@@joshemo8653 slamming the pelvic region into the bars like that caused trauma to the uterus and ovaries. Many gymnasts had fertility issues after. There was also risk of trauma to the pelvic girdle itself.
@@victoriagrayson5082 Haha! You had me double checking to make sure that I puncuated correctly... I am far from an english major, but I try my best. Had me questioning if i needed a comma between "... Dangerous" and "that half...". Or should there be a comma? Ughhh
Her name was Olga Korbut and she was the first and last gymnast to do the Death loop, she created it also known as the Korbut flip, it got banned because of the hazards. It was for the Soviet Union, in 1973, she wasn’t even 18 yet
They're not banned. The body beats against the bar (whatever they were called) stopped being used because women started doing more of the skills men did and the bars were slowly moved further apart to where they are today. The Korbut Flip and other skills that involve standing on the bar were taken out of the code, not because they were dangerous, but because they interrupt the flow of the routine. You're supposed to keep moving now and not have any stops. The Korbut Flip is still allowed on the beam, but is relatively low value so no one really does it. And some of those skills are still done today, just maybe not at the level you'd see on TV because they're relatively easy.
@@beans666 kips, front hip circle, back hip circle and sole circle for sure, one could even make an argument that front hip circle cast handstand is relatively easy. I'm assuming you've not done much gymnastics or that you're on the men's side, since they train differently than the women (though gotta admit, I don't know what the men do at lower levels, but the difference in training and bar thickness is why he struggled with some of them.) But anyway, if you're not familiar with gymnastics, there are currently ten levels in the US plus Elite (so really eleven levels.) Elite is what you see on TV. Kips are used in level 4 bar routines but are being trained by level 2. Front hip circles are in the level 3 bar routine. Back hip circles are part of the level 1-4 bar routines. Sole circles are no longer compulsory in any of the bar routines, but can be done for the level 1 dismount and can be done as part of the level 4 and 5 routines, though I don't think anyone really opts for them all that much. Back when front hip circles were part of what is now the level 4 routine, coaches would regularly train them to a cast handstand, though most gymnasts couldn't hit it. I'm sure coaches are training that with level 3s today, though again most won't be able to hit the handstand without assistance. The combinations used in Korbut's routines make the skills more difficult, but a lot of them would be impossible today because the bars are so much further apart. However, I don't think it would be more than a level 7 routine today, in the extra difficulty it adds. 1970s routines on the other events are roughly equivalent to level 6-7 routines, especially routines from the early 1970s (this routine was from 1972).
@@AdeleiTeillana as I don't do gymnastics, your assumptions are correct. It looks difficult to me, but I guess for someone that's already in the sport, maybe it doesn't seem as intimidating?
@@user-zj2ug6wd1z She certainly make it look easy. I can't even imagine those movements to be possible, yet she does it seamlessly. Clearly show how she mastered the art.
This performance by Olga Korbut should have been the first perfect ten in Women's Gymnastics. I was really young when this aired, but I remember that people in the audience were genuinely pissed that she wasn't awarded that score.
@@derangedlazyartistso, in this case the reason why so many moves of this routine are banned is due to the the slamming of the pelvic region on the bar. This caused trauma to the pelvic area and it also effect the ovaries and uterus of the female gymnasts that would perform the moves that involved hips slamming the bars. Many of the gymnast in that era had fertility issues due to those moves.
She also took a lot of shit from people when she revealed the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her coach, but her willingness to talk publicly about it gave other gymnasts the courage to talk about how they were also abused by him. Olga's a really brave woman.
@@DreamPhreak She won four gold in 1972. Two team gold and two individual gold (Balance beam and floor). She still managed to win the silver on the uneven bars. Even though she did not win the gold, she's remembered for that routine and nobody remembers the one who won the gold.
That girl had the best routine I have ever seen. I feel like a lot of routines now are repetitive and predictable but that was amazing! Good job trying to recreate it.
