Skip to main content

Who needs difficulty? Portraits of a young gymnast - Ivan Stretovich

These pictures of young Ivan Stretovich, taken by Elena Mikhailova at last week's European Gymnastics Championships, are available in a gallery at the Russian Gymnastics Federation website.  I wanted to share a sequence of them with you.

Stretovich turns 16 in October, and comes from Novosibirsk in Siberia, where he is coached at the Dynamo club by B Konvissar.  This young gymnast emerged at April's Russian Championships, where he took gold or silver medals in every event final except for vault.  In Montpelier, he contributed to the Russian team's silver medal.

But pictures speak louder than words, and medals aren't all that matters.  Stretovich's start values (in qualifying 5 (F), 5.1 (PH), 4.8 (SR), 5.4 (V), 5.1 (PB) and 4.9 (HB) leave some room for development, but the special quality of his work is even rarer than a double twisting double back somersault.  That quality is the ability to elevate the simple to a pitch of perfection, and to make the difficult look simple: consider here the amplitude, line, pointed toe, outstretched hands, that exquisite positioning of the head, the alignment of the shoulders.  The Code should value this ability more highly than it does: who needs difficulty when simple gymnastics can be this beautiful?


Little wonder that Valentina Rodionenko occasionally gets a little stroppy about standards of international judging, when you compare this junior gymnast's performances to those of some of the senior elite women who are regularly scoring in the high 50s all around.

I know I should be updating the results from the senior event finals, but this picture sequence seemed even more important to me at this particular time.  You will probably all know by now that Garibov and Balandin both achieved gold medals on their events (high bar and rings), and that Ablyazin achieved two bronzes on floor on vault.  I will provide a fuller account tomorrow.

Comments

  1. that picture of Raismann.. well, she does get heavy deductions for her form on every international podium, and I must say that the judges have gotten quite good in recognizing and appreciating artistry over difficulty (Ksenka's golden floor at worlds or even Liukin's bronze on floor at the Olympics or her floor score in the AA- her tumbling form was always horrendous and yet..) Let's hope that London judges keep a close eye on the sheer execution beauty of our team. May the best ARTISTIC gymnast win!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you, Quenn Elizabeth on behalf of my Russian compatriots from around the World. I didn't found any tributes to the young Russian gymnasts yet except portrait you wrote and shared with us. You are the first again saying such a good words about future of World Gymnastics. Just one example: Ablyazin got bronze with an incredible difficulty on FX? Surprise? Not at all. I am not making a special research about deductions and mistakes. I am talking in general: why he would need to perform so many difficult tumbling passes having just a carpet with four corners? Is it the only one existing way to make Artistic Gymnastics more attractive for the young people making just a first steps into the difficulty? Is the real future of the FX looks like a 12 - 15 different tumbling passes performed on 4 - 6 Road Floors connected to each other? I really don't think so. I hope that very soon your voice will sound much louder because it is not a real fun to see Artistic Gymnastics without Artistic!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Don't the judges notice breaks in Iordache's execution (every jump... feet, arms!!!), in Ponor's (toepoint!!! everywhere), the American team...?
    It's often easy to understand Rodionenko's reaction!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you both for your comments.
    I think that the value of Stretovich's work goes beyond form and needs to be understood in a number of different ways (choreography, harmony, amplitude, line etc??).
    Form deductions for lower level work can't really assess fairly work that is at a higher level. A human simply can't enumerate all of the deductions within the time frame available to judge international routines; and the beauty of this work goes beyond an absence of errors.
    Surely it is about finding a way to reward virtuosity, and providing a positive bonus to the better gymnast.
    There is such an over-emphasis on difficulty but the Code and the judges have also lost sight of the essential need to assess intuitively and respond to what is visually the better gymnastics.
    It's such a tragedy that the FIG abolished compulsories - they really did provide a great baseline for discriminating performance level which also helped when it came to marking the optional exercises.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think that the refereeing is better now than it was a perfect score but it would be fairer to bid up some sort of bonus for virtuosity

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Svetlana Boginskaya: I was always a bitch* in gymnastics

Svetlana Boginskaya, 15 years old, with her medals from the Seoul Olympics Nico translates the latest interview with gymnastics legend Svetlana Boginskaya, during a recent visit to her home country of Belarus. Svetlana Boginskaya: I was always a bitch* in gymnastics, so now I ask for forgiveness from everyone who came in contact with me. The National Olympic Committee of Belarus held a press conference with three-time Olympic Champion in artistic gymnastics, Svetlana Boginskaya. The meeting was devoted to the 25th anniversary of the Olympic Games in Seoul. In South Korea the Belarussian won two gold medals in the team competition and vault. As a gift to the Olympic Hall of fame, the famous gymnast, now living in the United States, donated one of her trophies that she won at the 1990 European Championships and a pennant for Best Female Athlete of the USSR in 1989. How happy we were when we could share with such stars as Boginskaya, Scherbo, and Ivankov,...

Does Russia need Mustafina in Glasgow? Vaitsekhovskaya adds her voice

'Should Mustafina compete in Glasgow, considering her fragile state of health? - aren't the Olympics more important?' are the key themes of this brief news piece by Elena Vaitsekhovskaya, a top sports journalist who has interviewed Alexandrov, Arkayev, Starkin, Mustafina and Rodionenko in the last five years since Aliya won the World Championships. Elena stresses that this year nothing unusual has happened.  Aliya has worked hard with her new coach Sergei Starkin.  She did a 'great job', demonstrating her work at the European Games in Baku where she won the all around, bars and team events as well as silver in the floor exercise. But, says Vaitsekhovskaya, more important than the medals was the fact that Aliya showed a new technical level, began work on upgrades for the Rio Olympics.  Just competing in one event - the Baku games - could be enough for a veteran athlete of Mustafina's experience.  The body ages in both time - and injuries.  Athletes always respond...

Kapitanova or Tutkhalyan? The ever changing seas of Russian gymnastics

Tutkhalyan and Melnikova - gymnastics dynamite and Russia's not so secret weapon for the Rio Olympics Just as I was about to go to bed last night one of our readers posted a link to a Tass article in which Valentina Rodionenko repeats the team membership for Europeans, but with a significant change, replacing Seda Tutkhalyan with Natalia Kapitanova as a reserve.  This Allsport article , linked on the RGF website this morning, still includes Seda as reserve.  I give up; there is never a final word.  Team selections are a difficult thing and especially so with injury rates in the sport as high as they are.  Media reports are unreliable.  Or Valentina changes her mind as often as she changes her fur coats.  Only one thing is for sure.  We will know who will compete when the teams walk out into the arena on Wednesday 1st June.  Maybe. Aside from the obvious observation - how must it affect the girls to be so unsure? - I'm going to repeat again ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more