Thursday, June 14, 2012

Off Balance: A Review




If gymnastics were US Weekly, it is without a doubt that life and times of Dominique Moceanu would've been splashed across its covers more than any other gymnast of her generation (and perhaps, ever.) Talented, beautiful, charismatic and coached by Bela Karolyi, Dominique Moceanu had it all. She is also gutsy, opinionated and speaking out in her new memoir Off Balance.

The memoir, just 256 pages of it, had the potential to be one of the greatest sports memoirs of all time. It will not go down on par with Andre Agassi's revealing book, but the memoir is a candid and worthy read. Given the intense emotional nature of the book, I would not recommend having it be a fun beach read unless you prefer to read it with a glass of wine (and box of tissues for some.)


Dominique Moceanu's life was planned by her father Dmitru. She didn't have a choice. Given their Romanian heritage, only one coach was ever good enough: Bela Karolyi. Dominique has been publicly critical of the Karolyi system ever since they denied her entry to the 2006 VISA Championships, but the feelings stem from so much more. As Dominique has slowly revealed in interviews over time, the Karolyis were only her coaches for brief periods during her career: December 1991-Barcelona and June/July 1995-August 1996 with a brief few months in early 1997. The pervasive attitude in the media (as voiced by Christine Brennan and Bryant Gumball) is that Dominique got to be where she is due to the Karolyis and keep her mouth shut about the methods used to get there because the end justifies the means. This notion is a bit skewed: the mainstream media is not aware that Bela Karolyi has a limited technical knowledge of the sport of gymnastics. His gifts lie in physical preparation, conditioning, managing, polishing and packaging.

There is a different look to Dominique Moceanu's gymnastics than the stronger, more powerful likes of Retton, Zmeskal, Strug, Grivich and Durham. There is a reason for this: Alexandr Aleandrov was responsible from taking Dominique from a new junior international elite to a national champion. The style and technique Dominique displayed in her tumbling, on vault, on bars and in her skills and series on beam is a direct result of this influence. Martha Karolyi did not put the same beam elements in the routines of her other gymnasts because she didn't teach them. I was taken aback when Dominique told me this during an interview I did with her in 2007. I wondered if she was just suffering from sour grapes. What I did find was that Alexandrov was indeed there and Martha's typical routine constuction supports this claim. One look at the Six Pack and one will find that Martha's beam routines involved: a series (back handspring to two layouts), leap series, high light skills (standing layout stepout to one foot for Grivich, back pike to two feet for Zmeskal and full twisting swing down for Stokes), and a dismount. It is even possible that these skills were taught by other coaches during private lessons. (This also destroys the The fact that the head coach of the '92 Soviet Team was employed and coached there had a little something to do with it.) Dominique's variations of back dive ¼ to handstand, back handspring to three layout stepouts, full twisting double layout off bars, full twisiting double layout, etc were all skills being performed regularly by the 1992 Soviet Team. Alexandrov also taught her a double front, a very popular Soviet skill, which Dominique was too injured to perform in the Atlanta Olympics.

One of the greatest revelations made by Dominique Moceanu is that the Karolyis never thought much of her or her family. They were poor immigrant pawns to be disposed of. It is also clear that the Karolyis have disdain for her, but it isn't clear why until you break it down.

  1. Dominique did not win in Atlanta. She had the meet of her life in the team event up until vault but lost. Had she won, Dominique may have become one of the richest child stars in history. In their eyes, she failed them by her lack of individual success.
  2. The Karolyis injured Dominique in the same manner (and injury) that they did to Kim Zmeskal four years earlier. They don't hate Kim, but she won a number of big meets for them over the years. Dominique was too injured to win the 1996 National Championships and too injured to compete at the 1996 American Cup and 1996 Olympic Trials. When she was coached by their biggest peer rival, Alexandrov—still Martha's biggest rival, she was on top of the sport and on track to be the Nadia of Atlanta. When they fired Alexandrov to take the spotlight, she was quickly injured. She went on to win again without them at the 1998 Goodwill Games. While the Karolyis are likely not the type for self-reflection, it is unlikely that they were cheering on the inside when Dominique looked the best she ever did in their absence. (They may have resembled Kim Zmeskal during the Magnificent Seven medal ceremony.)
  3. Dominique had the nerve to emancipate herself from her father due to abuse and control that was endorsed by the Karolyis themselves. Dominique revealed on the witness stand that Bela Karolyi witnessed her father hitting her. In her memoir, she tells how Bela Karolyi used her father as a threat to get her to work harder, lose weight and live in fear. This is also a father who hid another daughter from Dominique due to being born with a deformity.

If there is a downside to Dominique's book, it is that it leaves you wanting a bit more. She does not discuss being forced to compete in 1997 well out of shape, or her comeback attempt in 2000. It would've been interesting to read about returning to the camp system only to have Bela tell her and the media that she was grossly out of shape. While it was true, he was anything but polite about it. Dominique's take on the 2000 Camp System would've been enlightening. She does not go into detail about every competition or performance, nor does she discuss her teammates in excessive detail.

