Friday, March 14, 2014

Competition Day

What goes through your mind
Most gymnasts get really nervous for meets, as is expected. You typically get more nervous for invitational and state-wide and regional competitions than you do for little meets that don't count for much, but all different kinds of competitions are still atleast a little bit nerve-wracking. For me and some of the girls on my team, the panic sets in around 3 or 4 days prior to the competition day.

Why you get nervous
We are mostly worried about a new skill if we are doing it for the first time in competition, but mainly we worry about sticking our beam routine. Because, basically, if you fall off beam in a meet, you get a .5 deduction from your score of a maximum of 10.0, and that .5 ruins usually ruins your all-around score, so if you fall, it is hard to place in the AA, which everyone hopes to do at meets. Also, other things like: relatives coming to watch, pressure from your coaches to do well, first competition at a new level, or if how well you do at that competition determines whether or not you can qualify for a following meet can make you extra nervous. 

Judging
As I mentioned before, each event is scored out of a 10.0 and the judges who judge you write down all the errors they see and then add up all the deductions and give you your total score. A 40.0 is the highest possible all-around score you can get, but that never happens. A mid-high 35 or a 36 is usually a good enough score to place in the AA, but nothing is ever guaranteed. Even if you get the highest all-around of your life, you could still get 2nd AA because someone else in your age group could have done even better than you. 

Location
Meet locations vary, depending on the host gym and the type of competition. If it is a little meet that is basically entered for practice or to prepare for bigger meets, then sometimes the host gym has it in their actual gym. But, if it is an invitational, it is usually in a ballroom at a hotel or in a high school. State competitions are usually at a high school in the middle of the state. And regional competitions are somewhere in New England. For example, last year, regionals were in central Massachusetts in a ballroom at a hotel. 

Check-in, warm-up, march-in, compete
You arrive at the location of the meet and you go to a table that is labeled "gymnast check-in". Once you check yourself in, you go into the gym, put down your bag, meet up with your coach, and begin warming up whenever you are told you may begin. Check-in, warmup, march-in, competition, and awards all have a designated time, but meets often run late due to issues in the previous session. 

Once warm up is over, you go over to whichever event you are competing on first, introduce yourself to the judge, get another short warmup, and then compete, in whichever order you are put in. The rotation for the events is vault, bars, beam, floor, but everyone can't start at vault, so whichever event you start on, you follow the pattern to determine the rest of your order of events. 

Right before and right after you compete, you salute to the judge. A salute is basically putting up both of your arms by your arms while looking at the judge. Once you salute after your routine, indicating that you are done, the judge tallies up all the errors they wrote down and they flash you score and write it on your scorecard. Out of a 10.0, your goal is to get in the 9's, but sometimes that isn't as easy as it sounds. Mid-eights and nines are what you want to get for a score, if you want to place on that event. 

Competition usually takes anywhere from 2 hours to 4 hours, if the meet is really slow-moving. After you are completely done competing, you are escorted to awards, where you wait to see how you did. I will soon be writing another post all about awards, so I will talk about awards in that post!

This picture is of a panoramic view of a competition I worked at a few weeks ago, I'm hoping this helps you imagine what being at a competition is like! 

No comments:

Post a Comment