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                        |  The 
                          1970s - The Magyar Years | 
                       
                     
                   
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                    Zoltan Magyar 
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                   Hungarian pommel 
                    horse virtuoso Zoltan Magyar 
                    heavily contributed to the development of pommel horse work 
                    Further structural improvements to the horse facilitated these 
                    developments.   
                  It would take a few more years 
                    for the old name "side horse" to make way for "pommel 
                    horse". The "Magyar spindle" is to this day 
                    a specifically Hungarian element of the highest difficulty 
                    which is rarely shown.   
                  The innovation of the Thomas 
                    flairs, which had actually been performed by Canadian Delesalle 
                    before Kurt Thomas 
                    (USA) at the 1976 Olympics, was a sensation. Soon, gymnasts 
                    started constructing entire routines from this type of elements, 
                    forcing the FIG's technical committee to put a stop to this 
                    by changing the code of points. 
                     
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              | The 
                1980s -cultivation of the Thomas flairs | 
             
           
         
        Gymnasts 
          used Thomas flairs in any possible variation in their routines. Combined 
          with handstands, turns in handstand, they still remain one of the most 
          common dismount combinations to this day.   
         
          
             
              
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                  Swings 
                  in the straddled position were brought to handstand by most 
                  gymnasts in the early 1980s. 
                   Li Ning showed a spectacular 
                  front scissor with ¼ turn. But fear of possibly pausing in handstand 
                  and the ensuing deductions stood in the way of an inflation 
                  of such elements.
              
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              | The 
                1990s spindles with turns | 
             
           
         
        The 
          first half of the 1990s was marked by the flaired spindles with 1/2 
          turns and the full spindle in one or two circles. These were missing 
          from hardly any top routine. Gymnasts began showing various support 
          positions on the apparatus.    
          When 
          these elements were downgraded, they disappeared from most routines. 
            
         
          
             
               
                
                   
                    
                       
                        | A 
                          new millennium of gymnastics no more flops | 
                       
                     
                   
                  The 
                    new rules no longer allow the endless combinations of bonus 
                    elements, like the "quadruple flop" which generated 
                    0,6 in bonus alone. Only one flop is allowed now (immediate 
                    Stoeckli B on one pommel, 0,2 in bonus). The maximum bonus 
                    for this is now 0,3 (instead of the previous 1,1 pts). 
                      
                
                Autor: Heinz Neumann, 
                  Potsdam; 
                  (Bearbeitung und Gestaltung:  E.Herholz, GYMmedia)
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                    Marius Urzica - the "pommel 
                    artist" of the Nineties.
                
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