Unlike Amanda Beard, the reader puts down Dominique Moceanu's memoir with a better understanding of the gymnast who just won't shut up about the Karolyis. While many in the gymnasts community, like John Geddert via Facebook, wishes she would go away as it is the sport's turn to take center stage, it is clear that she has more insight into gymnastics than many give her credit for. At the end of her feature on Bryant Gumbal's Real Sports, Bryant dismissed Dominique's claims about the Karolyi method because she hadn't produced an Olympic Champion of her own in a non-Karolyi way. The truth is, Dominique already reached the top another way: twice.  It is true that Dominique may never have been quite the same media darling with Bela Karolyi's bluster, but her talent, beauty and charisma have always found a way to the top.

16 comments:

  1. Ooh, how did Kim Z. look during the Mag 7 award ceremony?

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  2. Did the book mention the Karolyi's themselves being abusive, or was it just focused on her father?

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  3. I thought it was interesting to read about Marta making up the rules of who qualified to Trials back then. Nearly identical to the rules for keeping Chelsie out and getting Nastia in. I also think the very composed and precise way she tellsthe story gives it more weight than if she raged about the negatives she had dealt with.

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  4. yea i thought the book was horseshit. Dominique is much less adjusted then kim kelly. Dominique went to the olympics and won her gold medal. Kim was screwed out of the olympics. Dominque went through a drug whore phase where she smoked and inhaled everything while fucking everyone at the usoc. Kim rebelled by getting college education.

    Dominique is such an asshole that she repeatedly took flash pictures at ncaa nationals until the one girl that she took 9 flash photos of fell off the beam.

    Dominique is such a mess that she married a gay guy and is willing to live as a beard.

    The most amazing thing that I got out of the book was how strong her sister was, and how weak Dominique was.

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  5. Did she write anything in the book that would make the Karolyis PISSED to read? Any juicy allegations?

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  6. She's insufferable. Every time I hear her name I think of the 'poker face' video she and her husband did for their 'fans' ugh. I wont be the least bit surprised when she comes out with another memoir in 4 years during Olympic Trials

    She's a self made martyr and it's getting annoying

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  7. You should link that old interview with you and Dominique.

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  8. Elite gymnastics is a game rigged to make money for a select group of adults at the expense of young girls. As we are seeing in the Sandusky trial, adults who stand to make a lot of money off an athletic program will go to any length to protect a status quo, even if it includes child abuse.

    Makes me laugh to see how many of you vent against Dominique. She was a frickin 14-year-old forced to perform like a trained monkey. And for WHAT, exactly? The chance to be on "Dancing with the Stars"?? What other "opportunities" are there for a kid who spent her entire childhood in a gym to shine at an event that the general public only cares about once every four years?
    For all that physical and mental abuse, the shelf life of her gymnastics career is pathetically short. And face it, one can count on ONE HAND the number of female gymnasts whose Olympic medal actually resulted in a lifelong career. But, thanks to greedy adults (Karolyis and their co-conspirators, the parents), there'll always be a fresh crop of children to subject to this B.S.

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  9. I enjoyed the book. I was surprised that there was no mention of her time at CGA, but I was glad that it wasn't just a listing of every competition, every score, etc.

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  10. Surprised you didn't know how much Alexandrov was responsible for Dominique until 2007. I thought it was common knowledge in the nineties.

    What is with everyone here? Do you just hate all athletes for writing biographies? Do you hate everyone who writes sports memoirs? Because this was her life. These things did actually happen. Would you prefer she lie and say her childhood and training were fabulous? Some people enjoy reading about the lives of their favorite athletes. If you're not interested in her life, don't read it. But don't buy a biography and then complain that someone is telling their life story.

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    1. Exactly. Your last point is spot on.

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  11. Does anyone have the link to the Real Sports interview? I haven't seen it and am interested in watching it.

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  12. It is important to emphasize that Moceanu was a STAR junior gymnast and only then went to the Karolyis. Another exquisite example of these imposters taking credit for the work that other coaches did. They did the same to 1) Brandy Johnson, 2) Kerri Strug, and 3) Mary Lou Retton. MLR in particular came to them with a battery of skills and amplitude that they merely honed. It is just disgusting how the media put all cameras on the Karolyis when they have had very little to do with the US's rise to dominance in the sport of WAG.

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  13. I'm no Karolyi fan, but isn't this what all top coaches do? They get a name for themselves and then top athletes come to them. For example, Chow had Shawn Johnson, so Gabby Douglas left her gym (big scandal there as we all know) and went to him. Chow didn't build Gabby from the ground up, anymore than the Karolyi's built Dominique from the ground up.

    The coach of an athlete at the Olympic games always gets more recognition than the coaches who preceded them. I think the gymnast should be grateful to all the coaches who got him/her there but at the end of the day these are usually 16-18 year old girls (not women) and they really don't understand all of that.

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    1. Exactly, everyone is on Alexandrov's balls for turning the Russian team around and he's been there for what 4 years?

      A lot of these girls go through different coaches and all of them have something to do with their success. The one's that are there with them at the Olympics will get the most credit.

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    2. There's a difference between Gabby and Dominique. Gabby voluntarily left her coaches and gym in Virginia to work with Chow. Gabby's growth in the past year shows how Chow has shaped her as an athlete. The Karolyis fired Alexandrov right before the 95 National Championships when Dominique was already primed to be a success. Dominique had no idea he was fired and would no longer be her coach until the morning she walked into the gym and started training with the Karolyis. People know that Gabby wasn't always with Chow. However, because Dominique was at the Karolyis' gym during her media years, it is assumed that Bela and Marta are the ones who made her.

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