quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
Are there 60 times for any gymnasts?
Any ever recorded?
I don't know of any coaches timing their gymnasts in the 60yd dash or even the 40 yd dash. One of my best friends has his own gymnastics studio and nobody gets timed. My daughter never got timed and she went to several gymnastics studios.
Gymnasts don't pay attention to their speed other than to observe if they need to improve it to compete. The same with strength. A gymnastics coach might tell a student they need to get stronger, but there are no standards like in baseball or football.
A good baseball comparison might be the strength of a catcher's legs. We all know a catcher's legs are in great shape but nobody is testing them or comparing them to other catchers. The same would apply to gymnasts, as long as they are strong enough and fast enough to perform the tricks, nobody cares. It is all about how perfect they can execute the tricks. Getting as close as possible to the elusive perfect 10 score.
PG,
Here are some answers to your questions.
How important is speed? Very important for the vault. If a gymnast cannot run fast enough they are like a pole vaulter who can't run fast enough, doomed to failure and defeat.
They never work on 60 yd sprints. Their sprint work is contained to the blue mat they call the floor exercise.
Gymnasts run a lot. During a three hour workout there will be a couple miles of running. Baseball players do some running as well but it varies more in baseball than gymnastics, depending on the coach.
Being able to run fast enough to perform the tricks is essential to gymnastics. You cannot substitute another skill for it and still compete. In baseball you have many more options to achieve success. A strong arm alone can make you a millionaire.
When people watch gymnasts they see the obvious strength and balance but their speed is hidden. It would be interesting to take 100 random H.S. gymnasts and 100 random H.S. centerfielders and see how the 60yd times play out.