Skip to main content

Viktoria Komova - I will be ready for the Rio Olympic Games. Interview with the Russian WAG team.

Aliya shows off the team#s patriotic manicure!  Picture courtesy of the RGF
Veronika has kindly translated two TV interviews with the Russian WAG team in Baku.  At the moment, the videos aren't available in the UK as they have been geoblocked, but I have provided the links below.

Now read on ...


Interview with Dmitry Zanin (correspondent).

A couple of years ago an interview with Aliya was a difficult test for a journalist, but now everything is quite different. 

- So was your job simply to win and nothing else?  Or just to compete with all your strength and show everything that you can do?

Aliya - Not at all, you can't set a target to win or to take first place - the task was the same for everyone.  We had to compete our programmes, perform well enough and then the result will follow. 

- How is your health, how much of your programme is ready, do you have pain?

Vika - No trouble or pain, I am about 70% ready.  It is hard to compete in an international arena after such a long time, unsettling, especially on beam.  My floor landings were not very confident.  I hope I will become more confident in future.

-  Many viewers will be surprised that you are already twenty years old - what do you think?

Vika - Well it seems only recently that I was a 15 year old at the YOG in Singapore, then 16 years old at the Olympic Games.  Time flies by very quickly. 

-  You had a difficult three years - injury, illness

Vika - Yes, it was very difficult.  I have recovered, but I did have injuries time and again.  I had to take two breaks over these three years. 

-  This year you missed the Russian Championships, the European Championships, and the preparation for these competitions.  Your long break from competition must have affected your performances - maybe you were overexcited!

Aliya - In my life I have experienced a long break from competition (my knee) so it isn't difficult for me now.  The hardest thing was vault.  I just raised my hand, made the vault, and everything became easier. 

-  You're very satisfied?

Vika - satisfied
Vika - I am satisfied that I have made my return to international competition.  Not everything turned out right, but I need to practice more, and get into better shape.

-  What are your plans for next year's Olympic Games?

Vika -  I will be ready.

-  You want to compete, do you have the strength?

Vika -  That's the reason I came back.

-  Your routines here - will they be your programme for Rio?

Aliya - I'll be doing different things on different apparatus - beam more or less the same, uneven bars I will add a little bit, vault, I will try the Amanar or learn something new.  My floor also will be better.

About Rio (second video)

Aliya - I really want to prepare and perform, I want to compete in Rio.  But after Rio, we will see; it depends on my health, my motivation.  After so many years in the sport, it's difficult. 

-  Lots of foreign journalists want to talk to you, will you learn English?

Aliya - No, not yet (laughs).  After training all I really want to do is sleep, I don't want to learn English.

-  How tall were you at the Olympics?

Vika - 150 cm

- and now?

Vika -  162 cm

-  How can you continue to do gymnastics when you have grown twelve centimetres? 

Vika - It's very difficult and painful.  I've had to redo all of my combinations all over again, especially on the bars.  That is a little bit difficult.  It's necessary to go back to the start again, but everything is very exciting for me, as usual. 

Seda Tutkhalyan with her gold medal on Monday.  You can just about see the manicure!

-  One of the smallest athletes is 142 cms.  So, let's talk about your manicure.

Seda - My mum suggested the manicure, it matches our leotards and the colour of the flag. 

-  Did you want that?

Seda  -  I didn't think about it, my mother suggested it (smile).

-  Were you nervous to be in the company of Olympic champions, at your first senior competition?

Seda -  Yesterday I was a little bit more worried, but I am used to it now.



Sportbox video link

Rossiya 2 video link

Hopefully, the videos will be posted on Youtube some time soon, so that we can view them as well as read Veronika's fab translations.

THANK YOU VERONIKA! 

Comments

  1. such a great pleasure to see Vika's phenomenal comeback:) Her fighting spirit especially on beam shows significant improvement from London! Go Vika:)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Remembering last summer - Nelli Kim, her judges and Viktoria Komova

In view of Nelli Kim's recent interview , Lupita and I thought it timely to revisit the performance of some of the WTC President's judges over past competitions ... this article from 27th August 2012 is reposted here, as a reminder. You will find a link to the FIG's newly published book of results at the Olympic Games here .  This year, they have broken down the judge's execution scores so you can see exactly how each judge evaluated the gymnasts' performances.  It makes for interesting reading - if only I had more time to analyse each judge's marking.  A skim reading already highlights multiple inconsistencies in individual judges' marks and makes you wonder why they bother with the jury at all. I have taken the time to look at the reference judges' scores for the top four in the women's all around.  The FIG explains here what their role is, and how they are selected.  I even used my calculator, which is a risky thing in my hands.  M

Andrei Rodionenko explains Russia's performance at Worlds - Lupitatranslates

Rodionenko with European Champion David Belyavski  Courtesy RGF/Elena Mikhailova This is the interview that many people on the internet have already commented on, regarding Andrei Rodionenko's alleged racism.  The original, Russian language version, appears on VTB Bank's website (VTB are sponsors of Russian gymnastics).  It takes cleverer people than me to decide what is racism, what is deliberately perjorative, and what is inferred in an interviewer's question.  For now, I will not comment on this, therefore, but I would ask you to read Lupita's translation carefully before you form your own opinion.   I am providing some links below which might help you to decide where you stand. Definition of racism Definition of sexism BBC Sport article by Matthew Syed : Is it wrong to note that 100m winners are always black?            Updated 24/10 CSKA Moscow: UEFA opens racist chants case             http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/24654499 Andrei

A changing of the guard

I certainly wasn't the only one who observed events in Rio yesterday.  And what a sad day, to see Romania fall out of contention for a team place in the Rio Olympics, so suddenly and so brutally after months of anticipation.  Although the team's performance was consistent with their result at the Glasgow World Championships, it was especially hard to hear how they fell at the very first hurdle, to read of the failures on bars, for so long a bugbear of the Romanian system.  After that, the team spirit was set and it was always going to be hard to lift them to more winning ways.   Romania's fate really echoes so much that has happened to Russia in recent years: an over reliance on a handful of star performers, many of them now injured and veteran; juniors difficult to transition to senior level responsibility; distinct technical weaknesses on one or two apparatus; and, for the Romanians especially, a volatile internal political situation resulting in frequent staffing changes

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more