 at 13:40

    Hmm – anonymous - is she as good as Sidorova and Grishina? Perhaps critically, I cannot find her listed as a national junior team member (though the list may be out of date). It is intriguing that the Federation chooses to highlight her achievements, though.
    Gonzo - you ask a difficult question. I am not a coach, a gymnast or a parent so I don't have a direct grip on the issues. Therefore, I am reliant on my own observations and what I read in the press and elsewhere.
    It is difficult to assess what qualifies as 'evidence' as so much is based on gossip and innuendo. Much of what is said by the mass media is sensational and one-sided, and primary sources become distorted and lost - (i) in translation from the original, then (ii) by a process of Chinese whispers, then (iii) by alienation from the original context. You have to treat all accounts with caution and read between the lines.
    The literature divides into three areas : (i) academic work published in sports science journals on the physical, mental and emotional issues (ii) gymnast and coach verbal accounts of the experience of involvement in the sport (iii) journalistic, often anecdotal reports by bloggers, message board members and journalists, of variable quality, which can draw on (i) and (ii) but which often include the Chinese Whisper effect. All are subject to their own bias, as you can imagine, and much of it takes a polarised view, either of individuals or of the issues concerned.
    All elite gymnasts have to begin work early in their life whether they start competing at 10, 16 or 21. Contrary to common perception, gymnastics is a relatively safe sport (find a link to some recent research on the Gymnastics Coaching blog at the bottom of this page). Gymnasts don't have to choose to practice at elite level, but if they do they will have to push and be pushed if they want to do their best.
    The outcome of gymnastics at any level can be enhanced self esteem, good health and a real sense of achievement. Negative outcomes can be lingering injuries, poor self esteem, loss of income and a general feeling of resentment at having been pushed beyond normal limits. There are several very convincing, triangulated primary accounts of the latter; direct accounts of the former are rarer, but indirect accounts are frequently embedded in other accounts. I'm a cup half full person, and I tend to believe the former, positive experience is much more common, even if it remains untold as it lacks sensation, but there are things to be learned from the latter. Sometimes people are just evil and shouldn’t be working with children.
    This is about any field of endeavour. Much depends on the child's maturity, skills of communication, expectations and environment, and on coaches and parents keeping the right distance and providing the right support. I don’t know how you do this. If my great nephew were involved in elite gymnastics I would be proud, but I would also worry. It is a question of judgement and sensitivity and is very individual so very surely subject to error.
    My response is totally personal and doesn't cover half the things I want to say. I can’t deny that there are huge question marks but then again gymnastics would not exist as a sport without early specialisation. I’m guessing that most gymnasts get a great deal of enjoyment out of their involvement in the sport and wouldn’t change anything. Whether that compensates for the few who come out of the experience damaged, I cannot say. But these are questions that are bigger than gymnastics and that demand a whole community of answers, and a whole library of books that no doubt exists somewhere.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Tatyana Nabiyeva on work and love in China

Some highlights from a long interview with 2010 World champion Tatyana Nabiyeva.  Source: Russian team page on VK.com.  Translation - Google translate A big interview with Tatyana Nabieva about the peculiarities of work and life in China, the bright years of her sports career, a little about modern gymnastics and about love. On the Nabiyeva flight — At the same championship, you presented a new element on the bars, which was later added to the rules with your last name (flying over the top bar with a straight body, difficulty group F. — Sport24). How did you come up with the idea to try something new? — Actually, it happened spontaneously, I think. We worked with Vera Iosifovna [Kiryashova] on the purity of the elements on the bars, sometimes I didn’t fly all the way to the Shaposhnikova element. Once I didn’t fly all the way to the bars either and stood on my feet between the bars, bending my legs in flight for safety. Then Vera Iosifovna said that this was a different eleme...

30 years in elite sport: Oksana Chusovitina

You've been competing internationally for over 30 years. How has gymnastics changed over that time? Is there anything about your sport that has remained the same for decades? First of all, the age has changed. More mature athletes are competing now, which makes me happy. Secondly, the apparatuses. They've become more comfortable and sophisticated. Gymnastics in general has become more challenging, but in my youth, people performed mostly the same elements as they do now. Back then, this was par for the course, but now it surprises many. It's a bit amusing. Has the nature of the training itself changed? For me personally, absolutely. Now, my life isn't just about my athletic career. I'm involved with the Oksana Chusovitina Academy, which was personally opened by the President of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev. It has 155 students, both girls and boys. I used to train three times a day, but now I train once. The entire afternoon is taken up with the academy and organi...

No Paseka for Russia in Berne

Barely two weeks will elapse before the WAG European Championships begin in Berne, Switzerland, and the news we had been fearing has been confirmed : world vault gold medallist Maria Paseka is  off the Russian team while she nurses a back injury.  This leaves Russia significantly weakened for the coming competition, with co-star Viktoria Komova also missing from the line-up.  It is a little disappointing, but it seems the right decision to rest the gymnasts so that they can be at their best when and where it really matters. Who will replace Paseka?  Valentina Rodionenko says that the youngster Natalia Kapitonova, who trains in Penza, has been chosen on the basis of her solid performances at national championships.  Well, we will have to wait and see - these announcements often turn out to be unreliable.   I personally would prefer to see the dynamic Seda Tutkhalyan be given a chance at this level, but Kapitonova has certainly shown herself to be more reliab...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more