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. When the choreography looks like actual dance and fits the music well, it seems easier for the gymnast to really get into the routine and put forth maximum effort.
The important part of music and coreography is it fits the gymnast
So she is not really invested.The routine dd had last year had music selected just for her and was choreographed with her mannerisms and movement style in mind. This year, she got a handed down routine and music. This year’s routine doesn’t fit her as well, but she’s really trying. There’s about a 0.3 drop in her scores, so not dramatically different, enough to go from scoring low 9s to high 8s.
It does actually matter, it's just not a major portion of the score.Yes, I think her routine is more difficult now; and yes I do think she’s grown.
It seems like the consensus is that judges aren’t taking deductions for choreography. That’s very reassuring. At our old gym, some parents requested an outside choreographer, so then all of the optionals were required to use her. It was expensive, but the routines looked really nice. It’s good know that it really doesn’t matter what the choreography is.
I think she’s really trying to sell the routine, it’s just not a good fit for her. I wouldn’t say she’s not invested. She likes her gym a lot, and has set a goal for herself to score really well. So, it’s not a timing issue in the sense that we moved at a bad time or moved too close to the start of the season. Dd was very happy to move. The gym did run out of time for choreography, so many got a recycled routine or had to use the same one again for an additional year instead of getting a new one. In that sense, it’s a timing issue, because there just wasn’t enough time for all of the kids.So she is not really invested.
Was it a timing issue as in when she moved.
I think she’s really trying to sell the routine, it’s just not a good fit for her. I wouldn’t say she’s not invested. She likes her gym a lot, and has set a goal for herself to score really well. So, it’s not a timing issue in the sense that we moved at a bad time or moved too close to the start of the season. Dd was very happy to move. The gym did run out of time for choreography, so many got a recycled routine or had to use the same one again for an additional year instead of getting a new one. In that sense, it’s a timing issue, because there just wasn’t enough time for all of the kids.
Some parents have even discussed getting dance private lessons on the side to at least modify the routines they have and make them on beat with the music.
Lots of floor titles don’t come from the coreography, it comes from the tumbling and other skills.
You can have the most expensive and stunning coreography on the planet. And if your tumbling and leaps are not good, there might be clapping but there will be no titles.
Many a parent has sat stunned at their kids scores who had great coreography wondering why the kid with the more simply coreographed routine outscored them by a lot.
So the priority for next season is music she wants and the coreography will follow.
You missed the point.Yes and no. To give an example of both sides: one child with excellent choreography and presentation but missing a skill to get 10.0 SV got a lower score. Another child has all the necessary skills but a very hesitant presentation, some acro that will get deductions, and choreography isn't as tight as it could be. The skills are fine. That routine will also get a lower score. You really need both. And great choreography can be very simple. It doesn't have to be complicated.
Again, you missed the point.I really wish it were that easy. I have seen firsthand that it makes a big difference if you have a very skilled choreographer. And the judges will definitely score tight routines higher regardless of skill execution. For example, if you go to regionals where all the girls are performing strong floor routines skill-wise, the tight, crisp, well choreographed routines will definitely score higher.
Again, you missed the point.
All things being equal skill wise. You can have the most expensive pretty coreography and music money can buy. And if the gymnast doesn’t like it and is not into it. It will not scores as well as a simpler routine the gymnast loves and is invested in.
The key being strong floor skill wise, tight, crisp. The coreography detail is splitting hairs.
And you took the comments out of context. I was responding to the poster whose gymnast daughter inherited a routine she is not invested in because of the timing of a gym change.
Of course, A change of music and coreography her daughter to something she is invested in, A new routine she has a say in and likes/loves will of course help the execution of her routine.
My daughter picked out her own music this year and she likes the choreography and is therefore invested, but it is simply not working as well for her as her previous floor routine. She did not like the music at all for her previous floor routine and had no say in the music or the choreography, but the routine/choreography worked really well for her.
Her score is a full point lower than it was for her previous routine. If presentation was similar to the old routine, I would expect her score to probably go down a bit due to harder skills etc., but this much lower score is consistent across meets. While I am sure she is getting some deductions on skills, and you are correct that level changes should factor in, I have had two judges look at it, and she is getting some deductions on the "dance." For example, she has some acro in her routine. She likes it, and it is fun for her, but that is just one thing that she is getting deducted on as far as the choreography. My point in responding to the post was just that both the skills and choreography matter (of course the skills are the MOST important thing, but details are important too), so I wouldn't dismiss the choreography issue as fixing itself with a routine and/or music that the gymnast "likes."By what are you measuring "not as well". And is the coreography the only thing that has changed? No skill changes, no level change?
For example, she has some acro in her routine. She likes it, and it is fun for her, but that is just one thing that she is getting deducted on as far as the choreography."
Yes, I did answer the question. I stated above that you are correct that you have to factor in the level change, and I would expect a drop in scores because of harder skills. That was me saying that she went up a level. I said I agreed with you that skill execution is the most important variable/component/whatever you want to call it of the routine, but I do not think it is as easy as "pick the music you want and the choreography will follow." That just has not been our experience.You didn’t answer the question. Is it the same level for both routines.?
Acro is not dance or coreography it’s acro.
Sorry I thought you were speaking broadly about the level.Yes, I did answer the question. I stated above that you are correct that you have to factor in the level change, and I would expect a drop in scores because of harder skills. That was me saying that she went up a level. I said I agreed with you that skill execution is the most important variable/component/whatever you want to call it of the routine, but I do not think it is as easy as "pick the music you want and the choreography will follow." That just has not been our experience.