Skip to main content

Balm for the artistic gymnastics soul

Irina Baraksanova on her best piece, beam, in 1985.  Photocredit : Tom Theobald


The gymnasts you will see in the following videos are all astonishingly athletic and powerful.  They are innovative.  They aren't performing on the most up to date sprung floors, and they don't have to rely on muscle to perform their difficult acrobatics.  They have outstanding line and choreography (in the fullest sense of the word).  They are individuals, each performing routines with a unique style. Their work goes beyond difficulty + execution, embracing the principles of risk, originality and virtuosity. They don't rely on rushing from skill to skill to blind the judges to the odd unbalanced landing, imperfections in their technique, or ragged performance. They haven't picked their skills from a catalogue of moves (the Code) or assembled requisite combinations so as to maximise their D value.
  
What they do is pretty impressive, ahead of its time.  The way they do it is as important.  They aren't ballerinas.  They aren't modern dancers.  They are artistic gymnasts.

It was a different time, and a different Code.  A different sport.  A better sport, don't you think?

Irina Baraksanova, 1985



Tatiana Tuzhikova, 1987 (full twisting double layout)








There is no rationale to my selection of these particular floor routines; there are many, many more I could choose that would arguably be superior artistically, technically, gymnastically, acrobatically, choreographically.  This random selection is history; some of you might say that to detract from its importance.  Gymnastics is different now; it's more exciting to see the girl next door in winning style, to be able to add up the scores for yourself, to see how the acrobats bounce and fly. 

But to me, these videos are history, and to me they are a source of both learning and delight.  They show a point in time in our sport's development, a sourcebook from which we have drawn to develop the gymnastics we have today.  The sport has gained some things and lost others.  What has been lost?  What can we add back in to make our gymnastics better?

What can we learn from this past?

Comments

  1. No words to describe the beauty, the art, the perfection. Thanks for sharing some of the best stage of artistic gymnastics with us.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I don't know if you can go back in time, however it was a much more interesting and beautiful sport.
    Ballet training rather than weight training, do you see a difference?

    ReplyDelete
  3. And having said all of this, I have just seen a video of Simone Biles' floor routine at yesterday's Classic, and she has improved ... She really is a watchable gymnast on floor now, and her tumbling is even better. That FX is a step forward - if all power gymnasts could perform like that ...

    ReplyDelete
  4. It comes to something when having watched the commonwealth games that the men are more stylish, technically accurate, fitter and dare I say it more elegant than the women. For me, it is not only that the elegance has been lost in womens gymnastics through a base of ballet training BUT it is worse than that, even basic form, neatness and tidiness, landing accuracy is so far from the forefront of the womens sport. The men in large have managed to keep this and has seen a natural progression of difficulty but keeping style. I have my theory as to why this has occurred but that's another topic.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I have puzzled over this too. I would be really interested to hear your opinion - please feel free to roam 'off topic' if you would like to post here.

    I suppose I have to come clean at this state and admit that this post was written in a moment of sad resignation at the response to the performance of the British girls and in particular Claudia Fragapane at Commonwealths. I can see she satisfies the Code but what is being presented as a different 'style' of gymnastics is actually just ragged to me.
    You can imagine that I feel like the wicked witch in making this point; there are lots of people taking great emotion from the apparent turnaround in WAG fortunes in Britain. Sometimes I even wonder if I have lost my eye for the sport and just am not seeing things in the way I should. Then I watch the men and realise that something vital HAS been lost in WAG. Gymnasts can't be to blame if they take advantage of the limitations of the judging to pass off work of an inferior quality as a winning performance.
    At least Simone Biles looks like an artistic gymnast ... I really am impressed with that floor routine.
    Anyway, I am burbling on ... Would be interested to hear what you think.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have to agree. Fragapane has poor form and almost seems to be chucking skills. Like many gymnasts are skipping basics and going straight to difficulty. This seemed common in Glasgow. A couple of beam finalists had rather unfortunate back handsprings...pausing forever and bending way forward before take off.

