Skip to main content

Something about this team ...

There is something about this team I like ... Not that I think they are likely to win masses of medals or anything.  Something more than that.  It's a very balanced team, each gymnast brings something unique to the table both gymnastically and in terms of personality.   And, more than in London, I feel a cohesive team spirit,  perhaps it comes from the cross-generational make up of the team, from Mustafina's leadership?  For me, they have a sense of calm purpose.

The Russian Gymnastics Federation has a lovely picture gallery of the girls training post quals.  There are some striking images, more for their atmosphere than technical brilliance.  My IPad is loaded with copies of them, but there are too many to post here; do visit the website and take some time to look at the album in its entirety - (www.sportgymrus.ru).  In the meantime, in as far as I am capable of choosing highlights, here are a few of them.



    Aliya Mustafina's coach, Raisa Ganina from CSKA Moscow



    
  Kharenkova 's coach, Olga Sagina from Rostov on Don



    National beam coach, Marina Bulashenko, advises Alla Sosnitskaya


    National tumbling and vault coach, Vasily Ivanov
















Comments

  1. Russian girls just need to bring up the game and nail that beam. Hello silver.

    Mustafina needs low 15 in VT, killer beam and her usual excellent UB presentation. Hello gold.

    :))))

    ReplyDelete
  2. I wonder when the judges will recognize the russian work on Bars, they always keep them on high 8s, I mean what the russian gymnasts have to do to get 9s (specially Musty and kramarenko and spridinova)
    john

    ReplyDelete
  3. That oversplit! Wow!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

WAG FX EF QUAL RUSSIAN CHAMPS 2026

Russian Championship 2026 — Women’s Artistic Gymnastics Event: Floor Exercise Venue: Central Sports Palace, Kaluga, Kaluga Region Dates: 28 June – 6 July 2026 Report generated: 1 July 2026 at 14:44 --- Final Results Place No. Athlete Region Difficulty (D) Execution (E) Penalty (Pen) Total Qualification 1 234 Lyudmila Arkadyevna Roshchina Krasnodar Krai 5.700 8.000 0.00 13.700 Q 1 221 Anna Dmitrievna Kalmykova Moscow 5.700 8.000 0.00 13.700 Q 3 240 Elizaveta Vladimirovna Us Krasnodar Krai 5.500 7.333 0.00 12.833 Q 4 205 Aleksandra Ivanovna Anufrieva Smolensk Region 5.100 7.700 0.00 12.800 Q 5 245 Kristina Konstantinovna Shavlovalova Moscow 5.100 7.533 0.00 12.633 Q 6 207 Varvara Viktorovna Belova Vladimir Region 5.500 7.066 0.00 12.566 Q 7 244 Elena Yuryevna Chursina Moscow 4.500 7.933 0.00 12.433 Q 8 230 Zlata Sergeyevna Osokina Leningrad...

The State of Gymnastics - 'Soviet' or 'American' style?

Lioudmilla Tourischeva, 1972 Olympic All Around champion in artistic gymnastics, was held up as an example of the ideal Soviet citizen.  Here she coaches one of the Soviet Union's leading gymnasts from the 1980 Olympics, Natalia Shaposhnikova The Soviet Union had a genius for lifting sport beyond the textbook, injecting the aesthetic where previously only goals had been in plain view.   This was not only manifest in gymnastics.  Do you remember the ‘Russian Five’, the players who elevated ice hockey to a creative sporting display, mesmerising their opponents and spectators with intricate patterns of play, so rhythmic and entertaining that they could have been set to music?   In gymnastics, a sport where the aesthetic counted as much as the outcome, it was this ability to create spectacle out of competition that resulted in the most extraordinary athletic performances.  The ‘Golden Era’, most commonly understood to cover the years from 1952-1...

Fact or fiction? The press, gymnastics and pregnancy doping

It was a Sunday morning.  I was drinking my coffee and contemplating the day ahead - a workout at the gym, shopping for groceries, an evening reading a book, or catching up on last night's episodes of crime thriller The Bridge .  How nice it was not to have to think about work for a day. Then I saw it - a story about the history of doping in The Observer .  Interesting reading. Of course, cheating is as old as the hills.  It is, unfortunately, human nature for some people to try to gain easy advantage in any kind of competition.  That is why we have laws, rules, ethical guidelines.  People who cheat should face justice and shouldn't complain when they are found out. But the story about pregnancy doping bothered me.  Hadn't that been found to be fictional?  The author began with Olga Kovalenko's allegations made in 1994 - but the rumours had started way back in 1991 with the documentary series More Than A Game .  The practice...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more