That was Russian gymnast Olga Korbut. I watched that live on TV in 1972. It was absolutely incredible. She won the gold for that. Her moves had never been seen before. People discussed her performance for years and years. 32 years later, when I had my own daughter, Olga was in my city and offering her services as a private coach at $150 per lesson. That was in about 2004. She told my daughter that she had to quit ballet lessons and competitive cheerleading and only focus on gymnastics! Olga changed the world of gymnastics with her feat.
She is not Russian, she is Belarussian - different country that was a party of Soviyet Union. Nowadays Russia often takes credit for athletes and performers who were born in Ukraine and Belarus, so it's important to double check.
@@KermitB_1815 yeah, technically you could say that she was a Soviyet gymnast. But there is just a little thing that pisses off a lot of former Soviyet republics' citizens - it's a common thing when achievements of not-Russian outstanding Soviet people (athletes, writers, performers, etc) get counted as Russian achievements and used to inflate their national pride. We really don't like it, since it basically erases us and the sweat and blood of our talented people. Sometimes people do it non intentionally and just by honest mistake, so we correct them to avoid the spread of misinformation. It's like when some Russian say that they won WW2, but it was won by efforts of *all* soviyet republics *and* western allies, but because Russian are so vocal about it being them and people outside of former USSSR being not knowledgeable about it's geography, everyone believes it.
If you wanted to know she was one of the last people to ever do that exact routine because it was banned because of how dangerous it was Sorry to be that person but tysm for the likes >:3
@@poisonpotato1 one of the moves in the routine if I recall correctly is called the death loop or smth like that. And a lot of people who attempted that move and others in that routine where injured.
Most of these Olga Korbut elements are banned now because she was the only one that was able to perform them & they were too dangerous to even try and learn. As for guys, um, well there are a few anatomical reasons men and women's routines are slightly different.😂
That loop is called by her last name Korbut loop . Very complicated and dangerous element. And yeah, it is banned As you can tell it is more difficult than a death loop. It includes death loop though
For the record, the bars were closer together in those days. A lot of those sorts of moves were no longer considered safe enough to be performed after the bars got farther apart. Great go at it, tho, dude.
Olga Valentinovna Korbut (born 16 May 1955) is a former gymnast who competed for the Soviet Union. Nicknamed the "Sparrow from Minsk", she won four gold medals and two silver medals at the Summer Olympic Games, in which she competed in 1972 and 1976 for the Soviet team
@Alfie Men who train flexibility have the same flexibility that women who train flexibility have. No difference in capacity. The reason why women, on average, might be more flexible than men, is because 1) women have less muscle mass and 2) women train flexibility more/men train things that tightens the body more. So no, it has nothing to do with women outperforming men, but rather men outperforming women - just like in every single other sport in the world. But gymnastics made a smart move in differentiating men's and women's gymnastics, having men's focus more on strength and pure skill while women's focus more on flexibility, grace, rhythm and artistic expression in general. That makes women's gymnastics something a 'different sport' instead of just being a worse version of men's gymnastics.
@Alfie "perform better in sports [...] so do women [in] Gymnastics, Ballet & Ice Skating" Women don't perform better in those sports. In gymnastics, for instance, men do much, much more difficult skills than the women do. Not to mention the fact that men do events (rings and pommel horse, for instance) that women wouldn't even be able to do the most basic skills in. If women and men competed against each other in gymnastics (women's or men's), men would win every time and women would lose every time. Just like in every other sport. That's just the reality. And that's why men and women don't compete against each other on sports.
@Alfie On average, sure. But professional athletes are specifically not average. At this level, the only difference is specialized training. An average woman would fall well behind a trained man in "women's" sports, and an average man would fall well behind a trained woman in "men's" sports.
