Sunday 25 February 2018

Baby Swan Graduates: Viktoria Gorbatova and Viktoria Panchuk

The two Viktorias will share the same post, because neither of them is likely to make a huge splash as a senior. I think the two of them will keep competing at national level and maybe win some medals when everyone else is a disaster (à la another Viktoria we know, Trykina, to be precise), but won't be contenders for any major teams.

Viktoria Gorbatova (Виктория Горбатова) is from Khimki and represents the Central Federal Okrug. She shares the same coach with another Baby Swan Graduate, Angelina Simakova. They're both coached by Irina Kolobova. She was never the junior to watch, but she has trained with the national team since forever (probably partly thanks to her coach and her more famous teammate) and has even managed to scrape out quite a few medals during her junior career (on every event, too). She's a pretty balanced all arounder and clean and beautiful to watch everywhere. Her routines are simple, but well executed. To me her best event is bars. She has a basic Russian routine with all of the usual elements from a bunch of stalders and flighty shap half to a piked jaeger and it could be easily upgraded into the standard Russian high scoring routine, ignoring that double pike dismount. As I said before, she's usually nice and clean, but she showed up to the Voronin Cup looking like a mess on bars. I don't know if it was because of an injury or a growth spurt, or if she's just the average Russian mess who just likes being a mess, but ugh. Her beam is mostly simple, but clean and steady (let's again ignore the Voronin Cup) and the same goes with floor too. She a pretty poised gymnast on floor and it makes her look good, but unfortunately she's not that memorable. On vault she has an okay FTY.

Routines: VT|UB|BB|FX

Viktoria Panchuk (Виктория Панчук ) is from Dzerzhinsk and represents the Volga Federal Okrug. She is coached by L. Bolshakova.  Her junior career has been the most modest out of the new graduates and I'll have to admit that out of the two Viktorias, I always preferred Gorbatova. But now that I went back and watched a bunch of their routines, I'll have to admit that Panchuk actually showed great promise at some point. And interestingly, she competed as a Master of Sport (like most Russian promising juniors during their last junior years), while Gorbatova never made it out of the Candidate level. Weird, considering Gorbatova was much more successful. Then again, this would partly explain why Gorbatova was more successful... Never mind. Unfortunately Panchuk was out for all of last year, so her current status remains unknown and because Russia is Russia, she might forever be lost. I think she's good all around and doesn't really have a best event. She has some form issues on her basics and because of that, isn't the most elegant gymnast, but she did show definite improvement during the short time we actually saw her.

Routines: VT|UB|BB|FX

Friday 23 February 2018

The First One Bites the Dust

The competition season is nearing and Russian Nationals are just behind the corner, so naturally, injuries will start piling up. And the first victim happens to be one of the most important players, Elena Eremina. Earlier this week she made an announcement on instagram, she underwent a surgery to stabilize some of her lumbar vertebrae earlier in February. She won't be able to fully start training until August, which means that she's going to be out for the year.


I can't really think of a worse loss for the team. Lena single-handedly saved Russia's ass last year. We have a bunch of veterans returning this year, but they're wild cards at this point. So are the new seniors. And I don't really have that much hope for Angelina Melnikova to get her shit together.  Russia always manages to scrape by, so I'm really interested in seeing how. Or rather, who will fill the spot of their best all arounder, because now it's wide open. Again.

Oh, and in case you were wondering, yes, she went to Munich for the operation. Your regular pilgrimage to meet the sacred German Miracle Doctors then. You aren't really a senior member of the Russian National Team unless you have Munich Munchkin written on your resume. Or unless you have "back pain" attached to your name every time Valentina Rodionenko opens her mouth.

As for Lena, I hope that she makes a full recovery and return to gymnastics in 2019. I really don't want her to be a forgotten one-hit-wonder of a post-Olympic year. She's too good for that.

Tuesday 13 February 2018

New and Old Rules at the Gala


Aliya Mustafina, Angelina Melnikova and Daria Skrypnik performed at a gymnastics gala in France over the weekend. Apparently no one was interested in seeing poor Melka and Dasha, but we have a Periscope recording (with a quality of an old potato) of Aliya, because the Queen is not to be ignored.

I feel like screen recording another screen recording in order to post the routines here would be a bit too much, so I'm just posting the links this time. Here is her bars routine to New Rules by Dua Lipa and her beam routine, unfortunately without a sound.

We obviously have new rules on bars, because there's choreography! And old ones on beam, still no acro series. And I know the routines are just for exhibition purposes at a gala, but still. I'm actually really impressed about that bars routine. Her stamina is not there, which is expected at this point, but she still managed some good handstands and a dismount. The first half of the beam routine was pretty terrible, but she eventually seemed to get the hang of it. And she had a new element, a split ring jump.

The only footage I found of Melka is this one, but it's shot from far away. She fell on the layout, because she always falls on the layout (GET RID OF IT ALREADY), but the rest of the routine actually looks pretty good.

If someone has better footage, or anything from Dasha and Melka, let me know.

Thursday 8 February 2018

Throwback Thursday: Brighter than Gold

Just a teeny, tiny throwback to last summer and the European Youth Olympic Festival where my Baby Swan favorite Ksenia Klimenko competed like the champion she is. She won the all around and got gold on balance beam and floor exercise too, but finished second on bars, her best apparatus.

Buuuuuut... Look at her.


We can clearly see that Ksyusha is still the brightest star on that uneven bars podium. The brightest star with the brightest medal.

I can't even tell you why I love this picture so much. Maybe it's because the way this picture ended up is the kind of shit that only happens to Queen Aliya. So maybe it's a sign for great things to come for Ksyusha.

Wednesday 7 February 2018

Baby Swan Graduates: Valeria Saifulina

Valeria Saifulina (Валерия Сайфулина), or Lera, is from St. Petersburg and coached by the famous Kiryashovs. In case you were wondering, that makes her a teammate of Elena Eremina and Tatiana Nabieva, so she's in good company. She even shares many of the same characteristics of their gymnastics. A famous coach comes with great opportunities in Russia, so her junior career has been busy. Her national medals include 2015 silver in all around and vault, and bronze on floor exercise, 2016 bronze on vault and bars, and 2017 gold on vault. She missed out on the Junior European Championships, but has competed regularly in the smaller competitions, such as Gymnix. Last year she competed at the European Youth Olympic Festival, where she won gold with her team and individual gold on vault. When she's not busy competing and training (and a lot of the times when she is), she makes appearances on the St. Peterburg girls' YouTube channel.

Tuesday 6 February 2018

Round Lake Update: upgrades and injuries on beam

Russian Gymnastics Federation posted some training footage of the gymnasts on their instagram account. Most of it was obviously about their biggest start Aliya Mustafina, but we saw glimpses of Maria Kharenkova, Elena Eremina and Anastasia Ilyankova too. We even saw a few skills form Aliya and Masha, but the rest was only choreography and warm-ups.



Reykjavik International Games 2018

Last week Russia showed up at the first international meet of the season, Reykjavik International Games in Iceland. I'm really jealous, I would have loved to go to Iceland, even though my relationship with Eyjafjallajökull is highly problematic. As last year, they sent one senior and one very tiny junior, Ulyana Perebinosova and Nelli Audi, respectively. Ulya is now a second year senior who just returned to competition after spending most of her first year as a senior injured. Nelli is a 2005-born sensation who has spent the past few years posting her incredible skill set to YouTube. They both won the all around and a bunch of other medals, but I wouldn't get too excited, the field wasn't exactly deep.