On 16th August a press conference took place at the RBK Press Centre in Moscow. The head coaches, some of the personal coaches (with the exception of Viktoria Komova's coach, Gennady Elfimov) and the gymnasts were present to discuss the future of Russian gymnastics. I have no idea if a key question highlighted in the lead up to the conference, do the coaching staff need to be changed, is of any real significance. Lupita's translation (below) addresses matters of coach training and availability, the plan for the coming four years; the Code of Points and its revision for the new quad, whether there is a judges' 'conspiracy', and a degree of contextualisation of Russia's current gymnastics legacy in relation to the history of the sport and the Soviet Union.
There does seem to be concern amongst the personal coaches of the women's team, with both Sergei Zelikson (Anastasia Grishina) and Maria Ulyankina (Maria Paseka) suggesting that head coach Alexader Alexandrov's personal involvement in the preparation of Aliya Mustafina was to the direct detriment of their gymnasts, meaning that Mustafina received greater attention from the national coaching team. Sour grapes? - perhaps. But also intriguing when you consider what Alexandrov had said in his earlier interview - that Zelikson had followed his own path with Grishina, ignoring advice from the national coaches, and that he (Alexandrov) had regretted not insisting on a more structured training plan.
Anastasia Grishina with coach Sergei Zelikson |
It's hard to interpret the cultural nuances of these exchanges - North European cultures are notoriously candid and direct. There is surely truth in what both Alexandrov and Zelikson are saying - they are merely seeing things from different perspectives. I do hope they can resolve their mutual position and work together for the benefit of the gymnasts. Grishina is a beautiful gymnast with great potential, but her body language and facial expressions (close to tears at the beginning of her floor exercise in team final) betrayed how intimidated she felt at this level. Mustafina is a magnificent competitor, and Alexandrov should take a great deal of credit for nursing her back to competition fitness after a career-threatening injury (not the first time he has done this: don't forget that Dmitri Bilozerchev was his gymnast). With coaching time evidently at a premium (see what the Rodionenkos say about this), it is clear that Mustafina was a good investment who paid off when she won the team's only gold.
Remember the circumstances under which Alexandrov took on Mustafina as his personal charge? Personal coach Dina Kamalova was poached by Texas-based, former Soviet Olympic gold medallist, Valeri Liukin to help to prepare Mustafina's main competition for the 2010 World Championships title, Rebecca Bross. Mustafina went on to win that competition. It is not the first time that Alexandrov has 'rescued' a talented gymnast in difficult circumstances; he played a significant role in coaching the legendary Svetlana Boguinskaia after she so tragically lost personal trainer Liubov Miromanova shortly after the Seoul Olympics.
Nor is it the first time that coaches have complained of favouritism within the national team; I am reminded of the anonymous letter of complaint sent by several coaches to the team leadership, about the selection of a certain 'mediocre' gymnast to the 1986 Junior European Championships (that gymnast was Svetlana Boguinskaia, who went on to win the competition) (as reported in Zaglada, 2010).
There is much to say about the following edited highlights, translated by Lupita from the video recording provided on the summary page. It is worth taking a skim through the video: observe the body language of a very quiet Alexander Alexandrov (seated behind Valentina Rodionenko), enjoy watching Viktoria Komova struggle with a fit of the giggles. The room lights up whenever one of the gymnasts takes the floor; Aliya Mustafina has learned how to deal with the press well and engagingly; Anastasia Grishina has grown up no end. There is a picture gallery there also. The pictures you can see on this page were taken from a gallery at the Russian Gymnastics' Federation website and you can find edited highlights of the pictures at the RRG Facebook page. We have tried to select the meatiest items in this edit.
Lupita's edited translation:
Taking
stock of the Olympics
Question:
Our gymnastics national teams achieved a very good result. What prevented
other Russian athletes from achieving better results?
V. Rodionenko: For
us it’s quite difficult, because we watched their performances on TV, and not
always. We cannot answer.
Question:
After a few days how do you assess your performance?
Afansyeva: I don’t know what to say,
but I’m happy with the team’s performance. I’m not totally happy with my own
performance. But I already said what was difficult for me.
Komova: I think that we did everything
we could, we fought and tried to do everything as we do during training, we
achieved some things, and we failed other things. I think that we performed
well. But, right now, we cannot beat the Americans. Yet, silver is also good.
