Tag Archives: GLASGOW 2015 ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

Glasgow 2015 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships: 4 Moves That Make A Big Difference In Women’s Gymnastics

Ever more daring, ever higher — gymnasts have always been innovators, striving to nourish their sport with new moves and greater difficulty. Beyond medals and records, the supreme honor for a gymnast is to introduce a skill that comes to bear his or her name, allowing them to leave their mark on history.
While there are dozens of elements in the code of points named after the gymnast who first performed them, here are four that could make a difference in the women’s competition:

Balance Beam: The full twisting back flip
Gymnasts have been doing backflips on the Balance Beam since 1972, when Olga Korbut dared one at the Munich Olympics and won a gold medal as a result. In recent years, women have made the skill more complicated by adding a full twist to the element. Flipping and twisting makes trying to land on a four-inch piece of wood exponentially more difficult, but certain gymnasts are nevertheless known for their mastery of the skill. When done well, this element is magical, handsomely rewarded by the judges and equally appreciated by the audience.

Vault: The Amanar
When Simona Amanar debuted the Vault that came to bear her name at the 2000 Olympics, she could not have imagined that her element would become one of most potent weapons of the American team at the London Games 12 years later. The Amanar vault (roundoff onto the springboard, back handspring onto the table and a flip done with two and a half twists in the layout position before landing) is so difficult that it carries a 6.3 point difficulty score, half a point higher than most other vaults in the code of points.

In a sport where hundredths of a point can make the difference between gold and nothing, the Amanar’s difficulty is therefore an indispensable weapon. In the team final at the 2012 Olympic Games, all three U.S. women landed the vault successfully, allowing them to pull away from the rest of the field from the beginning. American McKayla Maroney did the Amanar so well that some have even suggested that it be renamed after her!

Sophie Scheder
Sophie Scheder

Uneven Bars: The Tkatchev and friends
The Tkatchev, one of the classic release skills on Uneven Bars, was originally an element performed by men on the High Bar. The Tkatchev is named for Alexander Tkatchev, became the first gymnast to soar backward over the bar, splitting his legs in the air and regrasping the bar on the way down. In recent years, innovators have begun doing more difficult variations of Tkatchev’s move, keeping their legs straight in flight, putting their toes on the bar before letting go or combining it with another release move to earn bonus points. When the Tkatchev is done well, it transforms a routine into an aerial showcase. But look out: if a gymnast falls, the backward momentum can lead to a thudding belly flop onto the mat below.

Floor: The Biles
It didn’t take Simone Biles long to mark her territory on Floor — big tumbling has been the two-time World All-around champion’s calling card since she was a child. Still, it was still a surprise when she unleashed her unique skill — a double back flip done in a layout position with a half twist at the end — in 2013. Biles lands the skill facing forward, meaning she loses sight of the Floor before her feet hit, which is one reason the element is considered among the most difficult on women’s Floor. It’s one reason that for the moment, Simone stands alone as the only female gymnast to tempt the Biles.

GLASGOW 2015 ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: Eight Things To Know About The Men’s Competition

King Kohei
In Men’s Artistic Gymnastics, he’s the man: Since winning his first World All-around title in London in 2009, Kohei Uchimura has added another golden chapter to his stellar career with every passing year. With five consecutive World titles and the Olympic gold in 2012, Uchimura holds the record for All-around victories at the World Championships. Though his brilliance has brought him five Olympic medals (one gold and four silver) and 16 World medals (seven gold and five silver among them), the 26-year-old from Japan strives for one thing only: perfection.

Kohei Uchimura, "The Bolt of Gymastics"
Kohei Uchimura, “The Bolt of Gymastics”

Imperial China
For more than two decades, one nation has almost singlehandedly dominated the Men’s team competition at the World Championships. Since Dortmund in 1994, the Chinese men have won 10 of 11 World team titles, in addition to three of the five Olympic titles up for grabs along the way. For the past eight years, the team competition has been a ferocious battle between China, which deploys a solid legion of event specialists, and Japan, led by its star Kohei Uchimura. The competition is so tight that of the 273 points earned by both teams last year in Nanning, the gold medal was decided by one tenth of a point!

A Dutchman in flight
In a sport filled with daredevils, Epke Zonderland (NED) does combinations on High Bar even the most envelope-pushing gymnasts only dream of. The 29-year-old’s ability to do consecutive flipping release skills — letting go of the bar, flipping and twisting over it, regrabbing it and letting go again immediately to do still more flips and twists — has catapulted him to Olympic gold, two World titles and immeasurable Youtube stardom. Video footage of his winning Horizontal Bar routine in London in 2012 has received more than 1.8 million views to date, and earned him the nickname “The Flying Dutchman.”

The incredible Japanese twisting sensation
An adolescent upstart with an aptitude for twisting like a top, Kenzo Shirai’s prodigious talent first led him to become the youngest man ever to make the Japanese National team, and in 2013, one of the youngest-ever World champions on Floor. Shirai has two signature skills on Floor — a triple twisting forward somersault and a quadruple twisting back somersault, which he performs at the end of his routine — as well as a triple-twisting Vault, all of which are named after him. This year he plans to unveil a new tumbling run, which he hopes will help him regain the World Floor title.

Man of the year
2015 has been a golden year for Oleg Verniaiev: Since last November, the determined Ukrainian has won every competition he’s entered, racking up All-around titles at the European Championships, European Games, World University Games and American Cup, the last of which earned him the FIG World Cup series title for the second consecutive year. While Verniaiev is considered Uchimura’s most serious rival, the two have yet to meet in competition in 2015. The last time the two competed in the same arena was in 2014 in Nanning, where Verniaiev finished fourth All-around. Uchimura, of course, won the gold.

Great Britain awaits its first king
Beth Tweddle was the pioneer on the women’s side, but no British man has yet won a World title in Men’s Gymnastics. Nevertheless, before and since the London Olympic Games, the sport has experienced unprecedented growth and popularity on the island. During the London Games, Louis Smith (silver on Pommel Horse), Max Whitlock (bronze on Pommel Horse), Kristian Thomas, Daniel Purvis and Sam Oldham made history by taking bronze in the team competition. Those first four, aided by Nile Wilson and Brinn Bevan this year, hope to do as well in Glasgow, the first stop on the road to Rio.

Epke Zonderland
Epke Zonderland

38 gold medals
With the exception of Jake Dalton (USA), all medallists from the 2014 Worlds in Nanning are expected to compete in Glasgow. Additionally, no fewer than 15 former World champions will be present, including Marian Dragulescu (ROU/9 World medals), Kohei Uchimura (JPN/7), Zhang Chenglong (CHN/4), Krisztian Berki (HUN/3), Epke Zonderland (NED/2), Diego Hypolito (BRA/2), Lin Chaopan (CHN/2), Liu Yang (CHN/2), Yuri Van Gelder (NED/1), Arthur Zanetti (BRA/1), Oleg Verniaiev (UKR/1), Kenzo Shirai (JPN/1), Danell Leyva (USA/1), Fabian Hambüchen (GER/1), Vlasios Maras (GRE/1).

Lords of the Rings
Five Olympic gold medallists from London 2012 will also be present in Glasgow to continue the grand adventure that all hope will lead them to the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. These are Kohei Uchimura (JPN/All-around), Epke Zonderland (NED/Horizontal Bar), Arthur Zanetti (BRA/Still Rings), Krisztian Berki (HUN/Pommel Horse) and Zhang Chenglong (CHN/Team competition).