USA Gymnastics - Nov./Dec. 2011 - Vol. 40, #6
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Transcript of USA Gymnastics - Nov./Dec. 2011 - Vol. 40, #6
THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFOFTHE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF
NON-PROFITORGANIZATIONU.S. Postage
PAIDIndianapolis, IN
Permit No. 7867
USA Gymnastics132 Washington St., Suite 700Indianapolis, IN 46204
CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED
U.S.A. $3.95 • CANADA $5.95 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2011 • VOLUME 40, #6
USA WORLD TEAM
MEDALISTSFREE POSTER
CENTER SPREAD!
2 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
On the cover: 2011 World Championships USA Women’s
Gold Team and USA Men’s Bronze Team. Photos by John Cheng.
USA GYMNASTICS is published bimonthly for $19.95 per year in the U.S., $32 per year in Canada or Mexico, and $45 per year in all other countries. USA GYMNASTICS is published by USA Gymnastics, 132 E. Washington St., Suite 700 Indianapolis, IN 46204 (317) 237–5050, www.usagym.org. USA Gymnastics is the sole national governing body for the sport of gymnastics. A not-for-profit organization, USA Gymnastics selects, trains and administers the U.S. Gymnastics Team, including the U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Team. Contributions and support are always welcome and are tax-deductible. © 2011 USA Gymnastics. All rights reserved. Printed by Sport Graphics, Inc., Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Publisher Steve Penny
Editor Luan Peszek
Graphic Designer Jeannie Shaw
USA GYMNASTICS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chair: Peter Vidmar
Vice-Chair: Paul Parilla
Secretary: Gary Anderson
Treasurer: Jim Morris
National Membership – Women: Tom Koll
National Membership – Women: Steve Rybacki
National Membership – Men: Yoichi Tomita
National Membership – Men: Russ Fystrom
National Membership – Rhythmic: Brooke Bushnell-Toohey
National Membership – Trampoline & Tumbling: George Drew
National Membership – Acrobatic Gymnastics: Dr. Jay Binder
Advisory Council: Mike Burns
Advisory Council: Ron Ferris
Advisory Council: Carole Ide
Athlete Director – Women: Terin Humphrey
Athlete Director – Men: John Roethlisberger
Athlete Director – Rhythmic: Jessica Howard
Athlete Director – Trampoline & Tumbling: Karl Heger
Athlete Director – Acrobatic Gymanstics: Michael Rodrigues
Public Sector: Bitsy Kelley
Public Sector: Frank Marshall
Public Sector: Jim Morris
Public Sector: Mary Lou Retton
CHANGE OF ADDRESS AND SUBSCRIPTION INQUIRIES: In order
to ensure uninterrupted delivery of magazine, notice of change
of address should be made eight weeks in advance. For fastest
service, please enclose your present mailing label. Direct all
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Ste. 700, Indianapolis, IN 46204.
Unless expressly identified to the contrary, all articles,
statements and views printed herein are attributed solely
to the author and USA Gymnastics expresses no opinion and
assumes no responsibility thereof.
FEATURES10 2011 World Championships The World Championships for artistic gymnastics took place in Tokyo, Japan. The USA won a total of seven medals, including four gold, and secured berths to the 2012 Olympic Games for both men’s and women’s gymnastics.
26 2011 Rhythmic World Championships Team USA competed at the 2011 Rhythmic World Championships in Montpellier, France. In the team competition, where three scores on each event make up the team total, the Americans finished 16th.
34 2011 National Gymnastics Day Handstand World RecordMore than 20,000 gymnasts and fans from around the country joined together on Sept. 17 to break the world record for most handstands performed simultaneously. Check out some great photos from the day!
NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
CONTENTS
DEPARTMENTS 6 EDITORIAL38 EVENT SCHEDULE42 EVENT RESULTS48 FACES IN THE GYM50 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
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4 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
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Publisher
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262650 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
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USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 5 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 5
6 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
During the past couple of months it has been so rewarding to watch our athletes compete on the international stage. At both the artistic and rhythmic world championships, USA Gymnastics athletes have been delivering outstanding performances.
At the 2011 Rhythmic World Championships in Montpellier, France, the Americans finished 16th in the team competition and 20th in the group
event. Julie Zetlin was the highest-ranking all-around finisher from both North, Central and South America, so we are hopeful the USA will earn a continental spot in the 2012 Olympic Games. However, the official announcement from the FIG won’t be made until January.
In Tokyo, the men and women’s teams showed their world-class potential as we head into the Olympic year.
The women’s team stood strong through the entire competition after losing Alicia Sacramone to an injury. Incredibly, all five of our USA gymnasts finished in the top 12 in the all-around during qualifications. Their gold medal team performance for just the third time in history (2003, 2007, 2011) was yet another indication of the strength of our women’s program and the incredible dedication of the athletes and coaches. Every one of these young women showed great poise and confidence throughout the week and proved that the USA team spirit is alive and well.
On the men’s side, the USA team returned to the medal podium earning the bronze, and sent a message that the USA will be a threat for a team gold medal in London. After qualifying, the U.S. men were second behind Japan, and three Americans were in the top five in the all-around. During team finals, the USA challenged Japan for the silver medal, missing second place by a mere 0.010.
Jordyn Wieber and Aly Raisman were impressive in the all-around, as Jordyn became the sixth U.S. woman to claim the title of World Champion, along with Kim Zmeskal, Shannon Miller, Chellsie Memmel, Shawn Johnson and Bridget Sloan. Raisman finished fourth in the all-around.
You could not wipe the smile off the face of John Orozco, who finished fifth in his first World Championships all-around appearance. Danell Leyva had a tough day at the office but demonstrated his tenacity by coming back to take gold on parallel bars two days later. Danell is the first U.S. man to win a World individual event title since 2003, joining Bart Conner (1979) and Sean Townsend (2001) as the only Americans to win the parallel bars title at Worlds.
The women’s success also continued in event finals, with McKayla Maroney’s impressive and consistent vaults that led her to the gold medal in that event. McKayla became the third consecutive American to win this event at Worlds, following Kayla Williams in 2009, and Alicia in 2010. Jordyn and Aly won bronze on the beam and floor, respectively.
All in all, it has been a good couple of months for Team USA at the World Championships with more to come. As this issue goes to print, the Pan Am Games are taking place in Guadalajara, Mexico, and the Trampoline and Tumbling World Championships are just around the corner in Birmingham, England.
Have a great holiday season and good luck in your training for the 2012 season.
See you in the gym,
Steve Penny,President & CEO
During the past couple of months it has been so rewarding to watch our athletes compete on the international stage. At both the artistic and rhythmic world championships, USA Gymnastics athletes have been delivering outstanding performances.
At the 2011 Rhythmic World Championships in Montpellier, France, the Americans finished 16Americans finished 16
event. Julie Zetlin was the highest-ranking all-around finisher from both North, Central and South
During the past couple of months it has been so During the past couple of months it has been so During the past couple of months it has been so During the past couple of months it has been so
event. Julie Zetlin was the highest-ranking all-around finisher from both North, Central and South America, so we are hopeful the USA will earn a continental spot in the 2012 Olympic Games. However, the official announcement from the FIG won’t be made until January.
In Tokyo, the men and women’s teams showed their world-class potential as we head into the Olympic year.
The women’s team stood strong through the entire competition after losing Alicia Sacramone to an injury. Incredibly, all five of our USA gymnasts finished in the top 12 in the all-around during qualifications. Their gold medal team performance for just the third time in history (2003, 2007, 2011) was yet another indication of the strength of our women’s program and the incredible dedication of the athletes and coaches. Every one of these young women showed great poise and confidence throughout the week and proved that the USA team spirit is alive and well.
On the men’s side, the USA team returned to the medal podium earning the bronze, and sent a
event. Julie Zetlin was the highest-ranking all-around finisher from both North, Central and South
the U.S. men were second behind Japan, and three Americans were in the top five in the all-around. During team finals, the USA challenged Japan for the silver medal, missing second
Jordyn Wieber and Aly Raisman were impressive in the all-around, as Jordyn became the sixth
Chellsie Memmel, Shawn Johnson and Bridget Sloan. Raisman finished fourth in the all-around.
