Gymnastics
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Gymnastics is a sport involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strength, flexibility, and kinesthetic awareness, such as handsprings, handstands, and forward rolls.
It developed from fitness and beauty practices used by the ancient Greeks, including skills for mounting and dismounting a horse, and circus performance skills. In ancient times the term implied exercise taken by men in a gymnasium, a venue for intellectual and physical education.
It is often considered a dangerous sport, as the difficult acrobatic maneuvers often performed on equipment high above the ground puts the athlete at risk of serious injury.
Disciplines
Modern gymnastics, as regulated by the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique incorporates six distinct disciplines:- Artistic gymnastics (further classified as Men's Artistic Gymnastics and Women's Artistic Gymnastics)
- Rhythmic gymnastics
- Sports aerobics
- Sports acrobatics
- Trampolining
- General gymnastics
- Power Tumbling
Artistic gymnastics
Artistic Gymnastics is usually divided into Men's (MAG) and Women's Gymnastics (WAG), each group doing different events; Men compete on Vault, Parallel Bars, the Pommel Horse, the Rings, the High Bar, and on the Floor, while women compete on Vault, Uneven Bars, Beam, and Floor Exercise. In the past in some countries women competed on the rings and the high bar too, at least at the national level (for example, in the 1950s in the USSR). Though routines performed on each event may be short, they are physically exhausting and push the gymnast's strength, flexibility, endurance and awareness to the limit. Competitive women's gymnastics consists of two different stages: novice and optional. At the novice level, the gymnast performs routines that are pre-choreographed for all gymnasts. At the optional level, the gymnast performs routines that she herself choreographed or choreographed with the help of a dance choreographer. Every gymnast's routine at this advanced level will be different.Women's events
- Vault
- In the vaulting event, gymnasts sprint down a 25 meter (about 82 feet) runway, leap onto a springboard and onto the vaulting apparatus in a straight body position, touching the horse with their hands and pushing off of it. Beginners will often be upright; more advanced gymnasts will push off from a handstand position. The postflight may include one or multiple saltos and twists.
- In 2001 the traditional vault was replaced by the new vaulting table, sometimes known as a tongue. The new apparatus is more stable than the old, giving gymnasts a larger blocking surface. It is also longer.
- Uneven Bars
- On the uneven bars (also known as asymmetric bars, UK), the gymnast navigates a set of bars set at different heights to perform swinging, circling, transitional, and release moves, as well as handstands. The gymnast must use the entire bar to receive a high score.
- Balance Beam
- The gymnast performs a choreographed routine from 70 to 90 seconds in length consisting of leaps, acrobatic skills, turns and dance elements on a padded spring beam about 4 feet high, 16 feet long, and 4 inches wide. The event requires in particular balance and flexibility.
- Floor
- Gymnasts perform a choreographed exercise 85 to 95 seconds long, consisting of three tumbling passes, and a series of jumps, dance elements, and turns, to musical accompaniment, on a carpeted, springed floor 40 feet × 40 feet. All four sides should be used to earn the maximum score.
Men's events
- Floor
- Floor — The floor is a carpeted area, 12m × 12m, usually springed or foamed. Men perform a series of tumbling passes along with flexibility, strength, and balance tests. Routines last between 50–70 seconds and are performed without music.
- Pommel Horse
- Pommel Horse — Men must perform circular movements around the horse with their legs while allowing only their hands to actually touch it. This is considered one of the hardest events.
- Rings
- Rings — The rings are about 8 feet off the ground. Men must have good strength and flexibility to swing themselves on these rings while preventing the rings themselves from swinging. The rings are the epitome of male gymnast strength.
- Vault
- Vault — Gymnasts sprint down a runway, usually about 80 feet long, before leaping on a springboard and holding their bodies straight while punching (blocking using only a shoulder movement) the vault and flipping over to a standing position. In advanced gymnastics, twists are added before landing.
- Parallel Bars
- Parallel Bars — Men hold themselves on two bars about a shoulder's width apart and about 6 1/2 feet high while performing a series of swings and balances that require great strength and coordination.
- High Bar
- High Bar — a 1-inch thick steel bar 8 feet in the air is all the gymnast has to hold onto as he shows swings, release skills, twists, and even a change of direction.
General gymnastics
General gymnastics, sometimes called group projects enables people of all ages and abilities to participate in performance troupes of 6 to more than 150 athletes. They perform synchronized, choreographed routines. Troupes may be all one gender or mixed. There are no age divisions in general gymnastics. The largest general gymnastics exhibition is the quadrennial World Gymnaestrada which was first held in 1939.Rhythmic gymnastics
The discipline of rhythmic gymnastics is competed only by women (although there is a new version of this discipline for men being pioneered in Japan, see Men's rhythmic gymnastics), and involves the performance of five separate routines with the use of five apparatus — ball, ribbon, hoop, clubs, rope — on a floor area, with a much greater emphasis on the aesthetic rather than the acrobatic. Rhythmic routines are scored out of a possible 20 points.
Sports aerobics
Sports aerobics involves the performance of routines by individuals or pairs, emphasizing strength, flexibility, and aerobic fitness rather than acrobatic or balance skills. Routines are performed on a small floor area and generally last 60-90 seconds, being judged out of a total of 10 points.
Trampolining
Trampolining consists of four events, individual, synchronized, double mini trampoline and power tumbling. Only individual trampoline is included in the Olympics. Individual routines involve a build-up phase during which the gymnast jumps repeatedly to achieve height, followed by a sequence of ten leaps without pauses during which the gymnast performs a sequence of aerial tumbling skills. Routines are marked out of a maximum score of 10 points. Additional points (with no maximum) can be earned depending on the difficulty of the moves. Synchronized trampoline is similar except that both competitors must perform the routine together and marks are awarded for synchronicity. Double mini trampoline involves a smaller trampoline with a run-up, two moves are performed and the scores marked in a similar manner to individual trampoline. Tumbling involves a sprung track, athletes must perform a succession of tumbling moves and are marked on difficulty and execution.
The Rope Climb
This was an Olympic Gymnastic event at one time, but was removed from that venue after the 1932 Games. In the United States, competitive rope climbing persisted until the early 1960s, when the AAU and the NCAA dropped it. Competitors climbed either a 20' or an 8 meter, 1.5" diameter natural fiber rope for speed, starting from a seated position on the floor and using only the hands and arms. Kicking the legs in a kind of "stride" was permitted. At the top, there was a circular "tambourine" with lampblack on its undersurface, which the climber touched. Several timers with stop watches timed the climb, and an acceptable official time was then agreed upon. Before the event expired, an electronic means of timing the climb was developed, but this was insufficient reason to continue an activity that many artistic gymnasts thought should have been relegated to the track & field arena. The world record for the 20' climb was 2.8 seconds, first achieved by Don Perry in the 1950s. There would be little reason, other than historical, to dwell on this minor but exciting activity were it not for gymnasts in the Czech Republic, who resurrected competitive rope climbing in 1993. Local and national contests have been held each year since then.
See also
- Gymnast
- Gym
- Turners
- Trampolining
- Gymnopaedia
- World Gymnastics Championships
- NCAA Men's Gymnastics championship
- NCAA Women's Gymnastics championship
- Wushu, a gymnastics-like sport
External links
- [Fédération International de Gymnastique]
- [Gymnastics Coaching]
- [GymnasticsZone.com Articles] - A collection of web pages, written by gymnastics professionals.
- [Gymnastic Topics]
- [Dope Moves Central]
- [FM Gymnastics]- a list of Techniques and free animated comic tutorials for Floor Gymnastics.
- [The Rope Climb] - History & Records
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