WAG National coach Alexander Alexandrov |
S. Zelikson: In these gymnastics
competition many athletes, from which we expected good performances and who
were leaders at world level, made mistakes. A lot of mistakes. The Romanians,
who won the European championships, Jordyn Wieber, who was a candidate for the
AA. And all of our girls who worked well (I mean Nastia as well). There were
performances that we didn’t expect because at home they did everything. Many
leading gymnasts made mistakes: Mackayla Maroney, for instance. The Olympics
are a competition where it’s difficult to predict anything.
Concerning my
gymnast, I didn’t expect her to perform as she did. Neither did she. There’s a
psychological situation where suddenly an athlete can’t perform easy
elements. It’s impossible to predict it. This is why we have to prevent those
mistakes, but it was impossible to predict them. I cannot be happy with her
performance, but I cannot reproach her because it was the Olympics.
М. Ulyankina: After the euphoria, you begin thinking that everything
could have been different. I can say about my gymnast: if she had begun to
train earlier (she was injured), if she had worked on landings ... she could
have beaten the American gymnast. It’s all about our insufficient conditioning. I
don’t complain to her, but I think that the main issue in our team is that our
head coach had a personal gymnast. This is my standpoint as a coach. When I
watched TV and listened to the commentators and other specialists (i.e. Lidia
Ivanova), all the team worked for Aliya. Thanks, Aliya, she didn’t let the team
down, if someone thinks that the other girls didn’t perform well. Today, if we
begin a new quad, the head coaches shouldn’t have personal gymnasts.
А.Rodionenko: Thank you for quite complex questions. I
think that the girls are not prepared to answer those questions, they are not
able to analyze the team’s performance, and they can only answer concerning
their performance. The coaches’ opinion is more objective, but it’s also
related to their own gymnast. We don’t give a score to a performance. The
Olympic Committee, the Ministry of Sport are objective concerning the Russian
delegation that competed at the Olympic Games.
Is
there a judges’ conspiracy against Russian gymnasts?
Valentina
Rodionenko: I wouldn’t call this a conspiracy. In our sport, unfortunately, the
judging is very subjective. Every judge has his or her opinion, apart from the
CoP. But there’s a subjective opinion about the execution of an element. This
is why we say that there’s no objectivity in judging. It’s difficult to say that it’s a conspiracy.
Although what happened with Balandin’s rings score, when
even Adrian Stoica, President of the men’s Technical Committee, said that the
score should be different, which would have meant gold? But the guy wasn’t even a
medallist. And, you understand, when the American girl in vault falls on her
bottom, doesn’t perform the vault, and she wins silver. This also was an
outrageous instance. And those instances were not an exception, unfortunately.
But we are at the beginning of a new quad, there’s a project for new rules,
with changes. We expect them to be more objective. Currently, the judges can
manipulate the scores.
Andrei and Valentina Rodionenko |
A .Rodionenko:
Often the journalists tend to think that the success of a gymnast depends on
the judges’ score. It’s so in our sports. The same happens in rhythmic
gymnastics, synchronized swimming, diving.
In
gymnastics the judging system aims at matching the level of gymnastics at a
specific moment. This is why the CoP is changed every four years. The CoP is
the Bible for us. But the problem is, like for any other law, that as soon as
the CoP appears, some people want to change or to improve the weaknesses. Literally
six months later, a year later, we come back to the starting point of the
previous quad.
Gymnastics first
appeared at the Olympics in the 19th century. First the rules were two pages, then three, and
currently they are books, but nothing has changed, except the complexity of
giving the final score. First there were three judges, then six, now twelve,
but the principle remains the same. When someone is judging, he or she has an
opinion about the gymnast being in the handstand position or not, or in the
pike position. We can’t look for a panacea in the CoP, we have to do everything
to prevent mistakes when applying those rules. Another problem is that there
are contradictions between the rules. For instance, you can protest against the
difficulty part, but you can’t for technical execution. You can’t protest for a
gymnast who is not on your team but who has made a clear mistake. Only the
country of this gymnast can protest.
