You have to be a top level athlete to even begin to phathom of how difficult c ranked excirses really are D and beyond will be forever out of your comprehension 😅
There are some Bs that are actually easier than A elements imo Uprise to L sit, Chechi, straight forwards roll, full twisting dismount are all easier than A coded handstand skills imo
After doing calisthenics for 2 years and recently pulling out some muscle ups, I genuinely believe that these guys are PHENOMENAL, HOLY JESUS FUCKING CHRIST THEY ARE UNBELIEVABLE u don't even realise how damn hard A moves are and how many years they take to master
That's why pro gymnasts start training before the age of 7 and reach their peak at around 20 years old. That's not something you can learn in just a few years.
Gymnasts tend to struggle more on inverted cross than Maltese, I am just a mere mortal that could only hold handstand for 13 seconds, but I think Maltese is harder than inverted cross mostly because Maltese uses almost all of your upper body. but inverted cross is the same too, but more weight is on the specific muscle, which means more loads on shoulder or chest compare to maltese. I think what really makes inverted cross hard is the heavy loads and stability aspect
I think it’s the instability component of the inverted cross being in handstand, because Japanese handstand on floor is way easier than Maltese on floor; if it was just because of loading then that wouldn’t be the case
You’re right about that. But an inverted cross is going to be easier if you have a solid handstand on rings. Plus I think our shoulders are stronger, able to naturally hold more weight than our chests. Even if most guys can bench more than they shoulder press. It’s two different kinds of stress. But I totally agree that Maltese is way harder than inverted cross
I can do the Victorian but with floor support and without the rings. In reality, at 73 now, just managing 30” support hold. These guys are totally awesome.
Magnificent bodyweight movements. Ill be glad if I ever manage to do an iron cross although I dont train for it. The easier elements like front lever can be reached with bit of practice and mostly muscle strength from pull ups.
If you can do 12, start adding weight on a belt/chain. You will progress safely and much faster if you keep up the progressive overload. Otherwise, you will plateau and become someone who used to do calisthenics and rings. Stay healthy. That's the real secret. One injury will cost you six months to a year of progress.
Man not hating but I'm amazed that Tulloch's victorians were ever counted. Just shows how insane victorian is when the best gymnasts in the world struggle to hold it cleanly at all.
Great compilation. A solid cross, upgraded with a few variations, and planche (straddled for now) are the main goals I strive for in regular workouts on my excellent FIG-certified backyard rings set. ... P.S., 1 armed chin up deserves to be FAR higher on this ranking, even some very high level gymnasts can't do it (which makes sense, it's not really a formal gymnastics skill so it's not like you train it for the sport)
I agree with you on Maltese press and LXS, those make no sense but they’re ranked that way in the code of points when this video was published. But 360 pull isn’t nearly as difficult as azarian because you’re basically just going through FL/BL, without the transition to iron cross which is the hardest part
I've done a one arm chin up even with weight added and I can basically do nothing else from tier A except for muscle up and L-sit. The once arm chin up is actually an easy exersise for gymnasts, most of them can do more than 7 in a row
some of these will be just forever out of my comprehesion its insane just absolute insanity i will become a proffesional calishenic athlete and get the full planche though one day i will do that
Are those elements ranked by the code of points? I never realized a one arm chin up was an actual code skill. Dude, super cool video!! I loved it. That Azarian to Victorian ……, shoot only in my dreams
Most of these are, but some like you mentioned (MU, HSPU, OAC) are not, I just threw them in since they’re iconic and relatable 👍🏻 appreciate the kind words!
Ain't no way I have the balance for a ring handstand but I can do front lever back lever and 360° turn. This really made me wonder if training for gymnastic skills is more different from hypertrophy calisthenics than I thought it was
hs pushup is relatively in the impossible moves of you dont roll your feet around the lines, meanwhile straddle pl is almost free skill when u unlock it on floor/pbars
What about this still-ring combo - an Iron cross to back salto straight-leg swing to a double tuck back salto and finishing with the Iron Cross. What grade rank would be that combo, and was it named for somebody?
Why is the Zenetti harder than the Van Gelder? BL to planche is bigger ROM than BL to maltese. Is momentary moving that much assistance? In my opinion is more like quick moving.
Great question! Zanetti is performed from a static BL hold, and like you said, does not use any momentum unlike the Van Gelder, which uses a “springlike” bouncing motion. If you watch some of Zanetti’s earlier performances, he will actually do a very small downward motion before initiating the press to make it slightly easier. Even though the Zanetti ROM is less than Van Gelder, the hardest part is just pressing up from BL in the first place, which is easier with the momentum from the bounce.
@@IGNACY-fp8zo Because the press to Planche and press to Maltese are essentially the same skill and difficulty. The press to maltese cross is easier, but holding maltese cross is harder. The press to Planche is harder, but holding the 2 sec planche, is easier. Pick your poison.