      Delete
  6. Was the 1985 World Championships team the best ever assembled? I'm inclined to say that it was. There were four huge names in Mostepanova, Omelianchik (whose floor routine remains unmatched), Shushunova, and Yurchenko. Of the other two, it's Kolesnikova who has the famous daughter, so Baraksanova is the most obscure, and yet as we see here she was fantastic in her own right. What a remarkable squad.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I think you could argue for any of the teams from the 1980s and late 1970s as the best ever :0)

    I know that lots of people love the Baraksanova floor routine; she floats, and all of the movement and music is so harmonious.

    If there was any rationale for choosing the videos at all, it was to demonstrate that girls were doing very difficult tumbling more than two decades ago, without the need for poor form. The remarkable thing about three of these routines is that the gymnasts were not outstanding artists; Priakhina in particular was criticised in her time for her poor line; yet in comparison to many of the very top gymnasts today, they are exemplary.

    Surely we have hit the lowest point ever for the sport. Many are calling Fragapane's floor routine the likely silver medal winner in EF at Worlds. I remember recoiling with horror when Camelia Voinea scored 10 on floor at the World Championships in 1987, but her form was perfect compared to Claudia's.

    I don't want to bitch about a young girl who has in her own way made it to the top of her sport, thanks to strong efforts.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

ā€˜My daughter likes gymnastics. For us, this is the big successā€™. Aliya Mustafina talks to Match TV

Via VK.com.  Google translate A big interview with Aliya Mustafina was published on MATCH!. We provide a small excerpt below, and the full version is available on the website at the link below  ā“ Aliya, you are now the head coach of the junior artistic gymnastics team. What does your typical day look like? šŸ’œ My current life is similar to what it was when I was competing. In the morning, I have breakfast and go to work by 9:00, we train for four hours, have lunch, rest and train for another three hours. During the training camp, the athletes live at the base. They live and train on the same territory. ā“ Do you manage the gymnasts' personal trainers or do you evenly distribute the responsibilities? šŸ’œ We work in contact with the personal trainers, I listen to their opinions. For example, if the trainer believes that their athlete needs to be given a little rest or do fewer repetitions of a particular exercise, we do so. ā“ Describe the current generation of children. Do they nee...

Russian Gymnastics Federation withdraws AIN athletes from competition

 An official announcement, via VK.  Google translate. Official statement of the Russian Gymnastics Federation All Russian athletes representing artistic and rhythmic gymnastics, who received "neutral status", decided to refrain from participating in the upcoming competitions under the auspices of the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG). The reason for this decision is the numerous unfounded and biased refusals of the FIG special committee to allow our gymnasts to compete. The Russian Gymnastics Federation respects and shares the position of the athletes. President of the Russian Gymnastics Federation Oleg Belozerov: "I respect the athletes' decision and understand what it is dictated by. At our meeting on March 10, Mr. Watanabe said that "I would like to use all my strength to once again think about the role of sport in this world. Sport should unite and give friendship, it should not be a tool for increasing hatred. The rights of every person must be resp...

Simone and the others - results and reflections

In the end, it was as predicted : Simone and the others, with Simone's teammate, Alexandra Raisman, providing the back up.  I do not need to point out that, by definition, the Americans are scoring significantly higher marks than the rest of the field.  Congratulations to them! Aliya Mustafina finished in third place.  The 2012 bronze medalist led the competition after vault and uneven bars, but had a very nervous outing on beam that might have taken a less experienced gymnast out of the medals.  A bravura performance on floor brought Aliya back though to confirm her third place all around.  From her senior debut in 2010 to today, Mustafina has continuously set high standards of grace.    It is the first time since 2000 that a gymnast (Amanar) has medalled in the all around at two consecutive Olympics, and  if Aliya can medal on Saturday's uneven bars final, she will once again be Russia's biggest medal winner of the women's gymnastics.  Russ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more