- Aug 16, 2020
- 22
- 25
It's nice to know the sport is giving options to older athletes if they want to compete elite, even after college:
https://www.newyorker.com/sports/sporting-scene/elite-gymnasts-are-aging-up
"By the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (which were held in 2021, because of the pandemic), the average age of the U.S. team was over twenty-one. “There’s been a lot of misconceptions about women in sports,” Ellen Casey, a doctor at the Hospital for Special Surgery who serves as the U.S.A. Gymnastics Women’s National Team physician, told me. It was “one of the big myths in gymnastics”—a “belief,” Casey reiterated, “not fact”—that the height of a female gymnast’s career would come in her mid-teen-age years, and that attempting to improve into her twenties would be “dangerous, if not impossible.” I asked her if there was contrary evidence now. She answered, “It’s happening.”
https://www.newyorker.com/sports/sporting-scene/elite-gymnasts-are-aging-up
"By the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (which were held in 2021, because of the pandemic), the average age of the U.S. team was over twenty-one. “There’s been a lot of misconceptions about women in sports,” Ellen Casey, a doctor at the Hospital for Special Surgery who serves as the U.S.A. Gymnastics Women’s National Team physician, told me. It was “one of the big myths in gymnastics”—a “belief,” Casey reiterated, “not fact”—that the height of a female gymnast’s career would come in her mid-teen-age years, and that attempting to improve into her twenties would be “dangerous, if not impossible.” I asked her if there was contrary evidence now. She answered, “It’s happening.”