Gymnastic news #22 - Tokyo or bust

Status
Not open for further replies.

FiveRinger

Well-Known Member
Messages
8,174
But there are a lot of people who think it’s just a choice, like preferring blue over green. There’s a lot of educating that needs to be done.
Exactly. Most people don't choose to be "different." But they shouldn't have to.
 

snoopyskater

Active Member
Messages
136
I've been following Chellsie Memmell on her Youtube series. She usually trains in a leotard/pants ensemble, and I have to say I wish we could see similar pant outfits during competitions. I know most men will probably disagree, but I don't really enjoy watching all these women's butts sticking out. Some of these leotards are getting very skimpy and distracting. It would be nice to see something less revealing. Just my random thought today. Love to everyone.
 

syzygy

Well-Known Member
Messages
173
USA Gymnastics updated their policies for inclusion of transgender and nonbinary athletes and it looks...pretty good? They seem to really be trying to make sure that everyone gets to compete and enjoy the sport. I hope this is a good sign for the organization, and that they are able to make changes in all parts of the org to help and protect athletes.
Isn't that an unfair advantage to not require hormone replacement therapy. I love that they don't have to have surgeries or apply to do it; it just seems very unfair to athletes.
 

Rukia

A Southern, hot-blooded temperamental individual
Messages
21,724
Isn't that an unfair advantage to not require hormone replacement therapy. I love that they don't have to have surgeries or apply to do it; it just seems very unfair to athletes.
Competing in the female category requires testing to show that the athlete is below certain testosterone levels after a point (I don't remember if it's age or level). I think that is supposed to help with any potentially perceived advantages (although I'm not even sure how much of an issue that would really be). But also the policy is a good start that I'm sure will be tweaked as time goes by.
 

syzygy

Well-Known Member
Messages
173
Competing in the female category requires testing to show that the athlete is below certain testosterone levels after a point (I don't remember if it's age or level). I think that is supposed to help with any potentially perceived advantages (although I'm not even sure how much of an issue that would really be). But also the policy is a good start that I'm sure will be tweaked as time goes by.
At that point they're requiring HRT. No biological man will have T that low. I'm so glad the new policy exists also.
 

barbk

Well-Known Member
Messages
8,219
A truly infuriating interview with Maggie Haney in the NY Times today. It included this gem:
“I think my mistakes were that I cared too much, and wanted them to be a little too perfect every day, when maybe that’s not possible,” Haney, one of the most prominent coaches in the sport, said this month in an interview with The New York Times, the first time she has spoken publicly in nearly a year. “Maybe what used to be OK is not OK anymore, and maybe it shouldn’t be. I think maybe the culture has shifted.
...
Then,
"The culture has shifted perhaps too far, she said, and she expects the sport, going forward, to be filled with underachievers. She said she thinks coaches will not push their athletes as hard.

Haney blames parents for that. They have become too invested in their daughters’ success, she said, and now are emboldened to lash out at anyone — and potentially crush anyone — who stands in their daughters’ way.

“I feel that somebody needs to stand up for coaches,” Haney said. “If I don’t stand up and fight for the truth, then other coaches aren’t going to, either. I know if this can happen to me, I think it can happen to anyone.”"

 

ilovepaydays

Well-Known Member
Messages
13,253
So now Haney is gaslighting. Nice. 😒

It’s almost like Haney thinks she is entitled to be a gymnastics coach and train athletes who become champions. No, this is something you get to do and their parents are the ones paying you to do it. And there should be high standards for those who want to do it.

I have the same opinion about coaches that I do about other professions that work with minors like in education and clergy. I could rant a lot about what’s I’ve seen since I was a kid but that would make this post insanely long.
 

FiveRinger

Well-Known Member
Messages
8,174
I read the article and saw the video. Haney is quite the narcissist. She took no responsibility for any of what has happened. She’s not the victim. But the parents were just as disgusting as she is.

FYI, I don’t believe most of what was said. The parents weren’t allowed in the gym. So they have no idea how those kids were treated except for what they are told second hand. That was Haney’s policy. That was part of the problem. Haney might have had some witnesses to clear her had that rule not existed.

One other thing....there are 2 gymnasts suing her, one if them Riley McCusker. Why is Haney doing interviews?
 
Last edited:

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
It’s very telling that Haney and that crazy parent excusing such abuse have to think in binaries. Either we need the yelling and the abuse or we’ll get underachievers. Either coaches get to coach champions or they’ll just stay quiet out of fear of being sued. No in-between, no self-reflection, no other ways to make champions without the manipulations, shame, emotional games, and physical abuse (pushing though injuries, etc.).

Also, “if I want my daughter to come home smiling and happy every day, I’d send her to clown school”? Seriously? That dad has real issues. Also, was it his family where there’s screaming going on all the time? That’s not quite normal or healthy either. Parents buy into the con and excuse abuse then act surprised later on in life with the kids resent them as adults or how the abuse happened right under their noses.
 

mjb52

Well-Known Member
Messages
5,995
I think it's a good lesson for any of us who have maybe in the past thought that parental supervision is the answer to the abuse problem in sports - it's clear that not all parents see things as abusive that a lot of us see as abusive. There has to be a system in place that protects kids when the adults in their lives let them down. It's not enough to say, "but the parents are at the rink/in the gym" so everything must be fine.
 

