Wednesday, November 30, 2011

3 Golfers, 2 Cricketers, No Women!

There has been a fair amount of outrage amongst the public and press that amongst the 10 nominees for the British BBC Sports Personality of the Year award, there are no female athletes named.

The shortlist (in alphabetical order) is: Mark Cavendish (cycling), Darren Clarke (golf), Alastair Cook (cricket), Luke Donald (golf), Mo Farah (athletics), Dai Greene (athletics), Amir Khan (boxing), Rory McIlroy (golf), Andy Murray (tennis), Andrew Strauss (cricket).

The nominations list is made up by a panel of sports editors and journalists. Swimmer Rebecca Adlington was just outside the list with 6 votes (1 behind Amir Khan) according to BBC News.

Adlington, Keri-Anne Payne and Chrissie Wellington all won gold medals in their sports this year. British swimmer Payne said: "Are they voting for the people who are most popular? Or who has achieved the most in their sport this year? The line is fuzzy."(Telegraph). Nominee Dai Greene, the World, European and Commonwealth 400m champion, said he thought there should have been a woman on the shortlist.

The last women to recieve the award were Zara Phillips in 2006, Kelly Holmes in 2004 and Paula Radliffe in 2002. There was some discruntlement at the last 2 years winners, journalist AP McCoy (2010) and Manchester United footballer Ryan Giggs (2009).

Gymnast Beth Tweddle has twice been nominated but never been that high on the list due mainly to the lack of global popularity for gymnastics. 

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Grand Prix Final Qualifiers

Following an eventful grand prix series with plenty of ups and downs, the following skaters have booked spots at the Grand Prix Final in Quebec City.

Websites - Senior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix

I'm pleased to see surprise qualifiers such as Fernandez of Spain and Canada's Duhamel & Radford. Like many a skating fan I am overjoyed to see Mao Asada's return to form. Hopefully next year we will see an even more improved Mirai Nagasu earn a spot in the top 6. 


MEN
Patrick Chan - Canada
Daisuke Takahashi - Japan
Jeremy Abbott - USA
Michal Brezina - Czech Republic
Javier Fernandez - Spain
Yuzuru Hanyu - Japan
Substitutes
Song Nan - China
Takahiko Kozuka - Japan
Adam Rippon - USA 

LADIES
Elizaveta Tuktamysheva - Russia
Mao Asada - Japan
Carolina Kostner - Italy
Akiko Suzuki - Japan
Alissa Czisny - USA
Alena Leonova - Russia
Substitutes
Adelina Sotnikova - Russia
Mirai Nagasu - USA
Ashley Wagner - USA 

PAIRS
Tatyana Volosozhar & Maksim Trankov - Russia
Aliona Savchenko & Robin Szolkowy - Germany
Yuko Kavaguti & Aleksandr Smirnov - Russia
Zhang Dan & Zhang Hao - China
Narumi Takahashi & Mervin Tran - Japan
Meagan Duhamel & Eric Radford - Canada
Substitutes
Kirsten Moore-Towers & Dylan Moscovitch - Canada
Vera Bazarova & Yuri Lariyonov - Russia
Sui Wenjing & Han Cong - China 

DANCE
Meryl Davis & Charlie White - USA
Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir - Canada
Maia Shibutani & Alex Shibutani - USA
Yekaterina Bobrova & Dmitry Soloviyev - Russia
Nathalie Pechalat & Fabian Bourzat - France
Kaitlyn Weaver & Andrew Poje - Canada
Substitutes
Anna Cappellini & Luca Lanotte - Italy
Yelena Ilinykh & Nikita Katsalapov - Russia
Isabelle Tobias & Deividas Stagniunas - Lithuania

Thursday, November 17, 2011

GB trampoline girls earn spot at London 2012

Congratulations to GB's Kat Driscoll for qualifying 7th to the individual final at the World Championships and for the GB girls for qualifying 3rd in the team competition. The result guarantees GB a spot at the London Olympics.

I'll update the full results when they are finalised - Check the official scoring page here.

Missing Kimmie (still)

About this time last year I wrote a post on the former US, World and Four Continents champion Kimmie Meissner. Kimmie was and is one of the best examples of an athlete using fame to do good in the world. Following her world championship she became co-founder of the Cool Kids Campaign, a charity supporting paediatric cancer patients and their families. Kimmie has stayed loyal to all her charity work even as she has grown older and moved out of the skating limelight.