You could not wipe the smile off the face of John Orozco, who finished fifth Championships all-around appearance. Danell Leyva had a tough day at the office but demonstrated his tenacity by coming back to take gold on parallel bars two days later. Danell is the first U.S. man to win a World individual event title since 2003, joining Bart Conner (1979) and Sean Townsend (2001) as the only Americans to win the parallel bars title at Worlds.
The women’s success also continued in event finals, with McKayla Maroney’s impressive and consistent vaults that led her to the gold medal in that event. McKayla became the third consecutive American to win this event at Worlds, following Kayla Williams in 2009, and Alicia
All in all, it has been a good couple of months for Team USA at the World Championships with
Mexico, and the Trampoline and Tumbling World Championships are just around the corner in
See you in the gym,
Steve Penny,
On the men’s side, the USA team returned to the medal podium earning the bronze, and sent a
6 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 7
8 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 20118 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 20118
USA GYMNASTICS SPONSORS AND SUPPLIERS
CORE OBJECTIVES n Build the base n Promote the sport n Achieve competitive success
THE MAGAZINE’S MISSION STATEMENTUSA Gymnastics, a bimonthly magazine, is a benefit of membership from USA Gymnastics. The mission of USA Gymnastics magazine is to communicate with gymnasts, parents, coaches, judges, volunteers, clubs and fans of the sport in order to promote the programs, people, events and services of USA Gymnastics.
VISION To inspire and enable our members to achieve excellence in the sport of gymnastics and in life.
THE ORGANIZATION’S MISSION The mission of USA Gymnastics is to encourage participation and the pursuit of excellence in all aspects of gymnastics.
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 9
10 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201110 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
Tokyo, Japan was the site of the 2011 World Gymnastics Championships, where the United States won a total of seven medals, including four gold, and secured team berths to
the 2012 Olympic Games in London for both men’s and women’s gymnastics. This is just the third time the USA has won
seven medals, and the seven in 2011 marks the most medals won since the 2007 World Championships. The United States also won seven medals in 2003 and 2007, second only to the nine medals won in 2005. The women’s team gold medal is the USA’s first since 2007 and third overall (2003). For the men, the team bronze medal is the first team
medal since 2003. The U.S. medalists for 2011 are listed below.
Photos by John Cheng
ORIG
INAL
PHOTOS
BY JOHN C
HEN
G.
GOLD MEDALSWOMEN’S TEAM • Gabrielle Douglas, Virginia Beach, Va./
Chow’s Gymnastics and Dance Institute
• McKayla Maroney, Laguna Niguel, Calif./ All-Olympia Gymnastics
• Alexandra Raisman, Needham, Mass./ Brestyan’s American Gymnastics
• Alicia Sacramone, Winchester, Mass./ Brestyan’s American Gymnastics
10 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
ORIG
INAL
PHOTOS
BY JOHN C
HEN
G.
Brestyan’s American Gymnastics Brestyan’s American Gymnastics Brestyan’s American Gymnastics
DanellLEYVA
okyo, Japan was the site of the 2011 World Gymnastics Championships, where the United States won a total of seven medals, including four gold, and secured team berths to
the 2012 Olympic Games in London for both men’s and women’s This is just the third time the USA has won
seven medals, and the seven in 2011 marks the most medals won since the 2007 World Championships.
The United States also won seven medals in 2003 and 2007, second only to the nine medals won in 2005. The women’s team gold medal is the USA’s 2005. The women’s team gold medal is the USA’s first since 2007 and third overall (2003). For the men, the team bronze medal is the first team the men, the team bronze medal is the first team
medal since 2003. The U.S. medalists for 2011 are
GOLD MEDALSGabrielle Douglas, Virginia Beach, Va./Chow’s Gymnastics and Dance Institute
McKayla Maroney, Laguna Niguel, Calif./
Alexandra Raisman, Needham, Mass./
Alicia Sacramone, Winchester, Mass./
• Sabrina Vega, Carmel, N.Y./ Dynamic Gymnastics
• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./ Gedderts’ Twistars USA
• Anna Li, Aurora, Ill./ Legacy Elite Gymnastics LLC, alternate
WOMEN'S ALL-AROUND• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./
Gedderts’ Twistars USA
WOMEN’S VAULT• McKayla Maroney, Laguna Nigel, Calif./
All-Olympia Gymnastics
MEN’S PARALLEL BARS• Danell Leyva, Homestead, Fla./
Team Hilton HHonors (Universal Gymnastics)
BRONZE MEDALSMEN’S TEAM• Jake Dalton, Reno, Nev./
University of Oklahoma
• Jonathan Horton, Houston, Tex./ Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress Academy)
• Steven Legendre, Port Jefferson, N.Y./ Team Hilton HHonors (University of Oklahoma)
• Danell Leyva, Homestead, Fla./ Team Hilton HHonors (Universal Gymnastics)
• Alexander Naddour, Gilbert, Ariz./ University of Oklahoma
• John Orozco, Bronx, N.Y./ U.S. Olympic Training Center
• Chris Brooks, Houston/ Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress Academy), alternate
WOMEN’S BALANCE BEAM• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./
Gedderts’ Twistars USA
WOMEN’S FLOOR EXERCISE• Alexandra Raisman, Needham, Mass./
Brestyan’s American Gymnastics
GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS GOLD MEDALS
JordynWIEBER
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 11USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 11
McKaylaMARONEY
NOTE: All five USA gymnasts finished in the top 12 in the all-around but only the top two per country, Wieber and Raisman, could advance to the all-around finals.
McKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMARONEYMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMcKaylaMARONEYMcKaylaMARONEYMARONEYMARONEYMARONEYMARONEYMARONEYMARONEY
NOTE:NOTE: All five USA gymnasts finished gymnasts finished in the top 12 in the in the top 12 in the all-around but only all-around but only the top two per the top two per country, Wieber country, Wieber and Raisman, could and Raisman, could advance to the all-advance to the all-
USA WOMEN'S TEAM PRELIM SCORESNAME VT UB BB FX AA
Wieber 15.433 14.800 15.233 14.566 60.032
Raisman 14.666 14.000 14.933 14.833 58.432
Douglas 14.558 14.866 14.400 13.83 57.657
Vega 14.066 14.333 14.366 13.900 56.665
Maroney 15.533 13.666 13.300 13.833 56.332
USA WOMEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORESNAME VT UB BB FX AA Sabrina Vega --- 14.366 14.833 --- ---Jordyn Wieber 15.833 14.766 15.033 14.766 60.398McKayla Maroney 16.033 --- --- 14.566 ---Aly Raisman 14.950 --- 14.866 14.666 ---Gabrielle Douglas --- 14.733 --- --- ---
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 11
S TEAM PRELIM SCORESUB
14.800
14.000
14.866
14.333
13.666
USA WOMEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORESUB
14.366 14.766
------
14.733
USA WOMEN'S TEAM PRELIM SCORESNAME VT
Wieber 15.433 14.800
Raisman 14.666 14.000
Douglas 14.558 14.866
Vega 14.066 14.333
Maroney 15.533 13.666
USA WOMEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORESNAME VTSabrina Vega --- 14.366 Jordyn Wieber 15.833 14.766 McKayla Maroney 16.033 Aly Raisman 14.950 Gabrielle Douglas --- 14.733
DanellLEYVA
DanellDanellDanellDanellLEYVALEYVA
• Sabrina Vega, Carmel, N.Y./ Dynamic Gymnastics
• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./ Gedderts’ Twistars USA
• Anna Li, Aurora, Ill./ Legacy Elite Gymnastics LLC, alternate
WOMEN'S ALL-AROUND• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./
Gedderts’ Twistars USA
WOMEN’S VAULT• McKayla Maroney, Laguna Nigel, Calif./
All-Olympia Gymnastics
MEN’S PARALLEL BARS• Danell Leyva, Homestead, Fla./
Team Hilton HHonors (Universal Gymnastics)
BRONZE MEDALSMEN’S TEAM• Jake Dalton, Reno, Nev./
University of Oklahoma
• Jonathan Horton, Houston, Tex./ Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress Academy)
• Steven Legendre, Port Jefferson, N.Y./ Team Hilton HHonors (University of Oklahoma)
• Danell Leyva, Homestead, Fla./ Team Hilton HHonors (Universal Gymnastics)
• Alexander Naddour, Gilbert, Ariz./ University of Oklahoma
• John Orozco, Bronx, N.Y./ U.S. Olympic Training Center
• Chris Brooks, Houston/ Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress Academy), alternate
WOMEN’S BALANCE BEAM• Jordyn Wieber, DeWitt, Mich./
Gedderts’ Twistars USA
WOMEN’S FLOOR EXERCISE• Alexandra Raisman, Needham, Mass./
Brestyan’s American Gymnastics
L to R:Gabby Douglas, Anna Li,
Sabrina Vega, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman, Alicia Sacramone,
and Jordyn Wieber.
