D
Deleted member D3987
trust me geoff, the women judges wouldn't know a kaz from a full. that's why they don't distinguish in this code. back in the day, they did. and that generation coudn't tell the difference either.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
trust me geoff, the women judges wouldn't know a kaz from a full. that's why they don't distinguish in this code. back in the day, they did. and that generation coudn't tell the difference either.
trust me geoff, the women judges wouldn't know a kaz from a full. that's why they don't distinguish in this code. back in the day, they did. and that generation coudn't tell the difference either.
I do not believe the kaz is distinguished in the womens code. I would not know the differece , and I am a very experienced coach & judge. The kaz is a mens vault. Since the tsuk full is listed in the womens code, I would expect to see a tsuk full (which in my understanding is different from a kaz). If you called a kaz, I would look for it in the code, not be able to find it listed under the name kaz, i would try to score the vault based on what I see, but you are opening your female gymnast up to a lot of issues!
Why not just teach your female gymnasts vaults listed in the female code of points? Leave no room for interpretation, or wonder on the part of the judges. Womens gymnastics is different than mens, and if the guys want to come and coach womens, they need to coach it differently. I would expect to coach the mens side very differently than I do womens.
I do not believe the kaz is distinguished in the womens code. I would not know the differece , and I am a very experienced coach & judge. The kaz is a mens vault. Since the tsuk full is listed in the womens code, I would expect to see a tsuk full (which in my understanding is different from a kaz). If you called a kaz, I would look for it in the code, not be able to find it listed under the name kaz, i would try to score the vault based on what I see, but you are opening your female gymnast up to a lot of issues!
Why not just teach your female gymnasts vaults listed in the female code of points? Leave no room for interpretation, or wonder on the part of the judges. Womens gymnastics is different than mens, and if the guys want to come and coach womens, they need to coach it differently. I would expect to coach the mens side very differently than I do womens.
Its all gymnastics but MANY if not all the differences between men's and women's gymnastics are due to different equipment! Different equipment means different gymnastics- yes, men did a giant first, but be realistic, was a giant even possible when the bars were so close we could stand on one bar and hold the high bar to do a scale?
I also believe the difference in mens & womens vaulting came form when there was long horse for men. History teaches us many lessons.
I'm not even going to go into anatomy..... but they are differences. I hope the OP got some good info from his origional question before everyone started thumping their chests and showing us how intelligent they are.
Dunno, it it really stupid that then womens side calls something a different name, or just stupid accoring to you?? Is everyone that doesnt think the same way as you stupid? I found your post quite offensive to womens gymnastics, coaches & judges.
I guess, in a way, the issue is that often its a matter of which direction to twist. In a Kaz, you twist back. Even in the days of the old horse many women did a Kaz-style tsuk full. But it wasn't much of a difference really, because, with the horse, you pretty much had to do a true half on. Once it got changed to a 1/4 on, a Kaz is obviously easier, because there is less twisting to do. Sometimes it annoys me, when you can hardly tell, say a front half and a kaz apart. But basically, a true tsuk was always rare - because it forced you to either twist against your natural direction or do your entry the opposite way (except of course you are one of the few people that don't work like most of us do). Now it's just much more apparent and actually a significant change in difficulty.