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THE GREATEST OF EASE: Gill
is a favorite to win the NCAA all-around.
gonzalesphoto.com |
on one side of Ford Center’s
gymnasium, senior Dan Gill is hurtling down the blue
spring floor, headed for a soaring Yurchenko vault with
a double twist that will land him in the foam pit. Next
to him, sophomore Jessica Louie is climbing toward the
ceiling on a beanstalk of a rope while a cluster of
gymnasts yell “You’ve got it!” And
several yards away, sophomore Natalie Foley is polishing
a routine on the uneven bars that includes a Shushanova—a
full, twisting Tkachev release that few women attempt
at the collegiate level.
For the 13 women and 12 men of Stanford’s gymnastic
squads, it’s just another workaday practice as
they prepare for their winter meets and beyond. “This
year we should definitely qualify for the Super Six
and be able to contend for the national championship,”
says women’s coach Kristen Smyth. And men’s
coach Thom Glielmi is looking at both the NCAAs and
the Olympic trials in late June, when a couple of his
athletes could qualify for the Summer Games.
Smyth and Glielmi are both in their third season on
the Farm, and their easy working relationship is reflected
in the way the two teams support each other. The athletes
share a canny sixth sense that can bring the twirling,
bouncing, leaping sideshows to a standstill whenever
a gymnast is attempting a new vault or dismount. “We
appreciate it when the girls are learning something
difficult, and it’s exciting to watch,”
says Gill, who is a favorite to win this year’s
NCAA all-around competition. Women’s co-captain
Lindsay Wing, who earned a perfect 10 on balance beam
in competition last year, says her teammates like to
yell encouragement across the gym: “Earlier today,
the guys were doing a circuit-type thing that looked
so painful and hard, and we were, like, ‘Come
on, you’re about done!’ ”
Smyth says that for the women and men “to be
in the same gym, training together, is very unusual
and a definite positive.” Last year the two teams
drew 3,000 spectators to a dual meet in Maples Pavilion,
and they hope to fill 1,400-seat Burnham Pavilion for
this season’s home competitions. The women hosted
a preseason “Sips and Swings” exhibition
that brought fans to a wine tasting and silent auction
in mid-December, and the men have scheduled an alumni
meet as a January 10 fund-raiser. “A bunch of
out-of-shape gymnasts come back and try to relive their
glory days,” Glielmi explains. “It can be
quite scary at times, but also entertaining.”
The men compete in six events at the collegiate level—vault,
pommel horse, still rings, parallel bars, horizontal
bar and floor exercise—with six athletes per event,
and the top four individual scores counting as a combined
team score. That means designing 36 different routines
that have distinctive rhythm and form—and can
be made to look easy. “If it looks like they’re
struggling, they’re probably not going to get
good scores,” Glielmi says.
Smyth is confident in the women’s ability in
their four events—vault, floor exercise, uneven
parallel bars and, above all, balance beam. The beam
“takes such mental toughness and concentration,
and many times it’s the meet breaker,” Smyth
adds. “And we have Lindsay and Lise Léveillé
[’04] for a powerful one-two punch.”
As Wing, ’04, continues to polish her beam routine,
she’s also working on the quick-twitch muscles
that can energize jumps on the floor. Gill’s goal
is to get stronger on the rings for the static positions,
like the iron cross and Maltese cross, that require
such unflappable finesse. In the Maltese, “you
have to hold yourself completely flat, parallel with
the ground and level with the rings,” he says.
“Man!”
Off the mats, Glielmi says, his gymnasts are always
perfecting their kinesthetic awareness. And given the
3.4 grade-point average of the men’s team, he’s
not surprised when the conversation turns to such concepts
as the conservation of angular momentum. “Basically,
it’s the ice-skater theory, about what you do
with your arms in a spin.”
The sport, Glielmi adds, is lots of fun to watch, “and
what’s exciting is that the littlest thing, the
smallest deviation from the correct angle, can cause
the biggest problem.” But doing it exactly right
can earn a perfect 10.
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