WOMEN'S COMPETITIONThe U.S. women began the competition by winning the team gold medal, just the USA’s third team gold in history (2003, 2007). The squad banded together after team captain Sacramone withdrew due to injury and won the team title with a 179.411, four points ahead of second place Russia (175.329). The USA has won a women’s team medal in every World Championships that has had a team competition since 2001: 2001, bronze; 2003, gold; 2006, silver; 2007, gold and 2010, silver. Other World team medals were won in 1991, silver; 1994, silver and 1995, bronze. Two days later, the women’s all-around gold medal battle went down to the last routine, and Wieber emerged with the title after bouncing back from an error on the uneven bars to defeat Russia’s Victoria Komova. She is just the sixth U.S. woman to claim the prestigious title, joining Kim Zmeskal (1991), Shannon Miller (1993-94), Chellsie Memmel (2005), Shawn Johnson (2007) and Bridget Sloan (2009). Raisman also persevered after a bars mistake to finish fourth. Maroney vaulted to the event’s gold medal via her Amanar and Yurchenko half-on, front layout half off. She is the third straight U.S. woman to win the vault title – Kayla Williams in 2009 and Sacramone in 2010. On the balance beam, Wieber claimed the event’s bronze medal, and Raisman was fourth. Raisman earned the floor exercise bronze medal, with Wieber in sixth. On the uneven bars, both Wieber and Douglas competed in the finals, finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.
WOMEN’S TEAM FINALS1. United States 179.4112. Russia 175.3293. China 172.8204. Romania 172.4125. Great Britain 169.6706. Germany 168.4797. Japan 167.1228. Australia 166.739
WOMEN’S EVENT FINALSVAULT1 MARONEY McKayla USA 15.3002 CHUSOVITINA Oksana GER 14.7333 PHAN Thi Ha Thanh VIE 14.6664 BARBOSA Jade BRA 14.5665 STEINGRUBER Giulia SUI 14.4506 NABIEVA Tatiana RUS 14.3497 MORENO Alexa MEX 14.2168 PENA Yamilet DOM 6.950
UNEVEN BARS1 KOMOVA Victoria RUS 15.5002 NABIEVA Tatiana RUS 15.0003 HUANG Quishang CHN 14.8334 WIEBER Jordyn USA 14.5005 DOUGLAS Gabrielle USA 14.2005 TERAMOTO Asuka JPN 14.2007 TSURUMI Koko JPN 14.0668 DUFOURNET Yuna FRA 12.641
BALANCE BEAM1 SUI Lu CHN 15.8662 YAO Jinnan CHN 15.2333 WIEBER Jordyn USA 15.1334 RAISMAN Aly USA 15.0665 RACEA Amelia ROU 14.5336 INSHINA Yulia RUS 14.5257 PONOR Catalina ROU 14.2418 KOMOVA Victoria RUS 13.766
FLOOR EXERCISE1 AFANASEVA Kensia RUS 15.1332 SUI Lu CHN 15.0663 RAISMAN Aly USA 15.0004 YAO Jinnan CHN 14.8665 MITCHELL Lauren AUS 14.7336 WIEBER Jordyn USA 14.7007 TWEDDLE Elizabeth GBR 14.5008 CHELARU Diana ROU 14.200
AlyRAISMAN
12 USA GYMNASTICS
7 PONOR Catalina 8 KOMOVA Victoria
FLOOR EXERCISE1 AFANASEVA Kensia 2 SUI Lu3 RAISMAN Aly 4 YAO Jinnan 5 MITCHELL Lauren 6 WIEBER Jordyn 7 TWEDDLE Elizabeth 8 CHELARU Diana
AlyAlyAlyAlyAlyAlyRAISMANRAISMANAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAly
RAISMANRAISMANRAISMANRAISMANRAISMAN
GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
7 TWEDDLE Elizabeth 8 CHELARU Diana
AlyAlyAlyRAISMANAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAlyAly
RAISMANAly
RAISMANRAISMANRAISMAN
12 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
14 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201114 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201114141414 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201114 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
Women’s All-Around VT UB BB FX AA 1 WIEBER Jordyn USA 15.716 13.600 15.266 14.800 59.382
2 KOMOVA Viktoria RUS 14.933 15.400 14.683 14.333 59.349
3 YAO Jinnan CHN 14.966 14.933 13.933 14.766 58.598
4 RAISMAN Aly USA 15.233 12.900 14.525 14.900 57.558
5 HUANG Quishaung CHN 14.733 14.966 13.633 14.100 57.432
6 PORGRAS Ana ROU 14.100 14.133 15.100 13.966 57.299
7 AFANASEVA Kensia RUS 14.466 14.200 13.400 14.666 56.732
8 MITCHELL Lauren AUS 14.600 13.133 13.933 15.033 56.699
9 WHELAN Hannah GBR 14.400 13.258 14.333 14.133 56.124
10 JAROSCH Nadine GER 14.300 13.733 14.000 14.000 56.033
11 SEITZ Elisabeth GER 14.758 13.933 13.366 13.766 55.823
12 FERRARI Vanessa ITA 12.733 13.833 14.466 14.500 55.532
13 HYPOLITO Danielle BRA 14.300 12.866 14.333 13.866 55.365
14 FERLITO Carlotta ITA 14.200 12.866 14.616 13.400 55.082
15 TSURUMI Koko JPN 13.800 12.533 14.700 13.966 54.999
16 STEINGRUBER Giulia SUI 14.866 13.433 13.400 13.233 54.932
17 VAN GERNER Celine NED 13.700 13.766 13.766 13.633 54.865
18 HAIDU Raluca ROU 13.466 13.366 14.416 13.566 54.814
19 LEE Christine CAN 13.933 13.900 12.933 13.966 54.732
20 TANAKA Rie JPN 14.233 13.833 13.933 12.700 54.699
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie FRA 14.133 13.266 13.933 13.166 54.498
22 IZURIETA Ana Marie ESP 13.966 13.466 12.933 13.366 53.731
23 LITTLE Emily AUS 13.633 13.300 13.566 13.100 53.599
24 LOPEZ Jessica VEN 14.000 10.300 14.266 13.733 52.299
Women 1 WIEBER Jordyn
2 KOMOVA Viktoria
3 YAO Jinnan
4 RAISMAN Aly
5 HUANG Quishaung
6 PORGRAS Ana
7 AFANASEVA Kensia
8 MITCHELL Lauren
9 WHELAN Hannah
10 JAROSCH Nadine
11 SEITZ Elisabeth
12 FERRARI Vanessa
13 HYPOLITO Danielle
14 FERLITO Carlotta
15 TSURUMI Koko
16 STEINGRUBER Giulia
17 VAN GERNER Celine
1 WIEBER Jordyn
2 KOMOVA Viktoria
3 YAO Jinnan
4 RAISMAN Aly
5 HUANG Quishaung
6 PORGRAS Ana
7 AFANASEVA Kensia
8 MITCHELL Lauren
9 WHELAN Hannah
10 JAROSCH Nadine
11 SEITZ Elisabeth
12 FERRARI Vanessa
13 HYPOLITO Danielle
14 FERLITO Carlotta
15 TSURUMI Koko
16 STEINGRUBER Giulia
17 VAN GERNER Celine
GabrielleDOUGLAS
ROU 13.466 13.366 14.416 13.566
CAN 13.933 13.900 12.933 13.966
JPN 14.233 13.833 13.933 12.700
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie FRA 14.133 13.266 13.933 13.166
12.933 13.366
18 HAIDU Raluca
19 LEE Christine
20 TANAKA Rie
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie
18 HAIDU Raluca
19 LEE Christine
20 TANAKA Rie
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie FRA 14.133 13.266
22 IZURIETA Ana Marie ESP 13.966 13.466
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie
22 IZURIETA Ana Marie
21 MALAUSSENA Aurelie
22 IZURIETA Ana Marie
53.599
52.299
13.566 13.100
14.266 13.733
23 LITTLE Emily AUS 13.633 13.300
24 LOPEZ Jessica VEN 14.000 10.300
SabrinaVEGA
JordynWIEBER
16 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
ORIG
INAL
PHOTOS
BY JOHN C
HEN
G.