The fact that the routine is from 1972 Olympics, and Is still probably the best if not one of the best routines ever IMO. for context, the "death loop" trick was made illegal very soon after this. If I'm not mistaken, young ladies were trying to learn this move, and weren't quite capable, and alot were getting severely injured. Quickly making this an illegal move in gymnastics competition. ( I'm fairly sure about this but don't shoot me if I'm a little off in my explanation. It is the closest I got from memory. And it isn't gunna be too far off. )
I love seeing the difference between men's and women's gymnastics, how they both play on the different natural strengths and just how difficult it actually is. Really goes to show that women's gymnastics isn't "easier" than men's, just focusing on a different skillset
It’s called a Korbut flip, Olga the gymnast in the video was the creator of that entire routine/that loop in particular, as the inventor and performer she was the only one ever able to perform it in public at the Olympics. It was the first and last time ever displayed and done by anyone. And after her performance they’d create new rules, change the bar distances and ban it from competitions She also was given a 9.8 out of 10 for that routine, even if it was a once in a life time event that caused the official rules to change
Back in the 70-80s, the uneven bars were closer together. They moved them apart due to her routine. He is struggling because he didn't change the distance back to how she had it
Yo damn the grace and elegance of that gymnast had me mesmerized. Nonetheless that was a pretty great try Ian
And the female athlrte was good too i guess
@@givebackmybreadsticks oh damn, they even banned it 💀💀
Nah she went off
@@Joemama-rx5bt well a lot of the skills in that routine are simply impossible today with how much the equipment has changed.
@@hexa3171 ahh i see, makes sense
Half of that routine is illegal now, and the bars are farther apart. 👀
Why
@@joshemo8653 slamming the pelvic region into the bars like that caused trauma to the uterus and ovaries. Many gymnasts had fertility issues after.
There was also risk of trauma to the pelvic girdle itself.
I could have gone the rest of my life without that specific memory returning. At 9 I asked my mom if it was possible to bruise the bone. 😢😮❤
everyday we bars the i go home w bruises on my hips😊
@@joshemo8653 idk maybe for the same reason it has DEATH in the name
All hail Olga-- over 50 years later, her awesomeness on bars still can't be beat!
One of the best routines of all time. So absolutely dangerous that half of what she did is banned.
Well it can't be beat because most of these moves were banned. Also the bars were closer back then than they are today.
*All hail Olga! Over 50 years later, her awesomeness on uneven bars still can't be beaten!
Good punctuation.@@alienhead2020
@@victoriagrayson5082 Haha! You had me double checking to make sure that I puncuated correctly... I am far from an english major, but I try my best. Had me questioning if i needed a comma between "... Dangerous" and "that half...". Or should there be a comma? Ughhh
That girl was doing what the judges literally wished they could do.
That woman was made outta rubber
Im proud of her, she was from my country's ancestor i think
It's Olga Korbut
Not even luffy could do this
She was actually a child when she performed this routine. Quite amazing.
Her name was Olga Korbut and she was the first and last gymnast to do the Death loop, she created it also known as the Korbut flip, it got banned because of the hazards. It was for the Soviet Union, in 1973, she wasn’t even 18 yet
“Death pool” for men should be called “ball finisher”
Loop not pool
Hahahaha!🤣🤣🤣🤣
LMAOOO
It's like the final boss at the end of the game
"The nut cracker"
@@mrgoat8853 even better 😆
Did you know:
The death loop is now banned in gymnastics for being to dangerous.
..... 💀
THATS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS GOING TO SAY
No,it because the standard change so perform it will be super dangerous
One of the most beautiful routines in all of gymnastics imo
This is why most of those skills are BANNED 😂
They're not banned. The body beats against the bar (whatever they were called) stopped being used because women started doing more of the skills men did and the bars were slowly moved further apart to where they are today. The Korbut Flip and other skills that involve standing on the bar were taken out of the code, not because they were dangerous, but because they interrupt the flow of the routine. You're supposed to keep moving now and not have any stops. The Korbut Flip is still allowed on the beam, but is relatively low value so no one really does it. And some of those skills are still done today, just maybe not at the level you'd see on TV because they're relatively easy.
@@AdeleiTeillanawhich of the skills are "relatively easy"
@@beans666 kips, front hip circle, back hip circle and sole circle for sure, one could even make an argument that front hip circle cast handstand is relatively easy. I'm assuming you've not done much gymnastics or that you're on the men's side, since they train differently than the women (though gotta admit, I don't know what the men do at lower levels, but the difference in training and bar thickness is why he struggled with some of them.) But anyway, if you're not familiar with gymnastics, there are currently ten levels in the US plus Elite (so really eleven levels.) Elite is what you see on TV.
