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- OLYMPICS, Page 561992 SUMMER GAMESGYMNASTICS: Ode to Joylessness
-
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- The women seemed tense and strained. This time it was the men
- who were fun to watch.
-
- By JILL SMOLOWE -- With reporting by Susanna M. Schrobsdorff/
- Barcelona
-
-
- Somewhere in the Olympic Village as the partying picks up
- pace, it is not hard to imagine a 14-year-old girl crying. Her
- name is Roza Galieva. She is the gymnast from the gold-winning
- Unified Team who successfully fought her way to the coveted
- all-around competition, only to be robbed of her chance. Her
- coaches, in their unified wisdom, decided that one of Galieva's
- teammates, Tatiana Gutsu, was more likely to bank gold even
- though she had flubbed during the earlier team competition. So
- they exaggerated a knee injury to bench Galieva, made a quick
- substitution and, lo, Gutsu was in. Sure enough, she won the
- gold. Now Gutsu's triumph, impressive as it was, will always
- carry a caveat -- "Remember? She didn't even qualify for the
- all-around." And Galieva will have to digest the bitter lesson
- that fairness and feelings count for nothing in gymnastics; all
- that matters is winning.
-
- And that, in a nutshell, may explain the curious lack of
- joy last Thursday evening in the Palau Sant Jordi. The women's
- all-around should have been an energizing high for rapt
- spectators. The field of competitors was so deep with talent
- that on any given day, the gold medal could have hung deservedly
- on any one of eight necks from four countries. There was enough
- grace to satisfy balletomanes and enough difficulty to suggest
- that the laws of gravity ought to be rewritten. Yet there was
- little of the heartwarming drama that in Olympics past enabled
- audiences to lose their hearts to a charismatic Olga, a
- mysterious Nadia or an exuberant Mary Lou. The gymnasts often
- seemed more like automatons than human beings. Even on the medal
- stand, Gutsu and her fellow medalists -- Shannon Miller of the
- U.S. and Romania's Lavinia Milosovici -- conveyed little joy.
- They seemed to have not so much won as survived.
-
- The men's competition had a different feel entirely. Early
- in the week, the Unified Team waged a spectacular last hurrah.
- Its gymnasts occupied four of the top five spots, and its sixth
- gymnast beat the best performer from the U.S. team. In a sport
- where differences are measured in thousandths of a point, the
- Unified Team twisted and spun to gold with more than five full
- points to spare over China and Japan. Coming a night after the
- women's tense team competition, the exuberance of the men's
- unified effort was a welcome relief. Teammates cheered and
- hugged and seemed to revel in the triumph of Vitali Scherbo, 20,
- who took top marks in three of the six events.
-
- The night of the men's all-around, members of the Unified
- Team were again the ones to watch, but now they were rivals,
- even competing under different flags. Save for the challenge of
- Germany's Andreas Wecker, there was little doubt that the
- ex-Soviets would sweep the medals. The only question was, In
- what order? The suspense continued right to the end of the last
- event, when Scherbo of Belarus took the top mark on the rings,
- a 9.9, which secured him the gold. Ukraine's Grigory Mi sutin,
- 21, took silver, while the bronze went to Valeri Belenky, 22,
- of Azerbaijan.
-
- As for the Americans, a sixth-place team finish was
- followed by no higher than a 19th-place finish in the
- all-around. None of this came as much of a surprise, despite
- optimistic precompetition talk of a bronze medal. Most of the
- top U.S. male gymnasts are college students who abide by NCAA
- guidelines that restrict their training to 20 hours a week,
- roughly half the practice time of their main challengers. The
- American women, by contrast, are mostly still in high school and
- train in private gyms where no restrictions apply. Their
- discipline and dedication earned them a team bronze in a
- well-fought battle with the Unified Team and the Romanians --
- the first such medal for the U.S. in a nonboycotted Olympics
- since 1948.
-
- While excellence was evident on the U.S. women's team, a
- sense of unity was not. Certainly it didn't help that the six
- competitors and one alternate were thrown together only one
- month earlier. It helped even less that head coach Bela Karolyi
- and the other U.S. coaches bickered all the way to Barcelona.
- "The coaches hate each other," said someone close to the team.
- "Sometimes the girls feel as if they can't talk to each other
- because their coach will get upset." Word leaked out of the
- Olympic Village that the gymnasts were under strict regulations:
- no phone calls or leaving their rooms without permission, no
- unauthorized food. Small wonder that each gymnast performed her
- routine, looked anxiously to her personal coach for feedback,
- then turned inward to focus on the next event. In Olympics of
- old, the stony-faced Americans might have been mistaken for
- Soviets.
