Turn10

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Turn10 competition in Hard / Vorarlberg 2008. Gymnast on the bar.

Turn10 is the Austrian club and hobby competition program in apparatus gymnastics , which was also included in school sports from 2010. The term is a protected trademark .

The system introduced in 2008 is new worldwide. Instead of prescribed compulsory exercises, every gymnast can choose elements from the ten-part catalog and thus freely put together the freestyle exercises.

On the gymnastic floor, the catalog starts with a simple roll and ends with a screw somersault . The aim is to master all 10 elements of the catalog on each device - from the simple basic parts to the more demanding elements. Each turn element is worth one point, regardless of whether it is a roll or a somersault . With optimal execution, there are up to ten additional points in addition to the basic points. The evaluation therefore rewards something that has been particularly successful.

The broad gymnastics program was developed jointly by the ASKÖ , ASVÖ , Sportunion , ÖTB and ÖFT associations . It standardizes the formerly independent gymnastics programs of the associations and is intended to provide an impetus for club and school gymnastics in Austria. Turn10 was originally developed for club sports. In 2010 it was also included in Austrian school sport , as a successor to the ÖLTA program used in school gymnastics up to then.

equipment

Competitions

In Austria there are regional championships, state championships and, since 2015, a Girls' Cup in Kindberg .

execution

There are usually two rounds in the morning and in the afternoon. The participants are divided into groups, each doing gymnastics one after the other on one device. This is followed by a joint change to the next device or to a break. Gymnasts from different clubs can also be in one team. There must be at least four devices.

Rating

The rating is based on age groups and the basic and advanced levels. The teams can be male, female and mixed and consist of three to four gymnasts. However, only the three best per device are rated. Individual ratings are also possible.

The evaluation is carried out by referees committees directly with an A-grade (basic points: the running exercise 1) and a B-grade (extra points for execution: technology, entertainment, dynamics). There is a 0.5 point deduction for jumps and descents that are not qualified. The total of the two grades (maximum 10 each) minus deductions results in the final grade on the device (maximum 20). For the overall evaluation, all final scores are added up (maximum 20x number of devices). For the team evaluation, the three best final scores per device are always added up (maximum 60x the number of devices).

Germany

In November 2017 Turn10 was also introduced across Germany. For this purpose, a corresponding license agreement was signed on November 3, 2017 between ÖFT and the German Gymnastics Association in Schloss Bruchsal .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Ü-Magazin" of the DTB for trainers, March / April 2018 edition