4 Responses to “How do you decide the diffuculty level in olympic gymnastics?”
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April 17th, 2008 at 12:10 am
Good luck, your dreams are over, stop now before you even want to try and make it to that level unless your a genetic freak already to support the training.
April 20th, 2008 at 7:51 am
it all depends on the elements…
say there are idk 20 skills in a 10.0 routine. everything is perfect. this is how you can get a 10.0
another scenario is iff you have say a 9.7 value. you do a difficult leap instead of a pivot turn. that could give you a 9.8 or so
all are not true, but examples
April 20th, 2008 at 12:23 pm
wtf that first guy is an idiot
all it takes is alot of practice and you DONT HAVE TO BE A FREAK
April 21st, 2008 at 5:35 am
Your question is a little bit off, let me explain, Difficulty in gymnastics is determined by skills that are in the routines. The code of points, which is found on the USAG website gives both a value and a category for each type of skill. By the time you get to level 10 in gymnastics, there is a set amount of skills that you have to fulfill in each of the category and you have to have a certain amount of difficulty. For example, the skills are valued Alphabetically: A, B, C, D, E, Super E. Skill values of A are really easy, whereas super E are rare to see. By the time you get to level 10, (hypotheically) you would need to have 3 C’s, 3 D’s 1 E versus a level 4 routine which may have only 5 A’s in it…