16 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201116 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201116 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
SteveLEGENDRE
MEN'S COMPETITIONFor the first time since 2003, the U.S. men were on the World Championships team medal podium. The team challenged Japan for the silver medal, missing silver by a mere 0.010. China won the team title. The USA’s previous team medals came in 1979 (bronze), 2001 (silver), and 2003 (silver).
Leyva won the parallel bars gold medal, becoming the first U.S. man to win a World individual event title since 2003 and the first on the parallel bars since Sean Townsend in 2001. His well-executed routine earned at 15.633, a 10th of a point ahead of the silver medalists who tied at 15.533.
In the men’s all-around, Orozco continued to push to finish fifth after struggling on the first few events. Leyva had an unfortunate mishap on the high bar and was unable to complete his last
event, finishing 24th. Kohei Uchimura won his third straight title. In the other individual event finals, Steven Legendre of Port Jefferson, N.Y./Team Hilton HHonors (University of Oklahoma), finished fifth, his highest ever, in the floor exercise final, where Dalton, a last minute replacement for Romania’s Marian Dragulescu, was eighth. Horton was seventh in the still rings final, and Orozco was eighth for the horizontal bar. For complete results, stories, interviews and more, go to usagym.org/worlds.
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 17USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 17171717USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 17171717
FLOOR EXERCISE
1 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 15.633
2 ZOU Kai CHN 15.500
3 HYPOLITO Diego BRA 15.466
3 SHATILOV Alexander ISR 15.466
5 LEGENDRE Steven USA 15.400
6 KOCZI Flavius ROU 15.333
6 GONZALEZ Enrique CHI 15.333
8 DALTON Jake USA 15.133
POMMEL HORSE
1 BERKI Krisztian HUN 15.833
2 TOMMASONE Cyril FRA 15.266
3 SMITH Louis GBR 15.066
4 HIDVEGI Vin HUN 15.000
5 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 14.533
6 SELLATHURAI Prashanth AUS 14.333
7 BERTONCELJ Sasa SLO 14.266
7 TENG Haibin CHN 14.266
STILL RINGS
1 CHEN Yibing CHN 15.800
2 ZANETTI Nabarrete BRA 15.600
3 YAMAMURO Koji JPN 15.500
4 MORANDI Matteo ITA 15.200
5 VAN GELDER Yuri NED 14.666
6 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 14.633
7 HORTON Jonathan USA 14.300
8 CARMONA Regulo VEN 14.266
VAULT
1 YANG Hak Seon KOR 16.566
2 GOLOTSUTSKOV Anton RUS 16.366
3 OKIGUCHI Makoto JPN 16.291
4 BOUHAIL Thomas FRA 16.187
5 ABLYAZIN Denis RUS 16.174
6 KASPIAROVICH Dzmitry BLR 16.083
7 SHEK Wai Hung HKG 15.950
8 WAMMES Jeffrey NED 15.683
PARALLEL BARS
1 LEYVA Danell USA 15.633
2 TSOLAKIDIS Vasileios GRE 15.533
2 ZHANG Chenglong CHN 15.533
4 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 15.500
5 CUCHERAT Yann FRA 15.333
6 BERBECAR Marius ROU 15.266
7 FENG Zhe CHN 15.200
8 TANAKA Kazuhito JPN 15.166
HORIZONTAL BAR
1 ZOU Kai CHN 16.441
2 ZHANG Chenglong CHN 16.366
3 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 16.333
4 HAMBUECHEN Fabian GER 16.233
5 ZONDERLAND Epke NED 14.833
6 TANAKA Yusuke JPN 14.700
7 BOY Philipp GER 14.300
8 OROZCO John USA 14.133
MEN'S EVENT FINALS
USA MEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORES NAME FX PH SR VT PB HB
Jake Dalton 15.500 --- 14.333 16.333 --- ---
Jonathan Horton 14.966 --- 15.066 15.266 15.000 15.366
Danell Leyva --- 14.366 --- --- 15.366 15.533
Steven Legendre 15.566 --- --- 16.166 --- ---
Alex Naddour --- 15.058 --- --- --- ---
John Orozco --- 14.433 14.166 --- 15.233 15.366
USA MEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORESFX PH SR VT PB HB
JohnOROZCO FLOOR EXERCISE
1 UCHIMURA Kohei
2 ZOU Kai
3 HYPOLITO Diego
3 SHATILOV Alexander
5 LEGENDRE Steven
6 KOCZI Flavius
6 GONZALEZ Enrique
8 DALTON Jake
POMMEL HORSE
1 BERKI Krisztian
2 TOMMASONE Cyril
3 SMITH Louis
4 HIDVEGI Vin
5 UCHIMURA Kohei
6 SELLATHURAI Prashanth
7 BERTONCELJ Sasa
7 TENG Haibin
Jake Dalton
Jonathan Horton
Danell Leyva
Steven Legendre
Alex Naddour
John Orozco
USA MEN'S TEAM FINALS SCORES NAME
FLOOR EXERCISE
1 UCHIMURA Kohei
2 ZOU Kai
3 HYPOLITO Diego
3 SHATILOV Alexander
5 LEGENDRE Steven
6 KOCZI Flavius
6 GONZALEZ Enrique
8 DALTON Jake
POMMEL HORSE
1 BERKI Krisztian
2 TOMMASONE Cyril
3 SMITH Louis
4 HIDVEGI Vin
5 UCHIMURA Kohei
6 SELLATHURAI Prashanth
7 BERTONCELJ Sasa
7 TENG Haibin
Jake Dalton
Jonathan Horton
Danell Leyva
Steven Legendre
Alex Naddour
John Orozco
NAME
JohnJohnJohnJohnJohnJohnJohnOROZCOOROZCOOROZCOOROZCOOROZCOOROZCOOROZCOOROZCO
MEN'S TEAM FINALS1 China 275.1612 Japan 273.0933 United States 273.0834 Russia 269.0455 Ukraine 264.1026 Germany 263.9267 Korea 260.3938 Romania 245.175
18 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
MEN’S ALL-AROUND FX PH SR VT PB HB AA
1 UCHIMURA Kohei JPN 15.566 15.400 15.166 16.233 15.566 15.700 93.631
2 BOY Philipp GER 14.866 14.466 14.500 16.066 14.566 16.066 90.530
3 YAMAMURO Koji JPN 14.566 14.666 15.125 16.066 14.966 14.866 90.255
4 PURVIS Daniel GBR 15.033 14.566 14.333 16.000 15.200 14.800 89.932
5 OROZCO John USA 14.400 14.366 14.300 15.866 15.366 15.366 89.664
6 BELYAVSKIY David RUS 14.733 14.733 14.375 16.233 14.600 14.600 89.274
7 KUKSENKOV Mykola UKR 14.366 15.000 14.500 16.033 14.033 15.200 89.132
8 NGUYEN Marcel GER 15.233 13.866 14.933 15.133 15.200 14.466 88.831
9 TOMMASONE Cyril FRA 14.333 15.400 13.966 15.600 14.600 14.666 88.565
10 MARTINEZ Rafael ESP 14.633 13.833 13.891 16.100 14.466 15.166 88.089
10 KIM Seungil KOR 14.466 14.466 14.291 15.600 14.433 14.833 88.089
12 KOCZI Flavius ROU 15.366 14.333 13.633 16.433 14.433 13.800 87.998
13 SHATILOV Alexander ISR 15.300 14.300 13.900 15.400 14.200 14.333 87.433
14 FOKIN Anton UZB 14.066 14.566 14.233 15.700 14.966 13.833 87.364
15 GARIBOV Emin RUS 14.433 13.566 14.408 15.500 13.966 15.458 87.331
16 LIKHOVITSKIY Andrey BLR 14.266 14.966 13.700 15.300 14.600 14.333 87.165
17 KIM Soo Myun KOR 14.466 14.866 13.866 16.366 14.100 13.500 87.164
18 TENG Haibin CHN 14.266 15.066 13.600 15.633 15.233 13.233 87.031
19 STEPKO Oleg UKR 14.633 14.033 14.033 15.766 14.233 13.566 86.264
20 BUCHER Pascal SUI 13.800 13.066 13.566 15.333 14.933 14.333 85.031
21 FUERTES Javier ESP 14.066 13.500 14.300 14.800 14.475 13.766 84.907
22 SEPULVEDA Enrique CHI 15.333 12.100 13.866 16.000 13.300 13.766 84.365
23 GAFUIK Nathan CAN 13.633 12.900 13.566 15.833 12.533 14.233 82.698
24 LEYVA Danell USA 14.833 14.433 14.341 14.800 15.333 6.466 80.206
HB
15.700
16.066
14.866
14.800
15.366
14.600
15.200
14.466
14.666
15.166
14.833
13.800
14.333
13.833
15.458
14.333
13.500
13.233
13.566
14.333
13.766 84.907
13.766 84.365
AA
93.631
90.530
90.255
89.932
89.664
89.274
15.200 89.132
14.466 88.831
14.666 88.565
15.166 88.089
14.833 88.089
13.800 87.998
14.333 87.433
13.833 87.364
15.458 87.331
14.333 87.165
13.500 87.164
13.233 87.031
13.566 86.264
14.333 85.031
JakeDALTON
20 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
AlexNADDOUR
USA MEN'S TEAM PRELIM SCORES NAME FX PH SR VT PB HB AA_John Orozco 14.300 15.000 15.033 15.900 15.033 15.266 90.532 Danell Leyva 14.800 14.633 14.483 16.100 15.366 14.466 89.848 Jonathan Horton 14.900 13.308 15.366 16.083 14.966 15.066 89.689Steven Legendre 15.433 13.433 14.066 15.233 14.133 14.300 86.598Jake Dalton 15.366 --- 14.566 16.233 14.558 13.466 --- Alex Naddour --- 15.233 --- --- --- --- ---
L to R: Danell Leyva, Jonathan Horton, Chris Brooks, Steve Legendre, John Orozco, Alex Naddour, and Jake Dalton.Legendre, John Orozco, Alex Naddour, and Jake Dalton.Legendre, John Orozco, Alex Naddour, and Jake Dalton.Legendre, John Orozco, Alex Naddour, and Jake Dalton.