I found this interview with Kimmie online, I'm not sure exactly when it's from but some time in the last 6 months or so. It tells how Kimmie injured her knee, taking her out of the running for the Vancouver olympics- in true Kimmie style she was trying to avoid hurting a small child who got in her way as she was practicing her triple axel jump, Kimmie bailed on the jump, dislocating her kneecap in the process.

After a long recovery period Kimmie is now back into full intensity training, alongside studying and working in a physical therapy office. For the moment she is skating in shows but hasn't ruled out the possibility of skating competitively again.

It may be too much to hope for but I would love to see Kimmie skate again.

Are there any other skaters you would love to see return to competitive ice? (I'm pretty sure Yu-Na Kim is high on a lot of people's lists!)

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Trampoline & Tumbling World Champs


The 2011 Trampoline & Tumbling World Championships take place this weekend at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham. I myself will be attending to cheer on Britain's best with my university trampolining buddies.


For individual trampoline, these championships will act as the first qualification event for the Olympic Games. To qualify places in London, British gymnasts must either make the final (top 8) at the Worlds (where two places per individual class are available) or failing that go on to the Olympic Test event in January (where just one place is available per class).

British Champion Katherine Driscoll is the current world number one woman, with Bryony Page (8th) and Emma Smith (10th) joining her in the top ten. British Champion Luke Strong (18 th) and James Higgins (20th) are the top placed men.

Other disciplines (not part of of the olympic games) are synchronised  trampoline, tumbling and the crazy-dangerous looking double mini trampoline

International faces to watch include reigning olympic champions in trampoline, He Wenna and Li Chunlong of China (The chinese should have no difficulty at all qualifying a full quota to London 2012, they have also been men's and women's world champions at the last 2 world championships) 


The competition will be preceded by the world age group championships (a sort of junior worlds) giving a chance to see the names who will appear beyond 2012. 

Click here for the event website and full media guide.  

Schedule
Thursday 17 November
Qualifications:
Trampoline Individual men
Trampoline Individual women

Friday 18 November
Qualifications:
Double Mini Trampoline men
Double Mini Trampoline women
Tumbling men
Tumbling women

Opening Ceremony

Finals:
Trampoline Team Final men
Trampoline Team Final women

Saturday 19 November
Qualifications:
Synchronised men
Synchronised women

Finals:
Double Mini Trampoline Team Final men
Double Mini Trampoline Team Final women
Tumbling Team Final men
Tumbling Team Final women
Synchronised Final women
Trampoline Individual Final men

Sunday 20 November
Finals:
Double Mini Trampoline Final men
Double Mini Trampoline Final women
Tumbling Final men
Tumbling Final women
Synchronised Final men
Trampoline Individual Final women

Closing ceremony
 

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Mustafina Back?


7 months after tearing her ACL at the European championships in Berlin, 2010 World Champion Aliya Mustafina is listed to compete at the DTB World Cup in Stuttgard this weekend. If it is true there has been little publicity of her return. Film snippets of the Russian Camp since the injury have shown her training bars and beam.

Other gymnasts due to compete include Russians Maria Paeska & Alena Polyan, Australia's Lauren Mitchell and Germany's Oksana Chusovitina.

I hope the Russian's are cautious of Mustafina allow her to progress without further injury towards London 2012.

Grand Prix Series - Thoughts at half-way house.

There's been a fair bit of change in the skating world since the delayed world championships in Moscow earlier this year. The new skating season has started with the absense of last years world medallists Pang & Tong, Miki Ando and Yu-Na Kim. Add to that the fact that almost every North American ice dancer or pairs skater seems to be skating with a new partner, and the new season is wide open.

Now 3 events into the Grand Prix series, here's what we've learned.

Russia want to rule in Sotchi
Despite the upset of no Russian ice dancers on the podium at worlds for the first time in God knows how long. Russia looks as strong as ever with contenders in every discipline and plenty of new talent on the way. We've seen the much heralded debut of Tuktamisheva and Sotnikova on the senior stage (sadly they're still too young for worlds this year) Volosozhar & Trankov decimated the field at Skate Canada and a revitalised Kavaguti & Smirnov delivered one of the most beautiful and polished performances of the season so far last week at Cup of China. Russia have the coaching expertise and the financial support to nourish their athletes on the road to a home olympics. The goal: Bring back good old Soviet Dominance!