Kips are used in level 4 bar routines but are being trained by level 2. Front hip circles are in the level 3 bar routine. Back hip circles are part of the level 1-4 bar routines. Sole circles are no longer compulsory in any of the bar routines, but can be done for the level 1 dismount and can be done as part of the level 4 and 5 routines, though I don't think anyone really opts for them all that much. Back when front hip circles were part of what is now the level 4 routine, coaches would regularly train them to a cast handstand, though most gymnasts couldn't hit it. I'm sure coaches are training that with level 3s today, though again most won't be able to hit the handstand without assistance.
The combinations used in Korbut's routines make the skills more difficult, but a lot of them would be impossible today because the bars are so much further apart. However, I don't think it would be more than a level 7 routine today, in the extra difficulty it adds. 1970s routines on the other events are roughly equivalent to level 6-7 routines, especially routines from the early 1970s (this routine was from 1972).
@@AdeleiTeillana as I don't do gymnastics, your assumptions are correct. It looks difficult to me, but I guess for someone that's already in the sport, maybe it doesn't seem as intimidating?
@@AdeleiTeillana the Korbut flip is 100% banned for women on bars for more reason than just standing on bars
The best ist that she made that look so efforless, smooth, and easy 😂
Such grace. I can't even comprehend
That looks effortless, smooth but not easy at all hahahaha
Found a German
@@user-zj2ug6wd1z She certainly make it look easy. I can't even imagine those movements to be possible, yet she does it seamlessly. Clearly show how she mastered the art.
@@pepega3344 haha my thoughts as well 😁
That backflip into a grab was the craziest thing I have ever seen in gymnastics...unbelievable routine from start to finish..
She made it look sooo effortlessly
This performance by Olga Korbut should have been the first perfect ten in Women's Gymnastics. I was really young when this aired, but I remember that people in the audience were genuinely pissed that she wasn't awarded that score.
YES! It was also almost shocking how Nadia so strongly overshadowed her in Montreal in 1976, though 2 medals is nothing to sneeze at.
@@ChristineKrannich Nadia was that good? This makes Romanian me happy
@@Mrncgntu yup
@@Mrncgntu Nadia received first perfect score. 10
Didn't they ban most of the routine right after this.
The deathloop bro saw his life literally flash before his eyes
Fr
His life and the thousand generation after him
That part looks like cgi
his little bros too
Imagine his toes and how absolutely ripe and sweaty and stinky they are
The death loop is INSANE! That thing has to be a forbidden jutsu
Her skills are banned in a lot of gyms 😮
yeah, that’s sadly how sports work. any dominant technique/strategy gets banned.
@@derangedlazyartistso, in this case the reason why so many moves of this routine are banned is due to the the slamming of the pelvic region on the bar. This caused trauma to the pelvic area and it also effect the ovaries and uterus of the female gymnasts that would perform the moves that involved hips slamming the bars. Many of the gymnast in that era had fertility issues due to those moves.
@@AshJ_56if only the guys had done it first, ya know?
Olga Korbut a sensation to the gymnastics community
The first televized backflip in Munch 72 revolutionized gymnastics... one of the most iconic moments for the sport.
She also took a lot of shit from people when she revealed the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her coach, but her willingness to talk publicly about it gave other gymnasts the courage to talk about how they were also abused by him. Olga's a really brave woman.
@@ArtGirl82 that's horrible :0
Olga Korbut and Nadia Comăneci were absolutely amazing gymnasts! The best of the best! 🥇👍
olga korbut was one of my favorite gymnasts ever, her grace and talent will always be remembered.
This is Olga Korbut, one of the best gymnasts of all time. I think there will never be a second one like this❤
Well it's a little hard because a lot of her moves have been banned.
You know back then the bars were closer than right now
Yeah, but still incredibly impressive
He probably would have moved them closer if he could
Yeah they actually just used the same bars as the mens p-bars but with one raised up higher
Aren't the bars set according to the athlete height? Men set parallel bars as they want (width, height).