Johnathanhorton
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 2222 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201122 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
The Venue
Jordyn Wieber
Nastia Liukin
Danell Leyva Danell Leyva
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 23
the all-around competition with a score of 73.450. She earned scores of 24.250 (hoop), 24.725 (ball), 24.475 (clubs) and 22.850 (ribbon). Kozitskiy, who finished 59th with a score of 72.250, earned her highest mark of the competition for her ball routine with a 24.350. She also recorded scores of 24.100 (hoop), 23.350 (clubs) and 23.800 (ribbon) to complete her competition.
Italy won the group all-around final scoring 55.150 followed by Russia in second with 54.850 and Bulgaria in third with 54.125.
The group from the United States, who all train at North Shore Rhythmic Gymnastics, competed in the all-around competition, finishing 20th. They recorded scores of 24.775 for their five-ball routine and a 21.650 in the three ribbon and two hoop routine, giving them a 46.425 total score.
The group consisted of Jessica Bogdonov of Brooklyn, N.Y., Megan Frohlich of Arlington, Wash., Aimee Gupta of Orchard Lake, Mich., Michelle Przybylo of Glenview, Ill., Sofya Roytburg of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Sydney Sachs of Deerfield, Ill.
the all-around
Rhythmic World Championships
Rhythmic World Championships
The group consisted of Jessica Bogdonov of Brooklyn, N.Y., Megan Frohlich of Arlington, Wash., Aimee Gupta of Orchard Lake, Mich., Michelle Przybylo of Glenview, Ill., Sofya Roytburg of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Sydney Sachs of Deerfield, Ill.
with a score of
earned scores
(ball), 24.475
22.850 (ribbon). Kozitskiy, who
ChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionshipsChampionships
U.S. Rhythmic Delegation
Team USA competed at the 2011 Rhythmic World Championships in Montpellier,
France, Sept. 13-26. In the team competition, where three scores on each event make up the team total, the Americans posted a total score of 244.675 to finish 16th. Russia took the gold (290.275), followed by Belarus (272.500) and Ukraine (269.675).
Russian gymnasts Evgenia Kanaeva and Daria Kondakova took first and second in the all-
around with scores of 116.650 and 116.600, respectively.
Azerbaijan’s Aliya Garayeva won the bronze medal with a score of
112.450.
Individually, the best finish by an American came from 2010 U.S. national all-around champion Julie Zetlin of Bethesda, Md./Capital Rhythmics, who finished 35th in the all-around with a score of 75.125. Zetlin recorded her highest score, a 25.650, for her ball routine. Additionally, the 2010 World all-around finalist posted scores of
25.275 (hoop), 23.850 (clubs) and 24.200 (ribbon).
Also representing the United States were 2011 U.S. national all-around champion Shelby Kisiel of Missouri City, Texas/North Shore Rhythmic Gymnastics Center, and Polina Kozitskiy of Fountainville, Pa./Philadelphia Rhythmic Academy. Kisiel finished 52nd in
Individually, the best finish by an American Individually, the best finish by an American came from 2010 U.S. national all-around came from 2010 U.S. national all-around champion Julie Zetlin of Bethesda, Md./champion Julie Zetlin of Bethesda, Md./Capital Rhythmics, who finished 35th in the Capital Rhythmics, who finished 35th in the
World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World World TTTeam USA competed at TTeam USA competed at TTthe 2011 Rhythmic World TChampionships in Montpellier, TChampionships in Montpellier, T
France, Sept. 13-26. In the team competition, where three scores on each event make up the team total, the Americans posted a total score of 244.675 to finish 16th. Russia took the gold (290.275), followed by Belarus (272.500)
Russian gymnasts Evgenia Kanaeva and Daria Kondakova took first and second in the all-
around with scores of 116.650 and 116.600, respectively.
Azerbaijan’s Aliya Garayeva won the bronze medal with a score of
112.450.
TTFrance, Sept. 13-26. In the team competition, where three scores on each event make up the team total, the Americans posted a total score of 244.675 to finish 16th. Russia took the gold (290.275), followed by Belarus (272.500)
Kanaeva and Daria Kondakova took first and second in the all-
around with scores of 116.650 and 116.600, respectively.
Azerbaijan’s Aliya Garayeva won the bronze medal with a score of
112.450.
Julie Zetlin
The U.S.Rhythmic
Group
Polina Kozitskiy
Shelby
Kisiel
24 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
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USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 25
Rhythmic World Championships
Rhythmic World Championships
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USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 29
30 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
Lindsay Langford, MS, RD, CSSD
30 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
To build healthy bones and keep them stress fracture free, three nutrition interventions come to mind: adequate calories, calcium/vitamin D, and adequate protein.
- ADEQUATE CALORIES: This is a topic to be saved for another segment, but if your body is constantly deprived of enough calories, you’re likely not getting enough nutrients (protein, vitamins, minerals) to ensure health. You’re also unable to produce the amount of hormones needed for bone production and formation. You’re probably getting close to your caloric needs if you’re eating three meals and one to three snacks a day.
- CALCIUM/VITAMIN D: Calcium and vitamin D are the key components to strong bones. They are found primarily in dairy products but are also found in salmon and spinach. Vitamin D helps with the absorption of calcium and is actually absorbed primarily through the sun. Dietary sources of calcium and vitamin D should be consumed daily to obtain the recommended daily allowance (RDA) to assure bone development. Bone growth occurs at the highest rate in adolescents. The peak absorption rate occurs in the adolescent years, around ages 9–18. At this vital time, bones develop for the rest of your life, so “eat up,” “drink up,” or “supplement up.” In terms of supplements, obtaining the nutrients directly from the food source is always recommended, but if you’re not a dairy eater I highly recommend
Female gymnasts commonly have three classic health conditions that when lumped together are referred to as the Female Athlete Triad. The
three linking components are low energy availability/disordered eating, menstrual disturbances/amenorrhea, and low bone loss/stress fractures. Basically, not eating enough calories causes a lack of estrogen product, causing abnormal menstrual functions and a decrease in bone health causing stress fractures (diagram below). Although inadequate calorie consumption is the main root of both causes (menstrual disturbances and stress fractures/bone loss), I want to focus primarily on the role of bone health in gymnasts.
