PE PPT Group 2
PE PPT Group 2
PE PPT Group 2
EQUIPMENT IN GYMNASTICS
History of Gymnastics Equipment
The sport has its origins in ancient Greece, where young men
underwent intense physical and mental training for warfare. The word stems
from the Greek word gymnos, or “naked,”—appropriate, since the youths
trained in the nude, performing floor exercises, lifting weights, and racing one
another. (How ancient Greeks mixed naked sports with pagan partying.)
For the Greeks, exercise and learning went hand in hand. According to
sports historian R. Scott Kretchmar, the gyms where Greek youths trained
served as “hubs for scholarship and discovery”—community centers where
young people were educated in the physical and intellectual arts. Fourth-
century-B.C. Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote that “the education of the
body must precede that of the mind.”
EQUIPMENT IN
GYMNASTICS
Still Ring Beat Board
Bars Ball
Pommel Horse Hoop
Plane Ribbon
Safety Platform Clubs
Vault
I. Still Ring
Still Rings, also called still rings, gymnastics apparatus consisting of two small circles
that are suspended by straps from an overhead support and grasped by the gymnast while
performing various exercises. They were invented in the early 19th century by the German
Friedrich Jahn, known as the father of gymnastics. Competition on the rings requires the
most strength of any gymnastics event, although since the 1960s the trend in this
exclusively male competition has been toward a style of performance that emphasizes
swinging, somewhat diminishing the demand of strength. The rings have been part of the
gymnastics program in the Olympic Games since its modern revival in 1896.
Made of wood or metal, the rings are 28 mm (1.1 inches) thick and have an inside
diameter of 18 cm (7.1 inches). They are suspended by straps mounted 5.75 meters (18.8
feet) above the floor, the rings themselves hanging 2.5 meters (8.2 feet) above the floor
and 50 cm (19.7 inches) apart.
Competitive exercise on the rings must be performed with the rings in a
stationary position (without swinging or pendulum movement of the rings). It
combines swinging movements of the body, strength, and holding of positions.
There must be at least two handstands in an exercise, one attained by strength
and the other utilizing swing. Typical strength movements on the rings include
the cross, or iron cross (holding the body vertical with the arms fully stretched
sideways), and the lever (hanging with straight arms with the body stretched
out horizontally).
II. Bars
Diagonal Plane
Wrist straps, guards, and grips. Male gymnasts use these on the still rings, high bar, and parallel
bars and female gymnasts wear them on the uneven bars. They improve a gymnast's hold on the
apparatus and prevent blisters on the hands. Most grips consist of a piece of leather attached to a wrist
strap. Other options include wrapping the hands in sports tape or gauze. Gymnasts, especially beginners,
should use grips, tape, or gauze to protect their hands from blistering and tearing.
Footwear. Shoes for doing the vault usually have a reinforced toe to help absorb the pressure of landing.
Some gymnasts wear gymnastic shoes with rubber soles to protect against slipping while on the balance
beam.
Spotting belts. Spotting belts hook into cables that are attached to the ceiling. They support
gymnasts while they are learning a new move or practicing something difficult.
VI. Vaulting
Vaulting , gymnastics exercise in which the athlete leaps over a form that was originally intended to mimic a horse. At one time the
pommel horse (side horse) was used in the vaulting exercise, with the pommels (handles) removed. Later a cylindrical form made especially
for vaulting was used. The sanctioning body for gymnastic sport, the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG), decreed in 2001 that a
vaulting table would replace the horse. With its curved front, the vaulting table was designed for the greater safety of the gymnast In men’s
vaulting the horse was placed lengthwise, and the vaulting table is placed in that same position whether for men or for women. For men the height of the
apparatus is 1.35 metres (4.43 feet) measured from the floor.
VII. Reuther board
A Reuther board (also called a beat board), a special type of
springboard developed in Germany, is placed in front of the near end
of the apparatus.
VIII. Ball
The ball is an apparatus used in rhythm gymnastics. It is made of either
rubber or synthetic material (pliable plastic) provided it possesses the same
elasticity as rubber. It is 18 to 20 centimeters ( 7.1 to 7.9 in) in diameter and
must have a minimum weight of 400 grams ( 14 oz). The ball can be of any
colour. The ball should rest in the gymnasts hand and not rest against the
wrist or be able to be grasped.
Fundamental elements of a ball routine include throwing, bouncing or
rolling. The gymnast must use both hands and work on the whole floor area
whilst showing continuous flowing movement.
The ball is sometimes placed on their back while the gymnast does a
skill such as a walk over.
IV. Hoop
A hoop is an apparatus in rhythm gymnastics and may be made of tape
plastic or wood, provided that it retains its shape during the routine. The
interior diameter is from 51to 90 cm, and the hoop must weigh a minimum
of 300g. The hoop may be of a natural colour or be partially of fully covered
by one or several colours, and it may be covered with adhesive tape either
of the same or different colour as the hoop.