No, the gymnasts can adjust the bars for their heights
Back then the bars were closer. They're now further apart cause that routine is banned because there was high chance of serious injury
That's what I heard
They afraid of success
@@SofiamilkyHAH
Olga Korbut is barely 5 feet tall. Ian is 5'7''. I think that makes up for difference in the distance between bars.
the routine is not banned,only the death loop is banned
Soooo many things could have resulted in massive injury. She really did give the middle finger to that routine
Right
My toxic trait is thinking I could do this 💀
with a routine like that, she better have won
If I remember well, she did not. She was not the favourite Russian in the competition.
@@SLam-ve3yp That such a shame ,her performance was perfect
Her name is Olga Korbut, she won 3 gold medals, but the dead loop was banned and they also said it was illegal to stand on top of the bar
@@DreamPhreak She won four gold in 1972. Two team gold and two individual gold (Balance beam and floor). She still managed to win the silver on the uneven bars. Even though she did not win the gold, she's remembered for that routine and nobody remembers the one who won the gold.
@@julielynch6319 Was she better than Olga? How did she top THAT performance?!
Her routine was so good they banned it 🤣😂
🤣
That girl had the best routine I have ever seen. I feel like a lot of routines now are repetitive and predictable but that was amazing! Good job trying to recreate it.
These gymnasts ain't human dawg. How tf can u do the death loop without failing
That was Russian gymnast Olga Korbut. I watched that live on TV in 1972. It was absolutely incredible. She won the gold for that. Her moves had never been seen before. People discussed her performance for years and years. 32 years later, when I had my own daughter, Olga was in my city and offering her services as a private coach at $150 per lesson. That was in about 2004. She told my daughter that she had to quit ballet lessons and competitive cheerleading and only focus on gymnastics! Olga changed the world of gymnastics with her feat.
она из Беларуси.
хоть некоторые беларусы считают себя русскими, но у них своя идентичность
She is not Russian, she is Belarussian - different country that was a party of Soviyet Union. Nowadays Russia often takes credit for athletes and performers who were born in Ukraine and Belarus, so it's important to double check.
@@tameriz1280 Ig he meant Soviet union because at that time Belarus was a part of it, wasn't it?
@@KermitB_1815 yeah, technically you could say that she was a Soviyet gymnast. But there is just a little thing that pisses off a lot of former Soviyet republics' citizens - it's a common thing when achievements of not-Russian outstanding Soviet people (athletes, writers, performers, etc) get counted as Russian achievements and used to inflate their national pride. We really don't like it, since it basically erases us and the sweat and blood of our talented people. Sometimes people do it non intentionally and just by honest mistake, so we correct them to avoid the spread of misinformation. It's like when some Russian say that they won WW2, but it was won by efforts of *all* soviyet republics *and* western allies, but because Russian are so vocal about it being them and people outside of former USSSR being not knowledgeable about it's geography, everyone believes it.
@@tameriz1280 ok
In the next video, Ian will already be doing rhythmic gymnastics 😄👌
YES!!!
I CANNOT
Her skills are amazing and out of this world how fluid
her story is unbelievably tragic
Olga Korbut was an INSANELY talented gymnast. Also the “death loop” is the only part of this routine that’s banned.
The fact that they banned this routine after she done it is something. I wonder what her score was
I heard it was banned because it is very dangerous for the athletes
This was the only performance in the sport's history that got a 10 all across the board, actually
@@mateozanone7216 why do you lie?
@@brianbouf8303 no I was there its trus
@@mateozanone7216t SHOULD have been, and so many people were outraged that it wasn't. But no, it wasn't a 10.
Funny part it, the guy is actually quite good.
She's just another level
Smaller body can do crazier stuff.
Also it's a sport he's never trained in. Your comparing the best performance of her life with his literal first try
I think Olga Korbut would be proud!
This routine is actually banned in womens gymnastics now
Yeah. Famous Korbut flip
Olga Korbut was absolute perfection.
If you wanted to know she was one of the last people to ever do that exact routine because it was banned because of how dangerous it was
Sorry to be that person but tysm for the likes >:3
What made it dangerous
@@poisonpotato1 one of the moves in the routine if I recall correctly is called the death loop or smth like that. And a lot of people who attempted that move and others in that routine where injured.
