Skip to main content

Interview with Viktoria Komova - video link - VTB website resource

Viktoria Komova at last week's press day.  Courtesy of the RGF


R Sport has a new interview (published this evening)with Viktoria Komova - it provides a link to a new resource including video (see below).

The headline makes much of the loss at the Tokyo World Championships, but the interview isn't really about this. Key points made in the interview are :

1 Vika watched the Russian Championships online, like so many of the rest of us did!

2 Her injury is healed to the extent that her bars and beam are back to strength, although she needs another month to restore her Amanar vault (so I guess we won't see it at Europeans).

3 The most difficult part of recovery is fitness - she says she can get through three apparatus, but the fourth is very difficult, she gets very tired and finds herself making mistakes.

4 She loves gymnastics and performing. They do get paid a salary for what they do, but even so she simply loves her work.

5 Losing in Tokyo was very hard and painful for her. She just wanted to run away, hide and be alone. Her parents, coach, and friends' messages on V Kontakt (Russian Facebook) helped her to feel better. If she had had more time to prepare for the Championships, things might have been better ... but what has happened, has happened. The defeat will give her more adrenaline to go up and try to win next time ...

6 A mental trick her coach has taught her, to help deal with nerves, is to imagine it's just her and the apparatus in the arena - to insulate herself from all the noise and things going on around her. She prefers competition to training.

7 Her mother tends not to see her during competitions. She has a special teddy bear with scarf mascot for good luck, which the other girls on the team gave to her on the eve of her departure for the Youth Olympics in Singapore. The atmosphere at junior competitions isn't much different to seniors, but the competitors are more experienced.

8 She mentions her friends on V Kontakt with whom she speaks regularly, and also her older brother whom she Skypes but rarely sees in person. Her mother is a judge and is sometimes at the same competitions as her, but doesn't see Vika much for fear of disrupting her work. Sometimes at bedtime she will come to see her to say goodnight and a few encouraging words.

9 She jokes that she has lost the habit of being parented - and couldn't stand being like Anastasia Grishina, whose mother stays with her at Krugloye!

These are just a few of the key points that I've been able to derive with reasonable confidence from a Google translate. If anyone can add anything, please do comment.

The interview links to a whole new website started up by VTB in support of their various sporting sponsorship activities, in particular in this case the gymnasts.
There is a video of part of the interview with Komova there, as well as video of the girls training at the recent press day (including Paseka, Mustafina, Komova, Shelgunova and others). I have yet to explore this fully but there is also a commentary on the press tour of Lake Krugloye, so this looks to be an exciting resource!

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

2013 European Championships move to Moscow!

Russia is hosting the forthcoming men's and women's European Gymnastics Championships, scheduled to appear in Moscow (not Kazan, as originally announced) between 17th and 21st April 2013.  You can find more information at the UEG website.  It is a bumper year for Russian international gymnastics competitions, with the Universiade taking place in the ancient city of Kazan (part of which is a UNESCO World Heritage site) in July.  St Basil's Cathedral, Moscow, by night

Komova, Grishina, Afanasyeva, Kuksenkov on roster for Voronin Cup, 15-17 December

2012 Olympians Viktoria Komova, Anastasia Grishina, Ksenia Afanasyeva, and Nikolai Kuksenkov will compete in the Voronin Cup, Moscow, 15-17 December.   Aliya Mustafina, Emin Garibov, Denis Ablyazin and Alexander Balandin are out with injury or in recovery - expect them back next spring. http://itar-tass.com/sport/1629215

Sergei Starkin - 'My job is to bring Aliya back to the best in the world'

Sergei Starkin, then coach to Denis Ablyazin and now coach to both Denis and Aliya Mustafina, at the 2012 Olympics.  Courtesy of the RGF The latest news, that Aliya Mustafina now has a personal coach - not just a personal coach, one of Russia's best coaches, Sergei Starkin - was only released yesterday.  Since then we have heard from Vladimir Zaglada on the implications of this change - and now Sergei Starkin himself has spoken to Natalia Kalugina.  The following English language summary of the article is as close as I can get to the original, though please be aware that I will have to paraphrase where the translation isn't clear; this is not a word for word translation. Back in early December, when Aliya Mustafina turned to Sergei Starkin and asked him to work with her, there was talk about why a men's coach should work in the women's sport.   This is despite the fact that Starkin began his professional life as a women's coach.  His best known gymnast

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more