Last:
in all sports except gymnastics, when people reach the level of a final, the
judges are the best qualified, the most responsible. Take the example of
football, where the most objective and demanding referees are selected. In
gymnastics it’s the opposite. At the finals the judges come from countries with
no finalists and they are much weaker. It doesn’t make sense. We have submitted
a proposal a few times. Yet, it’s not convenient for the FIG, it’s not
convenient for the countries that don’t win medals. It’s not a conspiracy; it’s
only about friendly relationships around a table. They spend a good time
together, on the following day they are judges and they give Balandin the score
they think necessary. If one of our judges was there, they might be more
lenient. Concerning vault, it’s impossible to suppress those personal
relationships. You can’t forbid them. We have to try to reduce the judges’
manipulation. Our proposal is that the finals should be judged only by judges
from the countries of the gymnasts who made finals. We have tested it at
the Russian Cup with great results.
What are
the strengths of our rivals?
А.Аleksandrov: First, I’d like
to congratulate all the women’s programme because during this cycle we were first
in 2010 and second last year. Now we won second place, although there was the
will to fight the Americans. We couldn’t do it for different reasons, but I
think that silver is honourable. I want to congratulate the gymnasts, the
coaches, those who helped us and financed us, VTB and the Ministry of Sport, because
you understand that without this support it’s not simple to achieve something
nowadays.
Concerning the rivals, I’d to add that the Americans
have been experiencing a boom for three quads. They have won their third All
Around Olympic title. And they have won the team final. Their team has more
depth than ours. When there’s rivalry, the results improve automatically. At
the same time, the Romanian team improved in one season. Last year, they didn’t
win any medals, but now they did at the European Championships. It’s true that
the Olympics are the Olympics. But all the teams prepare very, very well. Even
China, that didn’t achieve the results of the previous Olympics, but they
excelled on beam.
Currently, the Americans are stronger, first because
of their reserve (depth). We trained every girl that we had. But the rivalry is
very strong, and the future won’t be that easy, considering that generations
change more often than among men. We must look for girls who will be able
to compete at a good level.
Denis Ablyazin |
Denis Ablyazin: The strength of the Chinese team is high bar, parallel
bars; the Americans are also strong on bars and high bar. The Japanese team
doesn’t have extraordinarily strong events; their performances are always well
balanced among all events.
E. Garibov: There are always countries stronger than
us at some events, and vice-versa. I’d like to tell you about the high bar
final. Of course, I was stunned by the Dutch gymnast’s performance. Nevertheless,
I want to say that it’s possible to compete with him; I’ll have to upgrade a
bit my routine. I think that there are no strong countries at every event. It
all depends on the mistakes they make.
The teams’ depth (Reserve)
V. Rodionenko: Today it’s difficult to say because since 2000, when a lot
of Olympics medals were won, gymnastics started to lose its position. Some
people relate this to the dismantling of the Soviet Union as many coaches
went abroad to work. Moreover, the conditions became much harder; a lot of
schools were closed. Our main problem is coaches. This is why we lack more
gymnasts or reserve. Our sport is complex for coaches, six events for the men,
four for women. Every event has requirements and the coach has to be highly
qualified. When we mention the creation of a reserve, it takes seven years to
prepare the national team. But those who make the team are young gymnasts, with
health problems. We pay attention to this, but as long as we don’t have an army
of professional coaches who know gymnastics well, it’ll be difficult to achieve
this. Even at university level,
gymnastics is together with chess. Graduates from those schools know little
about artistic gymnastics. Nobody wants to work in this difficult discipline.
But nothing is impossible. There are good schools with professional coaches. We
are making progress little by little. I think that in the future Russia will
win the leading positions that we lost 12 years ago.
Expectations for the next Olympics
V. Rodionenko:
We always have the highest aims and objectives. We were never satisfied with x
medals. Even now, when we went to the London Olympics, we understood that it
would be difficult. When you have lost your position, it’s very difficult to
win it back. We understood very well that, in order to be in the medallist’s
positions, we had to be much better to reclaim the position we had in the
Soviet period.
For Rio de Janeiro we have the highest ambitious. We have to
fight. Our gymnast said in an interview that we will win in Rio. And we
believe in our men’s team, in those young gymnasts who created such a good
impression: perhaps they didn’t win so many medals as we wanted, but things are
not simple.
The
girls should win gold at last. They have got everything for that. I hope that
these girls won’t quit and others will come to the team. We will do all we can.
S.Zelikson:
When the team came back after the European Championships, there were a lot of
injuries. If Andrei Fiodorovich [Rodionenko] had not introduced corrections, decreasing the
loads, I don’t know what the state of the team at the Olympics would have been.
