- Dec 4, 2009
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- #31
No but you can bobble on the beam and still win all around. Cheerleading isn't one element at a time like gymnastics is.
You can touch down on a pass and still win. I dont get your analogy.
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No but you can bobble on the beam and still win all around. Cheerleading isn't one element at a time like gymnastics is.
People shouldn't be waiting til warmups to remove skills.I feel like this could work. For one of our score sheets in IL, whether it's a stunt fall or a tumble bust, it's still 4 points deducted. I think it works too because in warmups when someone doesn't seem to be landing they pull it or water it down immediately. I imagine that coaches would see that its better to have a watered down pass than to bust...
People shouldn't be waiting til warmups to remove skills.
I was about to comment on that. Why are we just restricting lvl5? Do the other levels not matter either? Make that cowboyed tuck a deduction. Because those are scary to watch!So people there is a choice. Limit tumbling OR increase tumbling deductions.
The limit tumbling issue is that does NOT increase the safety of all the other levels.
I'm saying you can't compare gymnastics to cheerleading equally.You can touch down on a pass and still win. I dont get your analogy.
Or the layout with their head 3 inches above the ground that's so piked it should be illegal. Except it ISN'T..I was about to comment on that. Why are we just restricting lvl5? Do the other levels not matter either? Make that cowboyed tuck a deduction. Because those are scary to watch!
Yes but realistically it's going to happen. You get those people that can throw it perfectly at practice but then nerves take over a competition.People shouldn't be waiting til warmups to remove skills.
AND higher tumbling deductions means more tumbling classes to perfect skills. More money for the industry.
I cut your post down a bit for size issues- but even in other sports, flukes still get punished. My brother can spike like it's his job, but when his hand misses and he nets it, it's still a penalty. We've seen gymnasts lose world/olympic titles on easy turns or on a missed grip that is so easy a level 4 could do it..but even still, you don't see SUPER serious risks on things that could cost them a loss. They're cautious about putting enough in to win/demonstrate their awesome without killing themselves or going overboard. That's where we need to be..I don't know about judges / judging, but as a parent, I think I can tell between a) a normally done well back walkover that fell vs. b) a back walkover that shouldn't have been attempted in the first place. Perhaps the execution score should take more of the hit?? I am not sure how to make this right, but I would love to see the "scary" tumbling penalized, but not the flukes (well the flukes should still be penalized, but not to the degree of something that shouldn't be thrown in the first place.) And yes, I realize that is totally subjective, and doesn't really provide a solution to the issue.