@@Kermit_64 it's not true. It was banned due to bars standards change. It's not really dangerous element if you have some practice of it
@@poisonpotato1 I think you can tell just by looking.
I was just about to write thatttt, it's such a crazy routine and tbh, good it's banned 😶
WTF THATS WILD!! She’s cracked!!💖💖 that was so cool!!
Most of these Olga Korbut elements are banned now because she was the only one that was able to perform them & they were too dangerous to even try and learn. As for guys, um, well there are a few anatomical reasons men and women's routines are slightly different.😂
"I tried this famous women's gymnastics routine"
Him in the background: "AUHH"
Oh Ian!😂 I’m a female gymnast and I can’t do that no matter the practice
woah I wanted to do gymnastics but I lost hope
That loop is called by her last name
Korbut loop . Very complicated and dangerous element. And yeah, it is banned
As you can tell it is more difficult than a death loop. It includes death loop though
That is Olga Korbut. Comparing mortal men to her is luke comparing yourself to Wonder Woman!
this is a balls crushers technique
You know that that routine was actually banned after that comp 🤣😃
Her routine was fucccin insane
For the record, the bars were closer together in those days. A lot of those sorts of moves were no longer considered safe enough to be performed after the bars got farther apart. Great go at it, tho, dude.
The thing where the girl literally bounces off of one bar to the other with just her pelvis always kills me 💀 It looks so painful!!
It is!
Guys should just call this routine the “hope your not planning on having kids”
This just shows that not one (men or women) gymnastics is easier or harder. They each have difficulties. ✨
And I love it too because men’s gymnastics highlights men’s strengths, and women’s highlights women’s strengths.
The woman's name should be mentioned. She's amazing.
Agreed, I’ve seen this routine before and it’s absolutely stunning
Dude said : I'm not risking my children for this "
Gotta agree that gymnastics, whether it's men's or women's, it's damn difficult 💀
Olga Valentinovna Korbut (born 16 May 1955) is a former gymnast who competed for the Soviet Union. Nicknamed the "Sparrow from Minsk", she won four gold medals and two silver medals at the Summer Olympic Games, in which she competed in 1972 and 1976 for the Soviet team
That woman is Amazing. Holy damn. Never seen something like that. Incredible.
The fact that she was 17 at the time
So at her physical peak?
@@miriamweller812 I don't think that's good 😟
@@dreadnaught1445 ?
@@puppydogface2333 idk. Saying that someone was on their prime when they were still on development sounds bad.
"The "death loop"
My anxiety:✈️
dude she was 17 n a BEAST AT BARS she blew away EVERYONE WITH THESE MOVES lol a for effort
That’s amazing of that women! She has such talent for doing that.
I think thats why men and womens gymnastics is different most of the time because of the difference in size flexibility and sometimes even strength
@Alfie 🥺
It's different because women don't have the strength and power to do what the men do.
@Alfie
Men who train flexibility have the same flexibility that women who train flexibility have. No difference in capacity.
The reason why women, on average, might be more flexible than men, is because 1) women have less muscle mass and 2) women train flexibility more/men train things that tightens the body more.
So no, it has nothing to do with women outperforming men, but rather men outperforming women - just like in every single other sport in the world.
But gymnastics made a smart move in differentiating men's and women's gymnastics, having men's focus more on strength and pure skill while women's focus more on flexibility, grace, rhythm and artistic expression in general. That makes women's gymnastics something a 'different sport' instead of just being a worse version of men's gymnastics.
@Alfie
"perform better in sports [...] so do women [in] Gymnastics, Ballet & Ice Skating"
Women don't perform better in those sports. In gymnastics, for instance, men do much, much more difficult skills than the women do. Not to mention the fact that men do events (rings and pommel horse, for instance) that women wouldn't even be able to do the most basic skills in. If women and men competed against each other in gymnastics (women's or men's), men would win every time and women would lose every time. Just like in every other sport. That's just the reality. And that's why men and women don't compete against each other on sports.
