To tough for men!
What a great article that simply sums up the wonderful sport of rhythmic gymnastics.
It is no coincidence that the only
Olympic sports contested solely by women are the only ones that require
athletes to wear eyeliner and lipstick. Rhythmic gymnasts and
synchronised swimmers
wear leotards and faces that spangle and glitter - the way you look is
just as important as the way you move. Is this the last bastion of
traditional lady-like behaviour in the face of muscular feminism?
Of course not; these athletes are as
hard as weightlifters. Don’t be fooled by the elegance and grace, their
sport only looks easy because they have the strength, flexibility and
stamina to make it so. Mo Farah can stretch his gasping sinews every
sweaty stride towards the finish line and Jess Ennis can lie thoroughly
exhausted on the track after her 800ms, but our gymnasts have to show no
exertion, no breathlessness and no effort.
To use the colloquial metaphor of
the duck that is calm on the surface, but paddling like a train
underneath, the hard labour is what the synchronised swimmer and
rhythmic gymnast strives to hide from you. Perhaps if I refer to
synchronised swimming’s original title of Water Ballet I can more
convincingly convey the scale of the physical demands of the sport – at
least to those of you who have seen Black Swan.
Minority sports are so because they
are minor players in sports media coverage, but they are also widely
minor in the realms of common sporting knowledge. Most people know what a
‘bicycle kick’ and ‘topspin’ refer to. Not so with the ‘egg beater’,
‘pusher’ and ‘stack lift’ and there is certainly no appreciation of how
hard they might be to do.
Therein lies the opportunity of the
London 2012 Olympic Games for these athletes. They have scraped through
the last four years with comparatively less cash than
their counterparts (synchronised swimming receives 3.46m per year
compared to £20.66m awarded to swimming) or self funded (GB rhythmic
gymnasts self funded their way to within 0.273 of a qualification for
the 2012 Games).
This is their moment to shine but
there is no Tom Daley or Louis Smith to put their sport on a viral video
or You Tube. If you missed out on the Rhythmic Gymnastics in January
2012 buy tickets for the FINA Olympic Games Synchronised Swimming Qualification and see just what these women are made of.
A great time to say good luck to Esprit gymnast Jade Faulkner and the rest of the GB Rhythmic Group at the Nordic Cup in Sweden this weekend!
A great time to say good luck to Esprit gymnast Jade Faulkner and the rest of the GB Rhythmic Group at the Nordic Cup in Sweden this weekend!
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