We have mentioned that the gymnasts have had many injuries. If we solve this injury
problem ... And if, as Marina Gunnadieva [Ulyankina] has put it, the head coach won’t train
one of the gymnasts because it doesn’t allow creating a normal atmosphere in
the team, there are possibilities. If we look at the team, we are no worse
then the Americans.
And when people say that we cannot beat them, I can explain
that two and a half to three years ago Grishina, as a junior, beat the Americans, all the team
that competed at the London Olympics. In March, after three events, she was
first. She made a mistake on bars. This is why we can beat them; we only need
specific requirements to achieve it.
Can
the gymnasts drive the car they have been given?
А.Grishina:
No, I don’t think so if you’re under 18. As Ksyusha [Afanasyeva] is over 18, she can drive
and will do it herself.
Ksenia Afanasyeva |
K.Afanasyeva:
I lack confidence in driving, I’ll soon learn. The worst thing is to drive in Moscow.
As I live in Tula, it’s easier.
Question:
Did you like the car?
К.Afanasyeva:
What a question! It’s an Audi А7.
A.Rodionenko. This is perhaps the press
conference where journalists ask most questions. In 2005, I came back to
Russia. The situation of gymnastics was to be or not to be. In order to have a
renaissance of gymnastics, there was the programme of Viacheslav Festisov for the
development of all sports. It all started with the construction of gyms. [At Lake Krugloye, the national training centre] there
was water in the women’s’ gym trampoline. This gym was refurbished after two
years.
And in 2008, when we were beaten everywhere, we had prepared for
the Olympics for two years. In this sense, this quad has been a little bit
easier. But much more difficult with the gymnasts’ and coaches’ level. Concerning
the work of the Soviet national team, I can say there were 15 Republics. If
there was a talented kid in each republic, it meant 15 talented gymnasts. This was only half of
the people we had on our team. Currently, the boys and girls who make the
national team need corrections in basic gymnastics elements. But the most
difficult thing is to change the coach’s mentality, coming with the gymnast. ... Now we have a group of good
professional coaches able to prepare elite gymnasts. […]
V. Rodionenko: I’d like to add something
concerning the conditions. We now have ideal conditions for training. Another
gym will be built for the men’s team at Krugloye. But I think that the worst
problem in Russia is sports medicine, which lags behind other
countries. This is why we had to recover our gymnasts abroad. Aliya recovered
in Germany. Abroad ,orthopaedic surgeons are better. We have a well-known specialist – Arkhipov. In gymnastics there are a lot of injuries. Now the
Federation want to handle this and pays a lot of attention. We hope to solve
this for the next quad.
What are the gymnasts going to do after
elite sport?
Aliya Mustafina |
А.Mustafina: I think none of the five
gymnasts has planned to quit elite sport. We’ll all rest and we’ll resume
training.
А.Grishina: Currently, we have to
recover, heal our injuries, rest and fight again.
E.Garibov: This depends on every gymnast.
So far we don’t plan to quit and we want to train for the next Olympics. I
cannot guess what will be in the future and what I’ll do after elite sport.
I’ll decide that perhaps after the next Olympics or after the other Olympics if
health allows me to go on. When we get older, we’ll have other plans, we’ll see.
D.Ablyazin: I also intend to continue
and to prepare for the next Olympics. If I compete well, I’ll perhaps train for
the following ones. So far I don’t’ think about the future.
Is there a plan for artistic gymnastics?
А.Rodionenko:
Yes, such plans exist. There’s a document for the beginning of the next quad. One
of the items is what the team can achieve. I was there when Vladimir Mutko, the
Minister of Sport, expressed a negative opinion about those plans. Many teams
had a plan, but they didn’t achieve the results. Some teams, including
athletics, overcame the plan by two gold medals. Strict plans don’t work. It’s
not about a trade. It’s about life, life in sports changes all the time. The
young people in front of you change after four years, there are other programmes.
V. Rodionenko:
Our country functions in such a way that we must plan our work. Now a new quad
begins, we have to prepare a plan for the national teams. The plan implies huge
funding. Even the names of the possible candidates are included. The aim of the
plan is to compete at the Olympics. The gymnasts were not aware of how many
medals we had to win. I think they don’t need to know. We had a plan: two, two,
and two. We fulfilled the plan for silver and bronze, and we didn’t win the
second gold medal. Because we had certain losses during the quad, as Andrei
Fiodorovich said. We’ll analyze the competition again; we’ll say what to do in
the next quad, which changes have to be made. It’s not a plan like the one he
had in Soviet times, when if you didn’t achieve it, they’d cut your head off.