-
- The Unified Team, meanwhile, displayed an uncharacteristic
- degree of emotionalism during their journey to a 10th gold in
- as many Olympics. While their camaraderie contrasted starkly
- with the Americans' standoffishness, the comparison is a bit
- unfair, since the team's members have lived and trained together
- for years. Perhaps because the six gymnasts from four republics
- will never again compete as one, they found it harder to keep
- their emotions in check. When Gutsu toppled from the balance
- beam, seemingly dashing her all-around hopes, the team
- surrounded her. The sight of Svetlana Boginskaya, 19, the team's
- long-reigning princess, wrapping her arms protectively around
- the shattered 15-year-old was enough to move even the
- unsentimental.
-
- But two days later when Galieva miraculously came down
- with a "knee injury" -- thus clearing the way for Gutsu to
- compete -- it should have revived cold war cynicism. Instead,
- few rival coaches batted an eye. Indeed, just two weeks before
- the Olympics, a Pennsylvania gymnast named Kim Kelly, who had
- fulfilled the competitive requirements to make the U.S. team
- fair and square, was dropped from the squad by the American
- coaches to make room for another athlete they felt had greater
- potential. Kelly considered filing suit, then opted instead to
- show up in Barcelona, her presence a quiet rebuke of a selection
- process that even Karolyi denounces as "ugly."
-
- That nothing worked out in the all-around quite as
- predicted was, well, predictable. Gymnastics, after all, is a
- sport where athletes are in a race against not only one another
- but their own maturing bodies. Going in, the favorites included
- Boginskaya, Kim Zmeskal of the U.S. and Romania's Cristina
- Bontas. Each was kept off the medal podium by a younger
- teammate. Under the "new life" rules enacted in 1989, which
- allow the gymnasts to enter the all-around with a clean slate,
- Gutsu was able to set aside her earlier wobbles during the team
- contest. Competing under the Ukrainian flag, she performed some
- of the evening's most difficult routines.
-
- The U.S.'s Shannon Miller hardly needed a fresh start
- after the team rounds. The graceful 15-year-old had performed
- solidly throughout that competition, and she continued without
- any major breaks in the individual all-around. If there had been
- a gold medal for consistency, Miller would have been without
- rival. As it was, she missed the gold by only 0.012 -- whatever
- that means. Miller and Milosovici were the only gymnasts who
- qualified for all four apparatus finals, and there Miller shone
- again, taking a silver on the beam and a bronze on both the bars
- and floor.
-
- For Zmeskal, 16, it was an Olympics filled with tragic
- falls, heroic recoveries and disappointing finishes. A Karolyi
- protege who had been expected to take a run at the gold, the
- Texan got off to a shaky start with a spill from the beam during
- her first pass on her first piece of apparatus on her first day
- of competition. Showing her grit, she fought back and secured
- a legitimate place in the all-around. But come that night, she
- was again jittery on her first event, stepping out of bounds on
- her floor routine, losing an automatic 0.1 point. She finished
- 10th. In the apparatus finals, she crash-landed on a vault, then
- fought back with a rousing floor routine -- only to be scorned
- again by the judges.
-
- Surely Zmeskal's confidence was not boosted by Karolyi's
- announcement -- oddly timed after the team finals but before the
- all-around -- that he was retiring from elite gymnastic
- competition. Given Karolyi's fierce politicking, it was not
- unreasonable to wonder if he thought there might be some
- advantage in this announcement for Zmeskal and another of his
- gymnasts, Betty Okino. Perhaps he thought the judges would smile
- more benignly upon them, or that it might inspire one of them
- to cap his coaching career with a seventh gold medal. If so, it
- didn't work. And those who know him well, including Mary Lou
- Retton and Zmeskal, say they don't believe he's really quitting.
- "You must understand," says Yuri Titov, president of the
- International Gymnastics Federation, "it is just a form of
- theater."
-
- Miller's coach, Steve Nunno, also did a bit of spotlight
- hogging. In vintage Karolyi style, he screamed and flailed his
- arms and offered photo-op bear hugs. When Miller got a 9.975 on
- her vault, enough to secure only the silver, Nunno complained
- that she had been robbed of the gold. "She was the winner, no
- doubt in my mind," he said. "I thought it was a 10." Never mind
- that the women's judges awarded no 10s that day, and awarded
- only two during the entire competition. Never mind that others
- far younger who also felt robbed handled it with considerably
- more grace.
-
- In the end, it seemed that the most colorful and spirited
- performances of the women's competition were offered by the
- coaches. Meanwhile, their petite proteges -- few of them older
- than 16 or taller than 5 ft. -- went about their business in
- bloodless fashion. Perhaps the almost mechanical performances
- were an apt reflection of the grueling training and inhumane
- culling process they go through. "We are not in the gym to be
- having fun," Karolyi likes to say. "The fun comes in the end,
- with the winning and the medals." By then, it would seem, the
- gymnasts lucky enough to triumph are too worn out to enjoy it.
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