St. Vincent Hospital and St. Vincent Sports Performance in Indianapolis, Ind., are official service providers to USA Gymnastics Call 317-415-5747 or visit sportsperformance.stvincent.org
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 31
supplementing. Below are the RDA guidelines for calcium and Vitamin D.
• Calcium: 4 –8 years = 1,000mg, 9 –18 years = 1,300mg, 19 –50 years = 1,000mg
• Vitamin D: 600iu (highly debated that the RDA is set too low, but it’s here for now)
- PROTEIN INTAKE: Protein is a building block in producing muscle and bone, two crucial components to this story. The more muscle developed around the bone and joints, the less impact and force absorbed, which will reduce chances of stress fractures. Protein, along with calcium and vitamin D, is also a vital building block in producing bone structure and preventing osteoporosis or stress fractures. Many younger gymnasts neglect weight training (which strengthens bones and builds muscle) and fail to meet adequate protein intake. These two components directly correlate to injuries, especially stress fractures. Yet, once a stress fracture has occurred, assure that your athlete is consuming enough protein to allow for quick and efficient recovery. Adding an extra portion (3oz) of protein can be the best approach, but if appetite is low, add a protein shake or smoothie (~15–20g of protein).
If you’re consuming adequate calories, protein and the DRVs of calcium and vitamin D, don’t stress over a stress fracture or bone health.
4 –8 years = 1,000mg, 9 –18 years = 1,300mg, 19 –50 years = 1,000mg
Vitamin D: 600iu (highly debated that the RDA is set too low, but it’s here for now)
Protein is a building block in producing muscle and bone, two crucial components to this story. The more muscle developed around the bone and joints, the less impact and force absorbed, which will reduce chances of stress fractures. Protein, along with calcium and vitamin D, is also a vital building block in producing bone structure and preventing osteoporosis or stress fractures. Many younger gymnasts neglect weight training (which strengthens bones and builds muscle) and fail to meet adequate protein intake. These two components directly correlate to injuries, especially stress fractures. Yet, once a stress fracture has occurred, assure that your athlete is consuming enough protein to allow for quick and efficient recovery. Adding an extra portion (3oz) of protein can be the best approach, but if appetite is low, add a protein shake or smoothie (~15–20g of protein).
If you’re consuming adequate calories, protein and the DRVs of calcium and vitamin D, don’t stress over a stress
supplementing. Below are the RDA guidelines for supplementing. Below are the RDA guidelines for
4 –8 years = 1,000mg, 9 –18 years = 1,300mg,
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 31
St. Vincent Hospital and St. Vincent Sports Performance in Indianapolis, Ind., are official service providers to USA Gymnastics Call 317-415-5747 or visit sportsperformance.stvincent.org
32 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 33
34 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
NATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORD
By Am
anda Robinson
First Class Gymnastics – Annapolis, MD
Olympia Gymnastics Academy of Michigan – Shelby Township, MI. Great job!
San Jose celebrates Natio
nal
Gymnastics Day in preparation fo
r the
U.S. Olympic Trials – Gymnastics.
At precisely 1 p.m. ET, participants throughout the country kicked up into a handstand to break the existing record of 2,402, set by Australian
gymnasts in Melbourne to promote the 2005 World Gymnastics Championships. “We originally set the record of 1,072, here in Indianapolis, in July 2005 as part of the run-up to the 2005 Visa Championships,” said Steve Penny, president of USA Gymnastics. “Bringing the title back to the USA is a great way to celebrate National Gymnastics Day across the U.S. and help build awareness and support for gymnastics.” Each year, USA Gymnastics celebrates National Gymnastics Day to build awareness of the sport and Each year, USA Gymnastics celebrates National Each year, USA Gymnastics celebrates National Gymnastics Day to build awareness of the sport and
First Class Gymnastics
support Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals. Money raised will benefit Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals in each club’s local community. Since 2001, gymnastics clubs across the country have raised more than $1.4 million for Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals. The clubs have until Nov. 9 to raise and submit their funds for this year. Thank you to all of you who participated in National Gymnastics Day to help us regain the handstand world record title and make this day such a success.
Mark your calendar for National Gymnastics Day 2012, which is September 22, 2012.
20,478 gymnasts and fans from more than 300 gymnastics clubs and locations nationwide joined together on Sept. 17 to break the world record for most handstands performed simultaneously and bring the title back to the United States.
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 35
NATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORD
Don’t feel bad, you made a noble effort!
First Class Gymnastics – Annapolis, MD
Apollo Gymnastics – Woodbridge, VA
Don’t feel bad, Don’t feel bad, Don’t feel bad, you made a Don’t feel bad,
First Class Gymnastics– Annapolis, MDFirst Class Gymnastics– Annapolis, MDFirst Class Gymnastics
Apollo GymnasticsApollo Gymnastics– Woodbridge, VA– Woodbridge, VA– Woodbridge, VA– Woodbridge, VAApollo Gymnastics– Woodbridge, VAApollo GymnasticsApollo Gymnastics– Woodbridge, VAApollo Gymnastics
More NGD pics on page 36...
First Class GymnasticsFirst Class Gymnastics
20,478 gymnasts and fans from more than 300 gymnastics clubs and locations nationwide joined together on Sept. 17 to break the world record for most handstands performed simultaneously and bring the title back to the United States.
Academy West Gymnastics – West Jordan, UT
36 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
NATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDNATIONAL GYMNASTICS DAYHANDSTAND WORLD RECORD
Bare Foot Gymnastics Club – Saint George, UT
Palaestra Gymnastics Center – Farmers Branch, TX
HANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD 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RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORD
Saint George, UT
HANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDHANDSTAND WORLD RECORDPalaestra Gymnastics Center Gymnastics Center Gymnastics
– Farmers Branch, TX
...CONTINUED
Superior Gymnastics – Morrisville, NC
Rising Stars Training Camp – Amityville, NY
Champions Training
Center – York,
PA
Red Cedar Gymnastics
Nice! Kaleidoscope Gymnastics – Kimball, MI
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 37
Rising Stars Training Camp – Amityville, NY
· When your club signs the Standard of Care, it shows concern for the safety and well-being of the athletes.
· The Standard of Care is now the Industry standard!
· It demonstrates to families the club’s commitment to providing a safe, fun and educational environment.
· It underscores the importance of gymnastics as a sport and the club itself for having to follow best practices in working with children.
· It provides a level of comfort and trust for the parents who are sending their children to this club.
· It is a good solid business decision. It’s a point of distinction.
Raising the STANDARD OF CARE in Gymnastics
gymnastics as a sport and the club itself
in Gymnasticsin Gymnasticsin Gymnasticsin Gymnasticsin Gymnasticsin Gymnastics
Do you train at a USA Gymnastics’ Member Club? Did you know that all USA Gymnastics Member Clubs are required to sign a Standard of Care document?
Visit our web site today at usagymclub.com to learn if your club is a USA Gymnastics Member Club!
·
··
·
·
·
OF CARE OF CARE
Do you train at a USA Gymnastics’ Member Club? Did you know that all USA Gymnastics Member Clubs are required to sign a Standard of Care document?
Visit our web site today at usagymclub.com to learn if your club is a USA Gymnastics Member Club!
2011NOVEMBER 10–14 World Cup (AG) Forli, Italy
16–19 T & T World Championships Birmingham, GBR
20–26 World Age Group Championships (TT) Birmingham, GBR
30–Dec. 4 National TOP Team Training Camp (W) Huntsville, TX
TBD TOP Gym (W) Belgium
DECEMBER1–3 Future Stars Championships Colorado Springs, CO
1–4 National Coaches Workshop (M) Colorado Springs, CO
4–8 TOP B Training Camp (W) Huntsville, TX
9–19 National Rhythmic Open Camps (R) Huntsville, TX
2012JANUARY 10–18 Olympic Test Event London, GBR
FEBRUARY 2–4 Winter Cup Challenge (M) Las Vegas, NV
10–12 Elite National Qualifier-Gliders (W) Covina, CA
14–19 Rhythmic Invitational/Group Champs./Challenge Colorado Springs, CO
17–19 Elite National Qualifier-WOGA (W) Plano, TX
MARCH 2 Nastia Liukin Cup (W) New York, NY
3 AT&T American Cup (M/W) New York, NY
16–18 Pacific Rim Championships (M/W/R/T) Everett, WA
23–24 USA Gymnastics Collegiate Champs. (M) Colorado Springs, CO
APRIL 13–15 Women’s Level 9/10 Regionals Various Sites
16–22 Acro Gym. World Champs. & World Age Group Competition Lake Buena Vista, FL
MAY 3–6 Level 9 East/West Championships (W) Landover, MD/Boise,ID
7 USA Gymnastics Special Olympics Championships (M/W/R/GG) Marietta, GA
7–13 JO National Championships (M) Cincinnati, OH
10–12 JO National Championships (W) Hampton, VA
13 JO–National Invitational Tournament (W) Hampton, VA
31–June 3 Open Championships (W) Orlando, FL
TBD CoverGirl Classic (W) TBD
EVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULEEVENT SCHEDULE
38 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
USA GYMNASTICSHOLIDAY SCHEDULE
THANKSGIVINGOffice closes at 12:00 pm on
Wednesday, November 23 and will remain closed November 24 and 25.