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
I think it's a good lesson for any of us who have maybe in the past thought that parental supervision is the answer to the abuse problem in sports - it's clear that not all parents see things as abusive that a lot of us see as abusive. There has to be a system in place that protects kids when the adults in their lives let them down. It's not enough to say, "but the parents are at the rink/in the gym" so everything must be fine.

Agreed. Not to take a fictional tv show as something we should actually follow, but this reminds me of the Danish show "Rita" where the main character, a teacher, who is unconventional, confrontational, and abrasive, is reminded why she became a teacher in the first place...to protect kids from their parents.
 

Coco

Rotating while Russian!
Messages
18,536
I will say, complicating all of this is that it is hard to articulate what abuse is in the coach - minor athlete dynamic.

That lets Haney get away with this bullshit "I guess we have to be mediocre since I can't be 'intense.'"

Coaching teenagers and pre-teens in a high risk, extremely difficult sport is going to be a very intense experience for all involved. It doesn't have to be harmful. Heartbreaks about missed goals, competitive failures, being betrayed by your body through injury or growth, etc. are an unavoidable part of this life. The coach needs to figure out how to help the athlete navigate these challenges in a way that doesn't exacerbate them or leave permanent scars. But you can't avoid these disappointments and you can't avoid the intensity required to learn new gravity defying skills/combos.

But for !@#@#@# sake, disappointment, intensity, yelling, conflict...these things can happen in a non-abusive environment. Yes, it is extremely telling that Haney thinks her only options are the way she was and mediocrity. She is far from alone with this view. I see it in all walks of life.
 

danafan

Canadian ladies über
Messages
9,799
For those who post / used to post on GGMB (does it still exist?), Doc Marten passed away in October.

I’m so sorry to hear this. GGMB was reincarnated as gymscoop.com but I haven’t been there in a long time. Someone else told me there isn’t even a thread there about her death and that makes me sad. It was almost two months ago and I’m surprised I didn’t hear about it before now. Thanks for sharing this information here. I met her at 2003 worlds in Anaheim.
 

VGThuy

Well-Known Member
Messages
41,020
This is why it’s important for these hearing panels to follow proper procedures, so that these sort of technicalities don’t happen resulting in a reducing or even overthrow of a punishment.
 

FiveRinger

Well-Known Member
Messages
8,174
This is why it’s important for these hearing panels to follow proper procedures, so that these sort of technicalities don’t happen resulting in a reducing or even overthrow of a punishment.
It will be interesting to see what USAG does. I would hope that they would resubmit properly so that all victims can be heard. But they don't exactly have a reputation for doing the right thing.

Haney is hardly a victim. With reports that she's still training athletes, her lack of contrition, her admission that she knew about Nassar and didn't report it to the authorities, doesn't deserve to be a dog trainer, let alone the gymnastics coach of impressionable young girls. Reports are that McCusker's testimony is one that was rejected, but even without it, there is more than enough actual evidence to support a lifetime ban.

There are also reports that Haney and Victoria Levine have put their homes up for sale. Financial ruin is not enough of a price to pay. That's too easy. I'm still pissed that they haven't been brought up on criminal charges. If there are any legal eagles in the thread, based on what we know, is that even a possibility?
 

millyskate

Well-Known Member
Messages
16,732
It’s very telling that Haney and that crazy parent excusing such abuse have to think in binaries. Either we need the yelling and the abuse or we’ll get underachievers. Either coaches get to coach champions or they’ll just stay quiet out of fear of being sued. No in-between, no self-reflection, no other ways to make champions without the manipulations, shame, emotional games, and physical abuse (pushing though injuries, etc.).

Also, “if I want my daughter to come home smiling and happy every day, I’d send her to clown school”? Seriously? That dad has real issues. Also, was it his family where there’s screaming going on all the time? That’s not quite normal or healthy either. Parents buy into the con and excuse abuse then act surprised later on in life with the kids resent them as adults or how the abuse happened right under their noses.

I think it's a good lesson for any of us who have maybe in the past thought that parental supervision is the answer to the abuse problem in sports - it's clear that not all parents see things as abusive that a lot of us see as abusive. There has to be a system in place that protects kids when the adults in their lives let them down. It's not enough to say, "but the parents are at the rink/in the gym" so everything must be fine.
Yea, yes, yes.
For every abusive coach there's an enabling parent. I've been really frustrated at the refusal to address parental responsibility. People jump through all kinds of hoops to say "it's not the parents' fault" but it truly is, in part, just like it is in part the responsibility of fellow coaches / adults that didn't act sooner.
I understand why athletes resent pointing fingers at their parents. And I also understand that some parents are afraid of crushing their children's dreams by removing them from abusive environments. But that's their job. Not an easy one, but they're the parent.

It's not to say that in certain cases, when athletes are removed from the home to train in centers especially, abuse can't happen without their knowledge. But it's rare an abusive coach acts without at least some of the parents knowing.
 

dramagrrl

Well-Known Member
Messages
2,123
Maggie Haney is disgusting and the media should not be giving her a voice when she is under investigation, period.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread

Top
Do Not Sell My Personal Information