Skip to main content

Ksenia Afanasyeva - confidence, errors and support



Lupita translates this Kirov.net interview with the Russian women's team captain Ksenia Afanasyeva.  The twice Olympian discusses here the mistakes made in the team final, and how she has supported her young and talented team through all the excitement - and challenge - of an Olympic Games.








Ksenia, as the most experienced gymnast in our team did you give support to the other girls? 
Yes, I tried to help all the girls and I think I achieved that. But I won’t tell you how I did it (it’s a secret). [Laughs] In fact, I gave them support. If I saw that someone was becoming very emotional, I calmed her down.
Landing on your knees was an accident?
It’s lack of work and a mistake from my part.
"I think, I speeded up and didn’t do what was planned.  It’s not even a technical error.  I didn’t wait and breathe out; I decided to start without a pause."
You’re the only one who didn’t cry. Is your nervous system stronger?
No, you didn’t see me. I’m also a human being and I suffer. I may be more experienced than the other girls. In Beijing I went through a much more difficult situation. I came back home with no medal. Now we won a medal, though not the one we wanted to win.
Do you think that today it was possible to beat the Americans?
Of course, it was. We could have fought till the end. We surrendered too early. Nastia made mistakes; I made mistakes, and all this accumulated.
Were you very nervous during the competition?
It may sound strange, but I felt less nervous than in the rest of the competition. I feel nervous in general.  Now, I felt less nervous, perhaps because we were performing as a team, all together. The coaches gave us support and there we a huge delegation to support us. This made things easier.
Who needed more support: Мustafina or Komova?
Both are strong, psychologically and physically.  Perhaps, after her injury, Aliya is now less strong physically than Vika. 
Did you have the impression that Mustafina fell off the beam because she was scared?
I don’t think she was scared. Anything is possible! She may have felt that something was not OK and decided to make a pause, to think. It’s very difficult to explain.
How are you going to celebrate the silver medal in the Olympic Village?
"We’ll arrive there, we’ll laugh together, call our parents, our friends and go to bed."
Do you pay attention to the venue or are you so concentrated on the result that you don’t see anything around?
When I was not going to perform, of course I paid attention to the audience. We got good support. But later, when I was ready to perform on an event, I was left with the apparatus.
We thank Megaphone for their help in the organisation of the interview.

Comments

  1. I really felt for, I have no understanding of the scores yet but I thought it was a really great floor performance, perfect, then at the very end that fall. It looked so painful on the feet and knees but she got up. I luv how these Russians all console each other too, they look like the best of friends.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really nice interview. Thanks for the translation Lupita.

    I felt for them. They made some mistakes but it's nice that they won a medal. They can recharge and whoever is staying in gymnastics can prepare for the next big event.

    For now, they can celebrate their accomplishments.

    Still 3 more individual finals to go. Good luck to them.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I really felt sorry for her, her performance was so GOOD right at the very end with that fall.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Remembering last summer - Nelli Kim, her judges and Viktoria Komova

In view of Nelli Kim's recent interview , Lupita and I thought it timely to revisit the performance of some of the WTC President's judges over past competitions ... this article from 27th August 2012 is reposted here, as a reminder. You will find a link to the FIG's newly published book of results at the Olympic Games here .  This year, they have broken down the judge's execution scores so you can see exactly how each judge evaluated the gymnasts' performances.  It makes for interesting reading - if only I had more time to analyse each judge's marking.  A skim reading already highlights multiple inconsistencies in individual judges' marks and makes you wonder why they bother with the jury at all. I have taken the time to look at the reference judges' scores for the top four in the women's all around.  The FIG explains here what their role is, and how they are selected.  I even used my calculator, which is a risky thing in my hands.  M...

Breaking news - Stretovich in, Ignatyev out

Valentina Rodionenko earlier today confirmed that Ivan Stretovich will take the place of Nikita Ignatyev on the main Russian gymnastics team.  19 year old Stretovich, from Novosibirsk, Siberia, is Russian Cup champion on the pommel horse and high bar.  His first major senior competition was the 2014 World Championships where he performed on pommels only.  Stretovich was originally selected as a reserve and the decision to bring him onto the main team was based on his superior performance quality compared to Ignatyev, according to Rodionenko. For the women, the news is that Angelina Melnikova is recovering well from the hamstring injury she aggravated at one of the final control competitions at Round Lake.  Valentina says that she is back to training her full routines again.   Sources - MAG - http://rsport.ru/rio2016_gymnastics/20160802/1011352078.html WAG - http://rsport.ru/rio2016_gymnastics/20160802/1011409100.html New - video of the girls training, ...

National team coaches 2024, the Russian Federation - a full list

In January each year the Russian Gymnastics Federation publishes its list of coaches and gymnasts who have made the training teams for their country.  You will find below a transliteration of the list of national team coaches, 70 of them in total.  The oldest member of the team is Valentina Rodionenko, 88, the youngest Ivan Galonenko, 24 - he is a bars coach, to the junior women's team.   The senior coaches to the senior teams would all have qualified as coaches during the Soviet era.  Many of them work out of Moscow, Vladimir and Rostov, former Soviet strongholds of gymnastics.  The doctors are all attached to Yaroslavl.  St Petersburg has two coaches listed, but there are no St Petersburg gymnasts on the senior national teams at present.  There are no coaches from Russia's Far East.  This region has been highlighted as a geographical area President Putin is targetting for sports development and investment over the coming years.   ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more