Skip to main content

Rodionenko reflects on results of MAG qualifying

Andrei Rodionenko and David Belyavski anxiously await the final score. Courtesy RGF

Britain and Russia had another tussle in MAG qualifying yesterday, with Britain coming out on top this time.  Both teams had their weak moments.  Russia performed poorly on the high bar, where they missed Emin Garibov in particular.  The versatile Nikita Ignatyev, perhaps hampered somewhat by a painful back, had a rough day with a very poor floor exercise (12.933/6.833 E score) and a fall on high bar.  David Belyavski had a worse day on pommels, with a score of 12.5.  The downside is that Russia has once again trumpeted a reputation for inconsistency.  The good thing is that with a less erratic performance they have a real chance of bridging the gap of 2.772 that separates them from first placed Britain at this stage of the competition.  

But it will be perilously close, and if Russia fail to deliver on Saturday there is a real chance that the ambitious Ukrainian team, currently in third, may take them over, relegating a possible gold to bronze.  Ukraine don't have the same fire power as Russia but they are determined.  Russia will have not only to hold fast to maintain position, but also to show all their flair if they are to end in first.  That's a difficult compromise.  

Britain managed to avoid major complications yesterday, even if Daniel Keatings (pommels) and Daniel Purvis (vault) have reason to be personally disappointed.  On the scoresheet they do look to be the most reliable team here and I think the most likely outcome on Saturday will be GBR RUS UKR.  But gymnastics is gymnastics, and predictions are never an easy thing.  Given the risk level inherent in gymnastics, the medals could conceivably be distributed amongst any combination of teams in the top six, including Russia, Britain, Ukraine, Belarus, France and a rapidly up and coming Netherlands team.

This is a team/event competition, with no all around.  Russia does look likely to take gold on individual events (surely?).  Ablyazin ended up in first position on both rings and vault and managed to qualify to his specialism, floor, despite a fall.  Britain's Max Whitlock leads on floor and pommels while Ukraine's Oleg Verniaiev (who came first in the unofficial all around yesterday) leads p-bars and Epke Zonderland from Holland leads high bar.  Russia qualified gymnasts to five out of six finals, the best performance by this measure of any country.

Results are given below.  Now read on as Russian head coach Andrei Rodionenko gives his thoughts in yesterday's results.  This is a summary of an interview which can be found at http://www.allsportinfo.ru/index.php?id=83227

- It is rather early to evaluate the team.  He is happy with some things - less happy with others.  They will have to review, and decide what adjustments to make for the final.  Qualifications are a way of testing strengths and weaknesses.  They managed to qualify to all event finals but one.

-  The situation with the team is good, all the gymnasts are happy.  There is good team spirit.

-  Russia won't be in the high bar final - to an extent they are missing Garibov on this piece, but high bar isn't a strong piece for them, anyway.  Even though they aren't on this piece, they are represented on five apparatus - the best of all the teams.

- The gap to Britain is small; they had two unexpected falls, but this is a matter for the team, not the individuals.  He can't analyse this 'on the fly'; this is just the beginning.

- For the juniors, the main task was to qualify to the Youth Olympics - Nikita Nagorny will go.  Boys qualified to six finals, and there will be an interesting fight in the all around.  The British are in first and third position, the Russian gymnasts in second and fourth.




















Comments

  1. the russians have much room to improve in final than any other team on:
    HB (kuksenkov, ignatyev)
    Fx (ignatyev, ablyazin)
    PH (belyavski)
    VT(belyavski)
    good luck ...

    ReplyDelete
  2. RUS can definitely make improvements. So Russia had two falls but i heard on tumblr that GB had four ( i didn't follow the live tweets all the way through)? That seems like a lot. Perhaps the person meant that GB had four huge mistakes or four super low scoring routines? Otherwise if GB messed up that bad and still came out ahead...

    I am most sad for team Ukraine who should've come away with a team medal from London, and since then the amount of gymnasts switching to other federations has hampered their chances of dominating this World's. I'll cheer for them to win on Saturday because I will never forget their tears in London after being dropped off the podium. They face so much adversity but have so much heart. I hope we have a nice clean competition between Russia and GB. I hate when one team dominates b/c another top team is having a bad competition. I mean, we can evaluate what might've been afterwards and talk abut the scores not being reflective of their potential because of falls, but a competition is most exciting to watch when their is actual competition. So let's hope both teams get their act together.

    ReplyDelete
  3. GB had three falls on vault. Purvis missed his vault while Thomas and Oldham missed their second vaults. Only the first vault count towards the team, so Oldham's and Thomas' falls didn't count against the team. Just kept them out of the vault final.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

'It is a monstrous lie!' Pregnancy doping - Olga Karasyova speaks! (2001)

   Olga with her coach Sofia Muratova in 1971.  You can also see a video of Olga training with Sofia at  http://youtu.be/rDLY5Ctbe38  I wanted to record in English the key points of this 2001 interview with Olga.  Thanks to Maryam Vulis who gave me the link. Date of article - 7th March 2001 Author - Vladimir Golubev Link to Russian language source -  http://viperson.ru/articles/olimpiyskaya-chempionka-razoblachaet-dvoynika Olga invited me to visit her cozy one-bedroom apartment. I see family gymnastic albums, remember her youth, and gradually ask a few questions. - What a voluminous file of documents!  It shows how much time and effort had to be expended to get to court. Correspondence, lawyer requests, decisions, resolutions, agenda ... - Actually, this story began a long time ago.  Once, German broadcaster RTL screened an interview ... with my double!   A certain woman who said that she was Olympic champion in gymnastics, Olga Kovalenk...

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...

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