Skip to main content

Mental health time

I’m supposed to be taking some time for my mental health, not writing blog posts about gymnastics.  

It’s not only my mental health, but that of the whole gymnastics and sporting community.  You, my readers, know that the Court for the Arbitration of Sport has reassigned the bronze medal in the FX event at the Olympics.  We finally have the right finishing order, but the FIG is at huge fault here.  The appeals system went wrong in both its substance and its process, and before that the judges had failed, giving us inaccurate marks and unfair finishing orders.  

The gymnasts, Jordan Chiles and Ana Barbosu, are suffering and instead of unbounded joy and pride they feel humiliation and confusion and embarrassment.  That the judges couldn’t get the medals in the right order first time (and that there’s still one out there, Sabrina Voinea, whose question is left unresolved) is the biggest pair of oversized pants since the last time the FIG messed up.  

That coaches only have a minute to lodge an appeal at the end of a competition has always been unworkable, and visibly so since Yang was denied his gold in 2004.  The collective brain cell of the FIG EC failed to notice a fatal flaw in their systems, and this left the gymnasts vulnerable.  

The judging of the floor final should be reviewed in its entirety on a lessons learned basis.  Knuckles should be rapped and new pages turned.  A head or two should roll.

It’s my opinion that Simone Biles’ failure to deliver her usual reliable performance left the judges reeling to the extent that they couldn’t do their job any more.  They have been used to dishing out the highest scores to the Olympic champion without really having much need to work at it. When Simone made unexpected errors, it meant that their idea of the finishing order was shattered, and they didn’t know what to do.  They were shocked at having to judge, forgot how to judge, and everything went downhill from there.  It ended up with the mess of the appeals panel who mistook the name Chiles for Biles (they rhyme) and granted an upgrade that should never have been given.  Then the CAS had to make a ruling which the FIG has recorded and the IOC still has to enact, but probably won’t.  

The losers are the gymnasts.  It should never happen.

And secondly :

I looked at the Russia Cup WAG EF results.  Based on those scores, Russian gymnasts may have secured bronze medals in the UB and BB finals, but of course the scoring may not calibrate.  It’s a moot point.  

I think Russian gymnastics is done for now, and that’s a sad triumph for the sports politicians, even though we want to support Ukraine.  

The Russian state has chosen the military over sports.  What a bad decision that is.  

But was it really necessary and ethical to write Russia and the Soviet Union out of Olympic history both in the opening ceremony and the coverage of the sports?  To censor even the merest mention of the defending champions, MAG and WAG, from the broadcast and media coverage?  This was so widespread that it must have involved a collective and premeditated decision at a high level.  It wasn’t, though, a transparent, publicly discussed strategy - I can’t find any minutes or announcements about it. 

You didn’t have to glorify the history.  Nor was burying it the right thing. This smacks of authoritarianism. 

Finally, there’s something that links the two parts of this post.

There’s a common theme : sports politicians like to be able to rewrite history, whether it’s to cover up mistakes they made in the scores, or for larger political goals.  

When will the book burning begin?  

Comments

  1. The paragraph regarding the Chiles/Biles mix up is so PRECISELY CORRECT it's frightening. The fact that the gymnastics world doesn't know how to handle a non-Simone gold is just plain sad.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Anna Pavlova interview - YOU ask the questions

Anna with her team mate Maria Nekrasova today.   Maria competed in this spring's Russia Cup and will join Anna on the Azerbaijan national gymnastics team.  Picture courtesy of the Azerbaijan Gymnastics Federation on Facebook. As Anna prepares to compete at this week's Voronin Cup, representing Azerbaijan for the first time, RRG, in collaboration with Anna's authorised website Anna Pavlova Online, would like to invite readers to submit their questions for an interview with Anna.  What have you always wanted to ask one of Russia's best gymnasts of the last decade? Each reader may submit up to three questions.  We will collate and if necessary edit the questions and Anna will answer the ones she finds most interesting.  Please add your questions as comments to this blog, or you may email them to me at rewriterussiagym@btinternet.com.  We hope to publish the final interview on both websites by Christmas. Many of you must dream of having a conversation with Anna...

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...

30 years in elite sport: Oksana Chusovitina

You've been competing internationally for over 30 years. How has gymnastics changed over that time? Is there anything about your sport that has remained the same for decades? First of all, the age has changed. More mature athletes are competing now, which makes me happy. Secondly, the apparatuses. They've become more comfortable and sophisticated. Gymnastics in general has become more challenging, but in my youth, people performed mostly the same elements as they do now. Back then, this was par for the course, but now it surprises many. It's a bit amusing. Has the nature of the training itself changed? For me personally, absolutely. Now, my life isn't just about my athletic career. I'm involved with the Oksana Chusovitina Academy, which was personally opened by the President of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev. It has 155 students, both girls and boys. I used to train three times a day, but now I train once. The entire afternoon is taken up with the academy and organi...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010