Skip to main content

Will there ever be another Olga?

Did you see Olga Korbut on TV earlier this week? There she sat, a big smile on her face, every bit the naughty little Munchkin we all knew back in 1972.  The gymnasts need to smile more, to be beautiful, and to entertain, she said.  I, and several others, wish alike.  It's 40 years since we have seen her like at the Olympics; yes, Nadia came four years later and entranced us with her steely perfection, but it was Olga who stole our hearts. 

Where will the next Olga come from?  Will there ever be another?  Perhaps not ... time has passed, we are all more media-savvy and cynical, athletes more contrived and less spontaneous, the sport's Code of Points denuded of the semantic subtleties of the unique, expressive artistry that the world found so enchanting. 

But sitting there, amongst the judges, is a woman who was once as charming and delightful as Olga could ever be ... a former gymnast who thanks to the vagaries of world politics and the sheer depth on her national team, was never seen at an Olympics ... FIG judge Oksana Omelianchyk-Ziurkalova, 1985 World Overall Champion, 1985 World Floor Champion, Soviet reserve at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Soviet reserve at the 1984 Oloumoc Games, the Soviet 'alternative Olympics'.

I was sitting there, in the audience, during the 2001 World Championships in Ghent.  Oksana and a judging colleague had taken up a couple of seats in the row in front of me, and were conscientiously recording the uneven bars routines, checking their marks against those of the official judging panel.  In person, Omelianchik is as charming as on the floor; people came to shake her hand, always greeted with the greatest of courtesy and a big smile.  As she rose to leave the arena, the first bars of a gymnast's music rang out ... coincidentally, the first bars of Oksana's 1985/1986 floor routine.  I couldn't help but smile, and she quietly smiled too.






Later today, in the all around final, Oksana will be an execution judge on vault - you can see the judges' assignments below.  Remember her floor routine as you watch today's final.


Other former gymnasts judging at today's Games include 1972 Olympian Antonina Koshel (Floor), Romania's Anca Grigoras (floor), Czech Republic's Hana Liskarova (Ricna), Hungary's Szusanna Kalmar.  The superior jury includes President Nelli Kim (1976 and 1980 Olympian, 1979 World Champion) and uneven bars supervisor, 1972 Olympian Liubov Burda-Andrianova.

Comments

  1. You can spot Oksana from anywhere in the arena if she's judging, just watch them march in, there is no mistaking her walk, not changed a bit from when she was competing!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hana Ricna's married is not Liskarova, but Jessen.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Head MAG Coach Alfosov on Russian gymnastics prospects in 2026

"A Really Good International Level": Alfosov on the Return of Russian Gymnasts, Belyavsky's Videos, and the Games Qualification Alfosov: Belyavsky's presence on the team was a big plus Interview by Elena Vaitsekhovskaya  Google translate Russian gymnasts competing under neutral status will be able to take their first step toward qualifying for the Los Angeles Olympics as early as October, Valery Alfosov, head coach of the Russian men's team, told RT. He believes that qualifying for not only the individual but also the team competition at the World Championships is one of the season's greatest achievements. He also explained the criteria he uses to compare his players with their competitors and described David Belyavsky's decision last year as hard-won. The current season began with good news for the gymnasts: almost all of the leading Russian team members are participating in international competitions. Does this mean the suspension situation is a thing of...

Artistry versus acrobatics???

Watching videos of this weekend's competitions - the qualification and all around rounds of the Russian championships, medal winners from the American Cup - I am struck, more and more, by the huge difference between the American and Russian schools of gymnastics. It led me to ask the question : do artistry and acrobatics have to be mutually exclusive? (I am afraid that I think naming 'American' gymnastics a 'school' is perhaps lending an undeserved dignity to work which has become excessively obsessed with the difficult and the consistent, but I am using the word here so as not to label unfairly those individual gymnasts who are blameless in the direction of their training.) The FIG's vision for gymnastics is said to embrace more artistry; at least the publicity it has put about on the subject of its new Code makes that fairly plain.  So perhaps the Russians, with their inconsistent brilliance and superior body carriage (Mustafina, Komova, Grishina, Afanasy...

Angelina Melnikova and Arseny Dukhno - Results from Serie A competitions in Italy

  Russia's neutral gymnasts have been performing very well in competition recently, not least at the Cottbus Cup last week where a fairly inexperienced group of young women took medals on every piece - and their men did well, too. The team is still in the position where its veterans, or at least its established performers, are the leaders.  For the women, this means that Melnikova is assumed to be the top, while for the men, Marinov is the one whose name is most likely to be spoken.  But he is still recovering from multiple injuries and not expecting to be ready for competition until later in the year.  In fact the leadership of the men's team has skipped a couple of generations: first year senior, Arseny Dukhno, is taking the lead for the team. So while the youngsters head off to the World Cup competitions to make a name for themselves there, the leaders are competing in the Serie A league in Italy - and they aren't doing too shabbily there.  Both Melnikova and...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more