@Alfie On average, sure. But professional athletes are specifically not average. At this level, the only difference is specialized training. An average woman would fall well behind a trained man in "women's" sports, and an average man would fall well behind a trained woman in "men's" sports.
It’s called the Korbut flip and I love how you called it death loop 😂
this is by far the best routine i’ve ever seen,
absolutely gorgeous. oh and the female gymnast was good too i guess.
Dude saw the Death Loop and said "Nah, she built different, I'm built incorrectly."
🤣🤣🤣🤣
She looked like she was going in reverse. Couldn't tell if it was closer to flying or swimming. Incredible
The fact that the routine is from 1972 Olympics, and Is still probably the best if not one of the best routines ever IMO.
for context, the "death loop" trick was made illegal very soon after this. If I'm not mistaken, young ladies were trying to learn this move, and weren't quite capable, and alot were getting severely injured. Quickly making this an illegal move in gymnastics competition.
( I'm fairly sure about this but don't shoot me if I'm a little off in my explanation. It is the closest I got from memory. And it isn't gunna be too far off. )
Fun fact: the death loop is actually banned in competitive gymnastics now because it’s so incredibly dangerous
love how the ladies make it look so effortless! You show us the reality!
I love seeing the difference between men's and women's gymnastics, how they both play on the different natural strengths and just how difficult it actually is. Really goes to show that women's gymnastics isn't "easier" than men's, just focusing on a different skillset
that routine is actually banned because of how dangerous it was
That is wild, looks painful too
“Whatever this is “ got me 😅😅😅😅😅😅
That move is called “death” something or other, she was the first and last person to perform it at a competition because of how dangerous it is
Да! "Петля Корбут" запрещена для исполнения. Это опасно. Ольга Корбут - гениальная гимнастка.
@@elenateplicky840там не из-за опасности её запретили, а потому, что правилами запрещено стоять(и прыгать) ногами на брусьях.
@@valeriapavina1963 не мне Вам что-то доказывать. Прочитайте хотя бы Википедию.
This will always be impossible for men for one simple reason: it'll crush our balls 😂
That death loop stunt😱😱
Men and women gymnastics truly are amazing in their own unique ways
There's no one who can do Ms corbuts routine BUT Ms corbut
Olga Korbut truly renovated the sport into what it is today. Before her gymnastics was a very different sport.
Bro someone forget to tell that lady she's human 💀
If i'm not mistaken, the death loop was actually prohibited right after she did it in that tournament, so she's the last person that did that trick
It’s called a Korbut flip, Olga the gymnast in the video was the creator of that entire routine/that loop in particular, as the inventor and performer she was the only one ever able to perform it in public at the Olympics. It was the first and last time ever displayed and done by anyone. And after her performance they’d create new rules, change the bar distances and ban it from competitions
She also was given a 9.8 out of 10 for that routine, even if it was a once in a life time event that caused the official rules to change
@@arianaink100 seems i was mistaken lol
Ian doesn't stretch and it shows 😂
It's not a routine, it's a forbidden move after this woman
“The death loop” I CANT 🤣🤣🤣🤣💀😭
That’s the best routine I’ve ever seen in my life.
Before the bars were closer to each other but now they are further away from each other so thats why it was too far away for u :)
Ok the little yell at the beginning was amazing lol
Nah bro, even if I saw that in person I wouldn't believe my eyes and be thinking that it's CGI 😂
That is an insane routine
Back in the 70-80s, the uneven bars were closer together. They moved them apart due to her routine. He is struggling because he didn't change the distance back to how she had it
The ladies make it look so easy.
She is so talented o can't believe that someone can do that
I could watch the Olga Korbut routine all day. It’s so clean and perfectly executed. She really did an amazing job, especially at such a young age.
Bro was like: Nope, not killing my future generations for this shit 🤣
Big difference between flinging 90lbs and 160lbs around those bars
What’s the name of the original gymnast?? That’s beast mode right there 😂
It's Olga Korbut
That death loop was crazy looking
Olga was the only person capable of pulling this very dangerous routine off. They banned the routine afterwards
The way she moves is mesmerizing.
That woman is incredible
Легенда СССР 💯💯💯🚩🚩🚩👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻😊