The worlds that never happened

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I think at 14/15, top elite gymnasts should be there or thereabouts when it comes to full difficulty. It is much harder to learn skills as you get older, but it’s easier to maintain them. What was ridiculous was 11-13 year old compete senior level routines. Fortunately that doesn’t really happen anymore.

Bad form and poor basics are always a choice and doesn’t have to go hand in hand with high difficulty at a young age. Anna Pavlova competed at 2 junior euros, the first time when she was still 12.
 
Atler and Moceanu were only five months apart, but the former had to wait until 1999 to compete at a Worlds or Olympics while the other had been to three by then.
and continuing this train of thought, it's very easy to imagine Atler onto the 1995 World team and in the mix for Atlanta if she'd been born just six weeks earlier.





 
In 1995, technical Juniors were allowed to compete as long as they were senior eligible for the Olympics. The Pre Olympics Worlds allowed juniors to compete with seniors int he Pre Olympic year with 2008 being the last IIRC.

Also in 1995, Kristy Powell really shouldn't have won the American Cup. She was fortunate of extremely lucky circumstances that allowed her to win.
She did win prelims, however Miller's fall on beam gave her the win and eliminated Miller. Likely had Miller not fallen off beam, she would have qualified tied with Powell for the prelim win. I would assume that had Miller hit 4 for 4 in finals she would have won.

Powell deserved her win, obviously, but that win also put tremendous pressure on her.
There were 8 US ladies that competed in prelims that year. Aside from Powell, Miller, and Borden, also competing were Mina Kim, Jaycie, Phelps, Amy Chow (9.150 beam), Doni Thompson, and Mary Beth Arnold.

Interestingly enough, Moceanu never competed at an American Cup. I wonder why Dawes and Moceanu didn't compete here, was it because they were chosen with Kelle Davis and Katie Teft to compete at the USA-BLR-CHN meet instead?
 
In 1995, technical Juniors were allowed to compete as long as they were senior eligible for the Olympics. The Pre Olympics Worlds allowed juniors to compete with seniors int he Pre Olympic year with 2008 being the last IIRC.

Also in 1995, Kristy Powell really shouldn't have won the American Cup. She was fortunate of extremely lucky circumstances that allowed her to win.
She did win prelims, however Miller's fall on beam gave her the win and eliminated Miller. Likely had Miller not fallen off beam, she would have qualified tied with Powell for the prelim win. I would assume that had Miller hit 4 for 4 in finals she would have won.

Powell deserved her win, obviously, but that win also put tremendous pressure on her.
There were 8 US ladies that competed in prelims that year. Aside from Powell, Miller, and Borden, also competing were Mina Kim, Jaycie, Phelps, Amy Chow (9.150 beam), Doni Thompson, and Mary Beth Arnold.

Interestingly enough, Moceanu never competed at an American Cup. I wonder why Dawes and Moceanu didn't compete here, was it because they were chosen with Kelle Davis and Katie Teft to compete at the USA-BLR-CHN meet instead?
Maybe. I think Dawes was also coming back from the injury that kept her out of '95 Worlds.
 
I think at 14/15, top elite gymnasts should be there or thereabouts when it comes to full difficulty. It is much harder to learn skills as you get older, but it’s easier to maintain them. What was ridiculous was 11-13 year old compete senior level routines. Fortunately that doesn’t really happen anymore.

Bad form and poor basics are always a choice and doesn’t have to go hand in hand with high difficulty at a young age. Anna Pavlova competed at 2 junior euros, the first time when she was still 12.
Is that actually true? I mean, many men don’t start getting some of their skills until after puberty and rushing people through skills before puberty for women has been problematic at least, since many times, they need to relearn their skills for their new bodies.

As women careers have extended, they have also learned new skills later. Jade Carey learned a Bhardwaj, a layout double double, a Y1.5 etc as an adult.

I guess it also depends on how one defines “full difficulty”. Simone Biles for instance probably did all skills she performed in quad 2 as a junior already, but not with hard landings. Would you consider her to have “full difficulty” at 16 already?
 
Johnson placed third at 1990 US Nationals behind Zmeskal and Okino. She would have been second if Zmeskal had competed as a junior. It's been ages since I watrched this competition, but I remember feeling that all of Karolyi's gymnasts received some major gifts while Johnson was lowballed even when she hit. Bear in mind, though, this was 36 years ago, and I was/am extremely biased.

Based on Nationals results, the Worlds team might have looked like this:

Okino (first-year senior)
Johnson
Woolsey
Scherr (first-year senior)
Kelly
Simkins, Heinrich, or Stack

Not a particularly strong team, but they might have squeaked into third behind the USSR and China.
Brandy was better than her record showed. She’d get deductions on skills that other people would do worse and score better. This was true both nationally and internationally. This is just from my memory.
 
Is that actually true? I mean, many men don’t start getting some of their skills until after puberty and rushing people through skills before puberty for women has been problematic at least, since many times, they need to relearn their skills for their new bodies.

As women careers have extended, they have also learned new skills later. Jade Carey learned a Bhardwaj, a layout double double, a Y1.5 etc as an adult.

I guess it also depends on how one defines “full difficulty”. Simone Biles for instance probably did all skills she performed in quad 2 as a junior already, but not with hard landings. Would you consider her to have “full difficulty” at 16 already?
Yes it’s true. I don’t mean their full difficulty, which can only be examined retrospectively. I mean that at 14/15 they should be doing routines that are roughly at senior level. Not that they are performing at their ceiling.

If we look at the gymnasts who’ve had long and successful careers, they were almost all performing senior level routines as juniors. Andrade, Melnikova, Ferrari, Murakami, Chiles. Jade Carey is of course a major outlier because she never competed elite as a junior
 

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