CHRISTMAS
Office will be closed Friday, December 23 through January 2. Will re-open Tuesday, January 3, 2012.
Raising the STANDARD OF CARE in Gymnastics
Visit our web site today at usagymclub.com to learn if your club is a USA Gymnastics Member Club!
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 39
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42 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
Lexie Priessman, 14, and Amelia Hundley 13, both of Cincinnati Gymnastics, won four medals each at the 2011 Junior Japan
International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
around silver medal with a score of 54.100. She also earned the silver medals on vault (14.875) and floor (13.750), and the bronze medal on
bars (13.625). She just missed the medal
podium for the balance beam, finishing fourth.
International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title
exie Priessman, 14, and Amelia Hundley 13, both of Cincinnati Gymnastics, won four medals each at the 2011 Junior Japan
International competition in Yokohama, Japan, International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title
exie Priessman, 14, and Amelia Hundley 13, both of Cincinnati Gymnastics, won four medals each at the 2011 Junior Japan
International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title
LLexie Priessman, 14, and Amelia Hundley 13, both of Cincinnati Gymnastics, won four medals each at the 2011 Junior Japan
International competition in Yokohama, Japan, International competition in Yokohama, Japan, Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title
42 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201142
Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825), with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
around silver medal with a score of 54.100. She also earned the silver medals on vault (14.875) and floor (13.750), and the bronze medal on
bars (13.625). She just missed the medal
podium for the balance beam, finishing fourth.
Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825), with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
around silver medal with a score of 54.100. She also earned the silver medals on vault (14.875) and floor (13.750), and the bronze medal on
bars (13.625). She just missed the medal
podium for the balance beam, finishing fourth.
Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825), with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825), with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title Sept. 24–25. Priessman won the all-around title with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825), with a score of 55.700 as well as vault (15.825),
bars (14.175), and floor (14.425). She finished seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
42 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201142 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-around silver medal with a score of 54.100. She also earned the silver medals on vault (14.875) and floor (13.750), and the bronze medal on
bars (13.625). She just missed the medal
podium for the balance beam, finishing fourth.
seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-around silver medal with
the bronze medal on bars (13.625). She
seventh on balance beam. Hundley won the all-
NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
Orig
inal
pho
tos
by Jo
hn C
heng
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LexiePRIESSMAN
AmeliaHUNDLEY
SeanMELTON
On the men’s side, Adrian de los Angeles, 17, of Long Beach, Calif./University of Michigan, was sixth in the all-around with a score of 82.300 and Sean Melton, 16, of Orlando, Fla./Orlando Metro Gymnastics, finished eighth (81.550). Both USA men hit all six routines and did a great job in a very tough meet with the top-five ranked countries in the world competing. During event finals de los Angeles was fifth in both pommel horse (13.450) and high bar (13.750), sixth on rings (13.350), seventh on vault (14.850), and eighth on parallel bars (13.400). Melton was fourth on vault (15.250), fifth on parallel bars (13.950), and seventh on floor (13.800).
JUNIOR INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIONJUNIOR INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIONJUNIOR INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
AdrianDE LOS ANGELES
More Event Results on page 46...
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 43
ALEX NADDOUR
44 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 45
46 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
After capturing the gold medal at the World Cup in Germany, silver medals at World Cup events in Bulgaria and China, and a bronze medal in Russia,
Kalon Ludvigson of Pocatello, Idaho/Team Revolution, took home the silver medal in men’s tumbling at the Odense World Cup in Denmark, Oct. 8, securing the first-
ever tumbling World Cup series title by an American using the new format of a cumulative points system.
At the World Cup in Denmark, Ludvigson qualified to finals
in third position. With no scores carrying over, the American posted a two-pass total of 75.100 in the finals to win the silver medal behind Yang Song of China. Song scored a 79.200.
In women’s synchro trampoline competition in Denmark, Nani
Vercruyssen of Honolulu/Hawaii Academy, and Savannah Vinsant of Lafayette, La./T&T Express, competed in the finals and finished in eighth place.
LUDVIGSON GOLDEN At the World Cup in Salzgitter, Germany, Sept. 3, Ludvigson, who also won this event in 2009, posted a 75.500 to easily win the World Cup gold medal, scoring nearly two points better than runner-up Mikhail Kostyanov of Russia. Ludvigson posted a 38.200 for his first pass to take the lead and followed with a 37.300 for the title.
The USA’s Steven Gluckstein of Atlantic Highlands, N.J./UltraTwisters, and Vinsant, also had strong performances in Germany, finishing fifth and eighth, respectively, in trampoline. Gluckstein performed a very strong trampoline routine that earned a 56.080. Gluckstein paired with Neil Gulati of Irvine, Calif./World Elite Gymnastics, in men’s synchro trampoline, finished sixth with a score of 46.100. Vinsant, the reigning U.S. champion, posted a 51.630 in the finals for eighth place. In women’s synchro competition, Vinsant teamed with Vercruyssen to place fifth.
LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON 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LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN LUDVIGSON GOLDEN
The USA’s Steven Gluckstein of Atlantic UltraTwisters, and
Vinsant, also had strong performances in Germany, finishing fifth and eighth, respectively, in trampoline. Gluckstein performed a very strong trampoline routine that earned a 56.080. Gluckstein paired with Neil Gulati of Irvine, Calif./World Elite Gymnastics, in men’s synchro trampoline, finished sixth with a score of 46.100. Vinsant, the reigning U.S. champion,
teamed with Vercruyssen to place
The USA’s Steven Gluckstein of Atlantic UltraTwisters, and
Vinsant, also had strong performances in Germany, finishing fifth and eighth, respectively, in trampoline. Gluckstein performed a very strong trampoline routine that earned a 56.080. Gluckstein paired with Neil Gulati of Irvine, Calif./World Elite Gymnastics, in men’s synchro trampoline, finished sixth with a score of 46.100. Vinsant, the
teamed with Vercruyssen to place
AGermany, silver medals at World Cup events in Bulgaria and China, and a bronze medal in Russia,
Kalon Ludvigson of Pocatello, Idaho/Team Revolution, took home the silver medal in men’s tumbling at the Odense World Cup in Denmark, Oct. 8, securing the first-
ever tumbling World Cup series title by an American using the new format of a cumulative points system.
At the World Cup in Denmark, Ludvigson qualified to finals
in third position. With no scores carrying over, the American posted a two-pass total of 75.100 in the finals to win the silver medal behind Yang Song of China. Song scored a 79.200.
In women’s synchro trampoline competition in Denmark, Nani
Vercruyssen of Honolulu/Hawaii Academy, and Savannah Vinsant of Lafayette, La./T&T Express, competed in the finals and finished in eighth place.
in Denmark, Oct. 8, securing the first-ever tumbling World Cup series
title by an American using the new format of a cumulative points system.
At the World Cup in Denmark, Ludvigson qualified to finals
in third position. With no scores carrying over, the American posted a two-pass total of 75.100 in the finals to win the silver medal behind Yang Song of China. Song scored a 79.200.
In women’s synchro trampoline competition in Denmark, Nani
Vercruyssen of Honolulu/Hawaii Academy, and Savannah Vinsant of Lafayette, La./T&T Express, competed in the finals and finished in eighth place.
