U.S. Gymnastics | U.S. Gymnastics Championships will return to Des Moines in 2022

2021-11-24 03:27:45 By : Mr. Frank Duan

Indianapolis, November 1, 2021-The American Gymnastics Championships will be held in 2022 at the Iowa Event Center in Des Moines. The competition will be held from June 21st to 26th and will span the facility’s main event center, Wells Fargo Arena and Hyway Hall. This annual event is a national championship for the development and elite level of American gymnastics, acrobatics, art, trampoline and tumbling. The last time it was held in the city was in 2019. "Our more than 1,500 athletes participated in the T&T discipline and participate in this combined national championship every year," said Stefanie Korepin, Chief Program Officer of American Gymnastics. "The U.S. Gymnastics Championships provides an opportunity for athletes competing at our level of athletic development to perform in the same space as Olympians and world champions. We can't wait to welcome them back to Des Moines in 2022." Apart from the decision. In addition to the 2022 national championships in acrobatics, rhythm, trampoline and tumbling, the performance of the US Gymnastics Championships will help determine the composition of the US national team. The event will also serve as the final of three T&T competitions for international selection in 2022. "We are very happy to once again welcome the United States Gymnastics Championships to be held in Des Moines in 2022," said Greg Edwards, President and CEO of Catch Des Moines. "We are very happy to work with the United States Gymnastics Association to provide some of the best athletes in the United States with first-class facilities, while demonstrating the vibrant subway we have in Greater Des Moines." The U.S. Gymnastics Championship was first held in 2014 at KFC Yum! Center and the Kentucky International Convention Center in Louisville, Kentucky. Past locations include the St. Louis Dome at the American Center (2021), Iowa Event Center (2019), Greensboro (North Carolina) Stadium Complex (2015, 2018), and the Rhode Island Conference Center and Dunkin' Donuts Center (2016), and BMO Harris Bradley Center and Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee (2017). For more information about the U.S. Gymnastics Championships, please visit usagymchamps.com. Regarding acrobatics, rhythm, trampoline and tumbling, acrobatics gymnastics combines the beauty of dance with the power and agility of acrobatics. Routines are arranged according to music, including dancing, tumbling, and partner skills. At the elite level, each pair or group performs routines of balance, dynamics, and combinations. Pyramid and partner retention are features of the balance program, while synchronized rolls and complex flight elements define dynamic exercises. A pair of acrobatic gymnastics consists of a base and a top. The women's group consists of three athletes, respectively serving in the three positions of base, middle and upper. The men's group consists of four athletes-one base and upper, with two gymnasts occupying the middle position. Rhythmic gymnastics is characterized by elegance, beauty and elegance, combined with dance and acrobatics elements, while using equipment in a routine program of musical arrangement. The five types of equipment used in rhythmic gymnastics are ropes, hoops, balls, clubs and ribbons. Rhythmic gymnasts can participate in the competition individually or as a team. The choreography must cover the entire floor, complicated equipment handling, dance combinations, jumping, jumping, rotating and balancing difficulties. Each action involves a high degree of motor skills. The physical capabilities required by rhythmic gymnasts include strength, explosiveness, flexibility, agility, dexterity, endurance, and hand-eye coordination. Rhythmic gymnastics individual all-around competition joined the Olympic Games in 1984 and joined the team competition in 1996. Twist somersault. Rolling utilizes elevated poles on the floor track, enabling athletes to jump and perform various acrobatics at heights of more than 10 feet. In a two-person mini-race, the athlete sprints, jumps on a small two-layer trampoline, maneuvers in the air, and then gets off the vehicle onto the landing pad. The trampoline event joined the Olympic Games in 2000.