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Showing posts with label Gymnastics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gymnastics. Show all posts

Sabrina Vega Profile & Images 2011


Profile:
Full Name:Sabrina Vega
Nickname:Bina or Bri
Birthdate:May 24, 1995
Hometown:Manhattan, New York, USA
Program:Women's Artistic
Level:Senior
Club:Dynamic Gymnastics
Head Coach:Sorin Cepoi
Other Coaches:Teodora Ungureanu-Cepoi
Personal Website:www.sabrinavega.com
Images:
 Sabrina Vega
 Sabrina Vega
 Sabrina Vega
 Sabrina Vega
 Sabrina Vega
 Sabrina Vega
Sabrina Vega

Alicia Sacramone Profle & 2011 Visa Championships Images

 Alicia Sacramone Profle
Alicia Marie Sacramone born December 3, 1987) is an American artistic gymnast.
Sacramone began gymnastics at the age of eight, began competing in the elite ranks in 2002 and joined the U.S. national team in 2003. At US National Championships from 2004 to 2008, she won twelve medals, including four golds on vault and two golds on floor exercise. At World Championships from 2005 to 2007, she won seven medals, including a floor exercise gold in 2005 and a team gold in 2007. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, she won a team silver medal. In 2010, Sacramone made a comeback by winning the National Championship on Vault. Later in 2010 at the World.
Championships in Rotterdam, Netherlands, she won the World Title on Vault as well.[2] Her gold gave her a total of nine medals overall, joining Shannon Miller and Nastia Liukin as the U.S. athletes with the most medals at the gymnastics world championships.

Images:
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
Alicia Sacramone Visa Championships
TOKYO, Oct. 7, 2011 – Alicia Sacramone of Winchester, Mass./Brestyan’s American Gymnastics, tore her Achilles tendon yesterday during a tumbling pass at a training session.
“I am so disappointed to not be able to compete and be a part of this team’s competitive success,” said Sacramone. “This is an incredibly talented and wonderful group of girls and I have great confidence in their ability to go out and represent the United States to the best of their ability. I will miss being out there to help them, but I will be watching them on Universal Sports and NBC. I also want to thank my teammates, fans and friends for their overwhelming support and messages of encouragement.”
According to U.S. team physician Dr. Larry Nassar, she sustained her injury while attempting a tumbling pass at training. She is flying back to the United States to meet with an Achilles tendon specialist and is expected to have surgery on Monday. The type of surgery and the needed recovery time depend on the location of the tear.
“Alicia is an incredible young woman,” said Kathy Kelly, vice president of program for USA Gymnastics. “Even injured, she has demonstrated her leadership skills and provided inspiration for her team. She has shown grace and maturity in dealing with this and has gone out of her way to help her teammates get in the right frame of mind for tomorrow’s qualification round. We will miss her when we take to the floor, and we hope her surgery goes well next week.”

The U.S. women compete in the qualification round on Oct. 8.a

Alicia Sacramone Profile and Pictures 2011

Alicia Sacramone Profile and Pictures 2011

 Profile
United States
Gymnastics


Birthdate: December 03, 1987
Weight: 117 lbs (53 kg)
Height: 5’1” (1.55 m)
Age: 23 years
Gender: Female

Athlete Profile

.First-place finishes at the 2007 Visa Championships (vault), 2007 US Classic (vault, balance beam, floor exercise), 2006 Visa Championships (vault, tied in floor exercise), 2006 US Classic (vault, floor exercise), 2005 World Championships (floor exercise), 2005 Pan American Championships (vault, floor exercise), 2005 World Cup - Paris (vault), 2005 World Cup - Ghent, Belgium (vault, floor exercise), 2005 USA/GBR (vault, tied in floor exercise), 2005 American Cup (vault), 2005 Visa Championships (vault, floor exercise), 2005 US Classic (floor exercise), 2004 World Cup Final (vault), 2004 Pan American Championships (vault, floor exercise), 2004 Pacific Alliance Championships (vault), 2004 American Classic (floor exercise) and 2004 Podium Meet (vault, floor exercise).
.Won a silver medal in floor exercise at the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart, Germany, and a bronze in the vault.
.She also took home bronze in the vault at the 2005 Worlds at Melbourne, Australia.
.Won USA Gymnastics Sportswoman of the Year honors in 2005, when she scored a rare 9.9 on her final floor routine at the Visa Championships.
.Sacramone is a student at Brown University.
.Brestyan's American Gymnastics
.Mihai Brestyan
.Dec. 3, 1987
.Winchester, Mass.

Pictures

Alicia Sacramone
Alicia Sacramone
Alicia Sacramone
Alicia Sacramone
Alicia Sacramone
Alicia Sacramone

Kaori Ishii Gymnastic Player hot Pics 2011

Kaori Ishii Gymnastic Player hot Pics 2011
 






 

Yu-Na Kim Profile and Images 2011

Yu-Na Kim Profile and Images 2011

Profile:
Birthdate: September 05, 1990
Weight: 104 lbs (47 kg)
Height: 5’4” (1.64 m)
Age: 20 years
Gender: Female

Pictures

Yu-Na Kim
Yu-Na Kim
Yu-Na Kim
Yu-Na Kim
Yu-Na Kim
Yu-Na Kim

Gymnastics girl Almudena Cid Hot Pics

Gymnastics girl Almudena Cid Hot Pics

Almudena Cid Tostado born June 15,1980 in Vitoria, Spain. she is an Individual Rhythmic Gymnast. She is the oldest currently competing elite rhythmic gymnast.

Toppest Gymnastics girl pic
Gymnastics girl Almudena Cid Top pic
Gymnastics girl Almudena Cid Sexy Hot pic
Top Olympic player Almudena Cid pic
Top hottest Gymnastics girl pic

Top Gymnastic Girl Sandra Izbasa Pics

Top Gymnastic Girl Sandra Izbasa Pics 

Top 10 Gymanstic Girl
Sandra Raluca Izbaşa born June 18,1990 in Bucharest,Romania.she is a Romanian artistic gymnast.she won women’s floor exercise competition and grabbed the golden medal in Beijing. Best events are floor exercise,the balance beam,and the all-around. She is the 2008 Olympic champion on floor exercise and a bronze medalist on the team event.

Olympic champion Sandra Izbasa Gymanst Pic
In Beijing Sandra Izbasa won women’s floor exercise competition Pic
Sandra Izbasa is a Romanian artistic Pic
Sandra Izbasa Gymnastic Hot Girl pic
Sandra Izbasa won gold medal Pic

Nadia Comaneci Romanian gymnast

Nadia Comaneci Romanian gymnast

Nadia Elena Comăneci (Romanian born November 12, 1961) is a Romanian gymnast, winner of three Olympic gold medals at the 1976 Summer Olympics, and the first gymnast ever to be awarded a perfect score of 10 in an Olympic gymnastic event. She is also the winner of two gold medals at the 1980 Summer Olympics. She is one of the best-known gymnasts in the world.In 2000 Comăneci was named as one of the athletes of the century by the Laureus World Sports Academy.

Nadia Comaneci Gymnastics Accomplishments:

    * Nadia Comaneci was the first gymnast to score a perfect 10.0 in the Olympics.   She did it at the 1976 Games, and then went on to score six more 10.0s and win three gold medals.


    * Comaneci was also the first Romanian gymnast to win the all-around title at the Olympics, and is the youngest ever all-around champion.



Nadia Comaneci with husband
Nadia Comaneci be a model
Nadia Comaneci old
Nadia Comaneci gymnastic
Nadia Comaneci as gymnastic and now

Gymnastics Players

Gymnastics Players


Gymnastics is an activity involving performance of exercises requiring physical strength, flexibility, agility, coordination, balance, and grace. Internationally, all of the gymnastic sports are governed by the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG) with each country having its own national governing body affiliated to FIG. Competitive Artistic gymnastics is the best known of the gymnastic sports. It typically involves the women's events of uneven parallel bars, balance beam, floor exercise, and vault. Men's events include floor exercise, pommel horse, still rings, vault, parallel bars, and high bar. Gymnastics evolved from exercises used by the ancient Greeks, that included skills for mounting and dismounting a horse, and from circus performance skills.

Exercises of the ancient Greeks at first consisted of athletic feats performed by each individual according to his own notion, and were encouraged among the youth as combining amusement with exercise. These exercises were at length reduced to a system which formed a prominent feature in the state regulations for education. In fact, the period for gymnastics was equal to the time spent on art and music combined.[4] All Greek cities had a gymnasium, a courtyard for jumping, running, and wrestling.

In the fifteenth century, Girolamo Mercuriale from Forlì (Italy) wrote De Arte Gymnastica, that brought together his study of the attitudes of the ancients toward diet, exercise and hygiene, and the use of natural methods for the cure of disease. De Arte Gymnastica also explained the principles of physical therapy and is considered the first book on sports medicine.
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century Germany, two pioneer physical educators – Johann Friedrich GutsMuths (1759–1839) and Friedrich Ludwig Jahn (1778–1852) – created exercises for boys and young men on apparatus they had designed and that ultimately led to what is considered modern gymnastics. In particular, Jahn crafted early models of the horizontal bar, the parallel bars (from a horizontal ladder with the rungs removed), and the vaulting horse.
Artistic gymnastics is usually divided into Men's and Women's Gymnastics. Typically men compete six events: Floor Exercise, Pommel Horse, Still Rings, Vault, Parallel Bars, and High Bar, while women compete four: Vault, Uneven Bars, Balance Beam, and Floor Exercise. In some countries, women at one time competed on the rings, high bar, and parallel bars (for example, in the 1950s in the USSR). Though routines performed on each event may be short, they are physically exhausting and push the gymnast's strength, flexibility, endurance and awareness to the limit.
Artistic gymnasts participate in competitions which use a standardized level system ranging from Level 1 to Level 10. Levels 1 through 6 compete using compulsory routines. In Levels 7 though 10, athletes may use their own routines created from a set of skills which must be included. Elite competition, open to skilled younger athletes in lower levels, is typically reserved for athletes who have aged out of the junior program; for example, in the United States, Junior Olympic competition ends when the athlete reaches age 18. Elite gymnasts compete for team slots, which allows them access to international competition. It is accepted practice at the compulsory and optional level to use standardized routines in the training of young gymnasts.

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