It depends on the size of the competition and who the governing body is that's sanctioning the particular competition. In men's gymnastics, for example, a local or state competition often only requires one (possibly two) judges per event. The U.S. Junior Olympic National competition requires four judges per event. The Olympics and many international competitions divide their judges into two panels: the D-panel (which determines the D-score based on the content of the routine and difficulty of its skills) and the E-panel (which determines execution and form errors). Two judges are required on the D-panel, and six judges are required on the E-panel. There are many more variations than this, but this should give you an idea of how some places break it down.
Judges preside over court cases, weigh evidence, and make legal decisions based on the law.
a taste panel is when a group of judges are sitting in a long row in front of them are various foods for them to try they vote which ones they think are the best and which are the worst also they make comments
you make money if you teach gymnastics.
No, there are judges that score you. They are kind of like umpires though, they take deductions from your score for every error you make during your routine.
The judges who are on the United States Courts of Appeals make the decisions. These judges are directly appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
because they wanted to
Judges don't make laws, governments legislatures do.
Cheer is much easier if you have a gymnastics background. Cheer doesn't really make gymnastics easier though.
Fred Jhan
Make Love to the Judges with Your Eyes was created on 2006-05-09.
Understood, I'll ensure to review the judging criteria thoroughly. Thank you for the reminder.