USA ladies: Contenders again at last? 
It's been 4 years now since the US ladies have managed to secure 3 spots to worlds and 5 since Kimmie Meissner won their last worlds medal. So far 3 different american ladies have medalled on this years series, Alissa Czisny (Gold, SA) Ashley Wagner (Bronze, SC) and Mirai Nagasu (Silver, CoC). Of these, Czisny has the most realistic shot of making the grand prix final, but hopefully all these ladies will perform up to standard at Nationals and the 2 who make it to the Worlds in Nice will secure that much wanted 3rd spot and, without Ando & Kim, challenge for a spot on the medal stand again.

My personal hope is that Mirai can learn to love her Spartacus long programme and really challenge as the season goes on, she has such a painful history of falling short at the big events (not discounting her Olympic success!)


Still on top of the World. 
In the great partner switcheroo, thankfully some things have remained constant, the undisputed dominance of Virtue & Moir and Davis & White. These skaters have raised the standard of ice dance in current times. My hope is for an injury-free path and many more showdowns on the road to 2014.

GB is rebuilding
I had all but given up hope for any success for Great Britain on the international scene this year with the Kerr siblings retirement and Jenna McCorkell's disaster at worlds failing to qualify her for this year's grand prix. Why can the country that produced Torville & Dean and Robin Cousins not produce any contenders? Then Penny Coombes & Nick Buckland finished just 0.58 outside the medals at Cup of China hope springs eternal! They don't have a second event scheduled but it's a great marker for the future.

Raising the standard? 
The series itself has changed somewhat with the opportunity for skaters to compete in 3 events, rather than the usual 2, and for the first time (that I know of) the ISU has set a minimum score cutoff that skaters must earn prior to competing in a Grand Prix event. The scores are calculated as 2/3 the top scores at the 2011 Worlds. Men- 168.60, Ladies- 117.48, Pairs-  130.71, Dance- 111.15. The fields have generally been smaller this year than previous years (10 in Ladies and Men), (8 in Pairs and Dance). The general standard does seem to have risen a bit too, less of the usual splat fest.


Still to come....
Expected contenders we have yet to see include Mao Asada (who has been very much under the radar aside from her own ice shows back in Japan this summer), Brian Joubert (Who missed his first event due to illness), Brandon Mroz (He of the quad Lutz), Thomas Verner, Kiira Korpi, Agnes Zawadski & World Jr medallists Stolbova & Klimpov. It 'aint over til it's over.

Results so far- Skate America, Skate Canada, Cup of China
GP Standings -  Mens, Ladies, Pairs, Ice Dance
Coming up - NHK Trophy in Sapporo, Japan

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Swiss Cup - a different kind of gymnastics competition!


The post worlds period is often a quiet one, with teams regrouping and strategizing for the year ahead. However, that hasn't stopped many of the best countries fielding a team for the Swiss Cup in Zurich.

The Swiss Cup is a mixed pair competition (one female and one male gymnast from each country) the  competition is divided into a preliminary, semi-final and final round with the 10-pair field being reduced to 8 after 2 apparatus and only 4 for the final event.

The finalists were Romania (Ana Porgras/Flavius Koczi), Switzerland (Giulia Steingruber/Claudio Capelli), Germany (Elizabeth Seitz/Fabian Hambuchen) and Russia (Anna Dementyeva/Nikita Ignatyev).

Romania's Ana Porgras and Russia's Nikita Ignatyev won the Arthur Gander memorial cup (also in Switzerland) earlier this week, where athletes compete on their top 3 apparatus. Most of the gymnasts made it a two-stop trip.

In the end it was the home team of Steingruber and Capelli who won the day, making it Switzerland's first victory at the Swiss Cup. They were helped by Steingruber's two strong vaults. Porgras's first beam outing was the highest ladies score of the day.

Here are the scores of the finalists (source- International Gymnast)

the other teams competing were-
5. Kim Bui/ Sebastian Krimmer (Germany 2)
6. Jo Hyunjoo/Yang Hak Seon (Korea)
7. Angelina Kysla/ Nikolai Kuksenkov (Ukraine)
8. Jessica Diacci/Pascal Bucher (Switzerland 2)
9. Lizzie Beddoe/Ruslan Panteleymonov (GB)
10. Jessica Mattoni/ Paolo Principi (Italy)