FIG Photos Volker Minkus
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 47
48 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 201148 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
FACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYMFACES IN THE GYM
Joey Isenberg Martinsburg, West VirginiaJoey, 10, trains at Flip Over Gymnastics. He has competed in Trampoline & Tumbling for the past three years. This past year at Nationals he competed level 10 & won first place on trampoline & ninth on Double Mini.
Shae Rose Torrance, CaliforniaShae, 10, a Level 5 gymnast from Studio West Gymnastics, won first place on vault at the San Diego Classic. For Level 4, she took fourth place in the all-around and second place on vault.
Josiah Eng West Allis, WisconsinJosiah, 15, won back-to-back J.O. National titles on rings in Level 9. He placed fourth in the all-around at Regionals and made the top 36 at Nationals. He’s coached by Alex
Belanovski, Andrei Kan and Stacy Maloney.
Men’s Four Lawson, MissouriThis acrobatic gymnastics men’s four trains at Northwest Gymnastics Academy in Lawson, Mo. The team includes Levi Beaty, TJ Johnson, Ryan Howard and Dakota Saur. They were National Champions in 2008, 2009, and 2010.
Jeadon Wallace Ponchatoula, LouisianaJeadon, 12, trains at Cypress Pointe Gymnastics and is coached by Bryan Neal. She took first on floor at Level 8 Regionals and first in the all-around at the Louisiana State Meet.
Julia GarbuzEden Prairie, MinnesotaJulia is an elite rhythmic gymnast and trains at Northwest Rhythmic with her mom and coach Svetlana Leonova. She took sixth all-around at the Visa Championships (junior) and won the silver medals on rope and clubs.
Kayla Caputo Johnstown, PennsylvaniaKayla, 7, is the State Games of America All-Around champion in Level 4 Children A age group. She also took first on beam, second on floor, third on vault, and fourth on bars. Kayla trains at Uzelac Gymnastics.
Chase Hailey BrockAlpharetta, GeorgiaChase, 9, is a Level 6 and took first place in the all-around at the Judges Blast Off meet with a score of 36.975. She also was first on floor, bars, second on beam and fourth on vault.
Ponchatoula, LouisianaJeadon, 12, trains at Cypress
Would you like to be included in USA Gymnastics or the USA Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and we’ll select 10 gymnasts to publish in each issue of the magazine and a few more to post on the website at www.usagym.org/facesWould you like to be included in USA Gymnastics or the USA Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and USA Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and USAWould you like to be included in USA Gymnastics or the Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and Gymnastics website for Faces in the Gym? Send a photo and a paragraph of information to: [email protected] and
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 49
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Rettig’s Gymnastics Training Center Inc., established in 1992 is located in beautiful northwest New Jersey, half way between New York City and the Pocono Mountains. We are seeking FULL TIME COACHES. Applicants must teach recreational classes. Come join our great staff. Applicants need to be fun, energetic and team players. You must have strong spotting skills and the ability to coach at all levels of the Women’s JO Program. Duties to include but not limited to: instruction of rec. classes (approx. 8-12 hrs. per week), assist in the coaching of all girls’ teams (approx. 20-25 hrs. per week), preparation of work out schedules and lesson plans. Rettig’s Gymnastics is a well-established program with a strong foundation of recreational gymnasts to compliment our USA Gymnastics Teams. Benefits include paid vacations, holidays, health insurance, USA Gym membership and certifications. Performance based bonuses. Contact Dave/Diane Rettig. Web: www.rettigsgymnastics.com, Email: [email protected]. Phone: 973-267-5611.
TEAM DIRECTOR AND COACHING POSITIONS Available in Virginia! Loudoun Gymnastics in Sterling, Virginia is looking for professional, organized and motivated staff to join our growing organization. We are an established business in a NEW building looking for experienced personnel: Team Director, Gym Manager, Girls and Boys Team Coach, Trampoline and Tumbling Coach, Rhythmic Gymnastics Coach and a Cheer Director. Part time/full time positions available. Salary to commensurate with experience. Visit us at www.LoudounGymnastics.com. Please send your resume and references to Nadine at [email protected].
TEAM COACH NEEDED: for a large and growing team program, full time, benefits, great area (western New York). Experience necessary. Dedicated, enthusiastic, dependable. Will work various team levels. 14,000 sq. ft. state-of-the-art facility. In business over 40 years. 716-481-4953, 716-677-0338. Email: [email protected], [email protected]. Ask for June.
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GK RISK-FREE PROGRAM: Get with the program! It’s better than ever, with a terrific assortment of NEW styles and fabrics and incomparable sales potential. Plus, it’s easier than ever to order, sell and return your RISK-FREE garments. We offer customized packages for your pro shop, meets and summer camp. You only pay for what you’ve sold and may return the rest, there
is absolutely NO RISK! If you haven’t tried us lately, it’s time you started earning extra profits with our RISK FREE merchan-dise. Call 1-800-345-4087 for more information on how you can get started today! Email: [email protected].
SCORE MASTER – Scorekeeping software interfaced to many dif-ferent score boards: EliteScore, BetaBrites, TV’s & Projectors. Down-load team rosters from the USAG website. Features include: random draws, create rotations, assign #’s, the most comprehensive report-ing and results can go directly to your website. Supports: womens/mens, individual/team, artistic/rhythmic/trampoline, compul-sory/optional. Download a FREE demo at www.Score-Master.com.
MEDAL HOLDERS – Personalized Holders for All Sports, Room Themes, etc. We have a variety of sizes in a variety of colors with your choice of 1 or 2 gymnastics figures or sport/design of choice. Hang your medals, leos, hats, purses or backpacks. Order Early for Christmas Delivery. Check out www.mymedalholder.com and view Gallery on site and on Facebook. Let us customize a holder for you.
“PRECIOUS PRIDE” – Beautiful Custom Designed Award Displays and Medal Holders ~ hand made to celebrate your athletes achievements! Each display is created of untreated natural wood, and designed in the color, theme, and motif of your choosing! Specializing in displays for Gymnastics, Acro, T&T, and Cheerleading (other sports also welcome) available NOW! Custom orders take 2-3 weeks, so get your order in before the Holidays! Ask for discounts on multiple orders! Check out our online store at: www.preciouspride.net or call Barbara at 972-746-7916.
FUNDRAISING
NEED A FUNDRAISER? How about 1200 thread count Sheet Fundraiser? Since everyone needs linen, this has been a very successful fundraiser. You’ll make large profits by selling a great product at a great price. Here are a few success stories: Jasper Middle School Band (Jasper, GA) raised $4000+, Georgia All-Star Gymnastics (Woodstock, GA) to date have raised over $6000 and River Ridge Cheerleaders (Canton, GA) raised $9,450 in 3 weeks. Your customers will be impressed and coming back for more! Satisfaction guaranteed! NO start up costs! Get started today, email Mary@[email protected] or call 770-893-8842.
Call National Travel Systems today to book
your next trip, whether it’s a gymnastics
competition or a vacation getaway!
(888) 603-8747
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GOING SOCIAL
You only pay for what you’ve sold and may return the rest, there
GOING SOCIAL
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50 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011
EDUCATION NATIONAL UNIVERSITY VIRTUAL HIGH SCHOOL (NUVHS) offers the premier high school online learning experience for athletes. With more than 90 online high school courses including advanced placement, we provide athletes the opportunity to achieve academic excellence through an active, engaging and cooperative learning environment. Our courses are taught by highly qualified teachers and our online format is fully interactive and accessible 24/7 with flexible start and end dates. Students are able to enroll anytime on a full or part-time basis and can complete a full semester high school course in as few as four or as many as 16 weeks. NUVHS is accredited by WASC and AdvanceEd (formerly CITA) and approved by NCAA and NAIA. Additionally, NUVHS has been approved by UC “a-g” as an online provider. Call 866-366-8847 for enrollment information or visit www.nuvhs.org.
Available now! The NEW GYMCERT Gymnastics training manuals (Levels 1, 2, 3, & the NEW Skills & Drills for the Compulsory Coach Level’s 4, 5 & 6) a must for training your staff; cut your lesson planning time significantly; use to coordinate class progressions and skill training methods; and, best of all have a quick reference that is easy to use which includes Lesson Planning Forms and Class Evaluation Forms by level. The GYMCERT manuals provide concise instruction, clear illustrations, and several coaching, spotting, and safety tips. Will your staff be ready for your fall students? Order direct by calling 407-444-5669 EST or online at www.GymCert.com.
USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011 51
52 USA GYMNASTICS NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011