М.Nazarova:
I’m Afanasyeva’s coach plus the coach who accompanies all our girls who won
the team silver. I can say that any of them, when they go to the Olympics, they
want to achieve the best results after having worked for four years, some of them
for eight years. I think that our girls are very good. They worked a lot, they
could have won gold, but I want to congratulate them.
Viktoria Komova, Anastasia Grishina, and a Grishina family dog |
М. Ulyankina: ...When I watched TV and listened to the commentators and other specialists (i.e. Lidia Ivanova), all the team worked for Aliya. Thanks, Aliya, she didn’t let the team down, if someone thinks that the other girls didn’t perform well. Today, if we begin a new quad, the head coaches shouldn’t have personal gymnasts.
ReplyDeleteI what to know what Ulyankina is talking about?! Every interview before the Games was how Komova was the team star and would Aliya be able to get ready to perform well. I didn't see the Russian airing of the Games (for the obvious reasons), but saw a couple of different shows (I'll recommend seeing the Olympic official youtube page, Shannon Miller does a very good commentary and has very nice words to the Russian Girls) and during the qualification, team final and a.a they all kept mention that the Americans needed to be on the lookout for Komova become she was the star of the Russian team, even during the UB final, Komova was favorite in relation to Aliya.
In a way it felt like Aliya was the dark horse, there were a lot of question marks if she was able to perform well enough to reach for a medal after such short period of time after her injury.
It has been interesting to see the change of tune from these coach, (specially Valentina) regarding Aliya after the Games. I'm glad she prove them all wrong and hope they're still shocking on their own words (I'm looking at you Valentina)
I also found it very telling that Aliya refuse to answer the questions (correct me if i'm wrong, but I got the impression that the Journalist try, for a couple of time, to get an answer directly from Musty) until the very end, and took that time to confirm that none of the girls is leaving the sport.
On a final note, Sergei Zelikson should just man up and shut the hell up! It was your decision to coach Grishina apart from the others girls, it back fire you, so don't complain about it now. Afanasyeva didn't get any individual medal but gave to very important performances during the team final, both in beam and floor, without it they probably had lost the silver medal. Komova perform amazingly well during the qualifications, team and A.A, They just put too much pressure on her , and unfortunately she still doesn't have the maturity of Aliya or Afanasyeva to handle it. So the fact is Grishina was the weakest link of the team, maybe she is too young and without enough experience, and the fact is Zelikson choose to coach her separately from the team and put her out of Alexander wing.
sorry for the long ramble
"S. Zelikson: And when people say that we cannot beat them, I can explain that two and a half to three years ago Grishina, as a junior, beat the Americans, all the team that competed at the London Olympics. In March, after three events, she was first. She made a mistake on bars. This is why we can beat them; we only need specific requirements to achieve it."
ReplyDeleteAnd those Americans come with Amanar in vault and execute it flawlessly (even much etter than Komova), which Grishina can't even handle a DYT.
It's not the matter of past, because those Americans obviously upgrade their difficulties. It's about NOW. Looking at the difficulties alone, we can see clearly that the American has a lot of advantages if they hit their routines.
I can say that americans flawless amanar back there was poor executed for most of this girls but got too hight scores ! So not need to include the fantasy to do over the facts . And watching US now the only things is mentioned is ridiculously unbalanced system for the vault that gives too match advantage for no reason
DeleteNazarova and Alexandrov were the only two to really say congrats to the girls for their work. The others are annoying.
ReplyDeleteI never heard of Zelikson but he is living in the past, yeah Komova as a junior defeated the Americans as well... what is his point? I read that Russian press have been harsh on Grishina maybe that's why he is being so defensive. However, he is at fault because he should never have been training Grishina away from the group,; whoever authorized that is at fault as well. Grishina was really poor, how she did in TQ should have been a warning. However, she is young, she will hopefully improve next time.
Zelikson is also wrong because everything was about Komova, especially by Rodionenko, all she talked about was how Komova will do well and Mustafina can only medal on UB. She ran her mouth to the press.
