Skip to main content

Our Nelli Kim : a new documentary

Nelli Kim at the 1980 Olympics, courtesy of Nellikim.net

I have mixed feelings about Nelli Kim.  She was certainly one of the most talented competitors the Soviet Union fielded in gymnastics, and that is saying something. She harvested first place  all around at the 1979 World Championships, her country's only gold medal in a somewhat disastrous competition for the Soviet women.  (That competition has become a very notorious one in history, if one remembers poor Nadia Comaneci's brave performance despite a serious wrist infection, and the winning Romanian team's sickeningly unhealthy appearance in Fort Worth.)

Nelli was also a great performer and character.  Her career overlapped a time of fundamental change in the sport - when the lyricism of such performers as Tourischeva was overpowered by the pyrotechnical advances of the likes of Comaneci.  Nelli managed to reconcile the two qualities, and to span the gap between the two eras.  I don't think she ever really received full credit for doing so.  The result of the 1976 Olympic all around was far tighter than the legendary status of Comaneci suggests.

Kim showed how ultra difficult tumbling (for the time; a double pike back somersault at the end of a floor exercise was an innovation of hers) could be integral to a polished and artistic floor performance, and she was one of the first to choreograph her floor routines to orchestrated music.  She had a natural flair and spontaneity that gave her work great expression.  Even if the dance moves were simple she was a gymnast you simply had to watch.

I don't share the idea that Nelli is responsible for all the poor judging decisions made in women's gymnastics in the last few years since her election as President of the Women's Technical Committee, but I was rather disappointed when last year she went on the open attack and criticised the Russian system in retaliation for some rather unguarded comments made by their head coach.  Perhaps Nelli's thoughts reflect concern for the Russian system as much as frustration, but you would think that a senior figure of the FIG could show a little more constraint.  But a fiery and open character is one if the things that defined Nelli as a gymnast, and it seems pretty much to be part of her nature.  I enjoyed  reading a 1976 article about her earlier this morning, about her great talent, and how she could not be ruled.  Her relationship with her young and unconventional coach, Vladimir Baidin, was rather volatile, but stood the test of time as coach and gymnast battled in the fiercely political environment of Soviet gymnastics.  Nelli was far from a sure selection for any of the competitions she is today so renowned for, partly because her style of gymnastics might have been considered outdated by the time of the Moscow Olympics, but also because of her ethnicity (Tatar mother, Korean father, Kazakstan-based).  Favouritism and infighting are not recent innovations in gymnastics!  You can read more about this in Nelli's autobiography which is available online at her personal website.  

Nelli is highly respected in her home country, and there is a Nelli Kim Academy of Gymnastics in her town of Chimkent.  sports.kz has also just released a new video documentary on the great champion which is a joy to watch even if, like me, you do not understand Russian.  You can find it at the link given at the bottom of this page.  There are interviews with many of her friends, both of her parents speak, and also former Kazak international Yernar Yerimbetov has his say.  

In an interview Nelli expresses unhappiness that the Kazak system of gymnastics has failed since her day.  There is one club in the whole of Chimkent, to serve 750,000 people.  She suggests a resurrection of the old Soviet style system as a remedy to this, but doesn't suggest how the funding might be found ...

Enjoy the documentary - it is worthwhile suspending the constraints of understanding for the shots of Nelli today and in the past, her family and her life.  A very special gymnast, a link to gymnastics' heady past, and today a high level sports politician, Nelli is perhaps part of the final generation to have really experienced the Soviet mystery at its best, first hand, and it is fascinating to find out more.

Nelli's personal website : http://nelliekim.net/Gallery.html
Stanislav Tokarev writes about Nelli in 1976 : http://www.gymn-forum.net/Articles/Misc-Kim.html
Interview with Nelli today : http://sports.kz/news/nelli-kim-ochen-jal-chto-myi-poteryali-traditsii-jenskoy-gimnastiki-v-kazahstane

The documentary : Our Nelli Kim : http://sports.kz/news/nasha-kimanelli-dokumentalnyiy-film


Comments

  1. Nelly Kim is one of the best gymnasts the world had the pleasure to watch. Really, I appreciate more the "lyricism Touricheva" but Nelli Kim was surprisingly fantastic in her time. And with absolutely certain she will continue to represent what is best in artistic gymnastics.

    I do respect her resentments that she should have in relation to the Soviet system. This is no wonder that the USSR had serious problems. Until today, the ethnic issue is just one of the problems that Russia has. Imagine how difficult it was at the time of Nelli Kim. Even today, we see the political interference has in the gymnastics and how it is damaging to Russia, in particular, to the gymnastics team. (Alexandrov Rodienkos X).

    However, the position that Nelli Kim currently serves as president of FIG, requires absolute neutrality as impartiality. And in the name of ethics, Nelli Kim must reveal their resentment towards Russia and the Russian gymnastics team. Unfortunately, the revulsion Nelli Kim has compared the Russian Gymnastics is almost palpable.

    However, I do not have mixed feelings about her. Simply, I do not approve of her conduct as President of FIG. _ Her comments to the Russian gymnasts are inadmissible and arrived at the edge of discrimination.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What comments did she give to the russians gymnast?

    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,...

Artistry versus acrobatics???

Watching videos of this weekend's competitions - the qualification and all around rounds of the Russian championships, medal winners from the American Cup - I am struck, more and more, by the huge difference between the American and Russian schools of gymnastics. It led me to ask the question : do artistry and acrobatics have to be mutually exclusive? (I am afraid that I think naming 'American' gymnastics a 'school' is perhaps lending an undeserved dignity to work which has become excessively obsessed with the difficult and the consistent, but I am using the word here so as not to label unfairly those individual gymnasts who are blameless in the direction of their training.) The FIG's vision for gymnastics is said to embrace more artistry; at least the publicity it has put about on the subject of its new Code makes that fairly plain.  So perhaps the Russians, with their inconsistent brilliance and superior body carriage (Mustafina, Komova, Grishina, Afanasy...

Breaking news - Stretovich in, Ignatyev out

Valentina Rodionenko earlier today confirmed that Ivan Stretovich will take the place of Nikita Ignatyev on the main Russian gymnastics team.  19 year old Stretovich, from Novosibirsk, Siberia, is Russian Cup champion on the pommel horse and high bar.  His first major senior competition was the 2014 World Championships where he performed on pommels only.  Stretovich was originally selected as a reserve and the decision to bring him onto the main team was based on his superior performance quality compared to Ignatyev, according to Rodionenko. For the women, the news is that Angelina Melnikova is recovering well from the hamstring injury she aggravated at one of the final control competitions at Round Lake.  Valentina says that she is back to training her full routines again.   Sources - MAG - http://rsport.ru/rio2016_gymnastics/20160802/1011352078.html WAG - http://rsport.ru/rio2016_gymnastics/20160802/1011409100.html New - video of the girls training, ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more