I don't know about Alexandrov concentrating more on Mustafina because he is head coach, her grit and determination to master everything especially after her injury is what made her do well. I don't think the head coach having a student really matters. None of the others took Mustafina after her coach left and Alexandrov did.
I don't even know Paseka's coach and I don't see her point either. I don't see why all this blaming is going on, they did a hell of a lot better than they did in 2008. They had injuries which prevented a perfect training opportunity for them all.. so they did good under the circumstances.
I hope they sort things out, it makes no sense the coaches be blaming anyone, just work together to improve. The girls are supportive of one another, the coaches should be too.
The only coaches I like are Afan's coach, Alexandrov, Komova's coach and the UB coach.
Alexandrov did an amazing job with Aliya's recovery, and she performed brilliantly and was rewarded accordingly. Those other coaches strike me as a couple of bitter individuals, especially Grishina's- he chose not to follow Alexandrov's directives and it blew up in his face.
ReplyDeleteI do so wish the Russian would stop playing the victims and refer to judges conspiracy or at least a subjectivity against them. The fact that there is no judge from the countries of the finalists judging in the finals is essential. Just because gymnasts from your country don't reach finals does not make you a flawed or mediocre judge. It is just likely to make you a more objective judge who is not going to be 'lenient' towards athletes of your own country. It only makes sense.
ReplyDeleteAlso it is interesting how they keep banging on the fact that Maroney fell and still got Silver but keep quiet about the fact that Mustafina fell but still got Bronze after the tie-up with Raisman. No doubt this rule would have been yet another thing for them to whine about and cried conspiracy about had it been the other way around and had Raisman fell off the beam and got the medal after a tie up with a Russian girl.
I love Russian gymnastics but I don't find the team of coaches very sympathetic.
Concerning Rio 2016, on the one hand they state that they don't have a depth of reserved gymnasts and at the same time they say 'The girls should win gold at last.' How can that be? There is no point setting unrealistic goals unsupported by evidence.
In any case, I wish them all the best. I hope they have a good rest and come back to delight us next year in the European and World championships.
A correction to your post is needed - Mustafina did not fall from the beam in the EF.
DeleteNo, she did not. She was not in the beam EF. I believe the original poster is referring to the AA final when Aliya did indeed fall from the beam and win bronze over Aly Raisman in the tie-breaker. And I agree with the comment that had the situation been reversed, there would have been outcry from the Russian camp. To be fair, the American camp voiced their displeasure with the tie-break rule. I personally would have preferred to see both gymnasts receive a medal.
DeleteOh yes ... Sorry, I was at cross purposes :-)
DeleteI think it reflects poorly on the judges that there were so many ties at the Olympics, both men and women. The tie break procedure prefers good execution which is refreshing but surely it is up to the judges to make a clear decisionas to their preferences (even if we disagree).
Pierre
ReplyDeleteThere're probably financial questions, salaries, travels, etc. related to all this mess. The Russian Gymnstics Federation is in crisis. Lots of things we don't know.
A coach able to train a gymnast like Grishina shouldn't be left out of Krugloye.
Right now the Russian press tends to forget Komova. OK, Musty has won more medals, but Komova put up some fantastic routines in the All Around competition.
And then, who's going to train Mustafina?
Ms Nazarova, the Russian team still needs you!
But surely the support of VTB helps on a financial level - or is it not enough?
DeleteOf course they have the support of VTB Bank and other foreign investors! But for people like Ul'yankina it will never be enough, and the professionals will squeeze out of the round lake or not to be invited . Problems with medicine and the promotion of sports remain at the same sucked level. Lets See what will happen in a few years! Ostapenko back to Ukraine and will now grow there gymnasts! I wonder what will then Ul'yankina and Zelinkson gonna complain about
DeleteI think that the depth problem will be diminished soon as they have wonderful gymnasts to come like Maria Kharenkova and Shelgunova, Kuzmina, Tipaeva, Chimareva, Baturina
ReplyDeleteWe can smell jealousy in Zelikson and Ul'yankina. Dont go around blaming head coach Aleksandrov for having a personal gymnast as talented as Mustafina. Taking out Grishina from the national training has paid a very heavy price on Zelikson. He is to be blamed for Grishina's lack of confidence and chickening out on beam at the last minute.
ReplyDelete