The whole new level of planche movements seems to only be possible with PEDs, otherwise we obviously would see "zannettis" (its interesting that countries with a lot more experience in gymnastics could not figure out that this "zanneti" movement was possible, its absurdly obvious. Maybe because it was not possible because required absurd strenght, therefore PEDS) before 1960s. Lets keep in mind gymnasts are not like most of the calisthenics dudes that dont train legs, and they have to endure a lot of more extenuating movements in addition to the strenght draining planches and front levers. The problem itself is not the movements, but they have to be realized with other movements in a routine. If you guys think its not PEDs making these movements possible, (i believe they had already tried in training but could not incorporate on the routines because it demands too much strenght), keep in mind that there is even a surge of doping in RHYTHMIC GYMNASTICS (egypt whole rhythmic gymnastics team got caught)! So imagine on the current trend of suspiciously unknown countries rising in gymnastics doing complex stuff that not even tradicional countries did years ago, think of what they are using to perform such things now, or abusing the anti doping weakness of their own countries. I mean if for such low intensity activity like rhythmic gymnastics they are takind PEDs, imagine an current all around athletes that even go to the finals on specific events on the next day.
as a judge, i cannot understand the victorian. the additional D score would be totally wiped out by either: 1 - false grip, 2 body not horizontal or 3 no neutral head. NOBODY has yet to compete a victorian without at least one - usually two - of these deductions.
Do you mean before? IMU is bent arm (like a really deep HSPU) which is difficult but still easier than the straight arm crosses in terms of absolute strength requirement. The hardest part is the initiation by biceps
I think because its more of a bounce-like motion to get into the butterfly making it slightly less challenging, rather than going straight from a dead hang
When the muscle-up is the easiest exercise, you know you’re in trouble 😅
haha, technically it's not even rated A anymore, but I figured i'd still include it since it's tougher than L sit and so iconic
@@derekchen5749 hahah, yikes
Haha true!!🤣🤣
Isn’t the L-sit easier than the muscle up?
@@BR-lx7py that’s what he’s saying
Gymnastics is so badass that you have to already be an athele to be able to realise how hard it is
Ranking system is simple. They are ALL impossible. :D
im a gymnast and they arent to hard
for sure lol B+ is insane difficulty but seeing the transition between positions that are extremely hard to even hold is just mindblowing.
@@sgwc1 cause you train for that whole life :D
You have to be a top level athlete to even begin to phathom of how difficult c ranked excirses really are
D and beyond will be forever out of your comprehension 😅
Alternative title: Gymnastics rings skills ranked (impossible to even more impossible)
...to impossibler ahah
Tbh if it were impossible moves i'm missing the one arm iron cross......... truly impossible lol
I tore my rotator cuff just watching this.
Really liked how you sort the moves base on their difficulties. People who can do element B and up are superhuman haha.
Haha true, I feel like mastering each of these moves requires an additional 1.5-2 years of consistent training per level.
@@derekchen5749 It depends(genetics, lifestyle, age, )
From my personal experience if you have the time and the dedication it's much faster.
There are some Bs that are actually easier than A elements imo
Uprise to L sit, Chechi, straight forwards roll, full twisting dismount are all easier than A coded handstand skills imo
@@robscott333 definitely! I focused on low/no momentum moves here
Thank you for calling me a superhuman, I can do some of them, tho very few, up to C :)
After doing calisthenics for 2 years and recently pulling out some muscle ups, I genuinely believe that these guys are PHENOMENAL, HOLY JESUS FUCKING CHRIST THEY ARE UNBELIEVABLE
u don't even realise how damn hard A moves are and how many years they take to master
That's why pro gymnasts start training before the age of 7 and reach their peak at around 20 years old. That's not something you can learn in just a few years.
@@cyndrianaaMost people in the world could start training at that age and never even be able to perform those moves.
Best part of this video is 2:40 Liu Yang's neck roll 🤟🤟
Bro that’s some gangster shit😅
I noticed that too lol. He's real sigma.
2:39 That's what I call a "flex".
Iron cross
caruso is a flex
Olympics Gymnast are on next level!! Skills look so easy and clean when they perform but reality 💀💀
I will do a Super Idol Becoming Uncanny version of this and the harder the skills get, the more uncanny he gets. 50 phases extended.
Wow ! Those athletes are incredible! thanks for this video it's very cool and inspiring
GREAT SCOTT! This is fantastic beyond comprehension! Thank you, very very enlightening! GRACIAS! BLESSINGS!
Good luck on your journey! I hope you keep on seeing results
So satisfying to watch the manifestation of true strength and power of athletes ❤💪
you know it's tough when you have gigachad do the hardest move..
The rings are where it’s at!….very impressive how far we’ve come.
Exactly the video I was looking for, thanks!
No problem!
Gymnasts tend to struggle more on inverted cross than Maltese, I am just a mere mortal that could only hold handstand for 13 seconds, but I think Maltese is harder than inverted cross mostly because Maltese uses almost all of your upper body. but inverted cross is the same too, but more weight is on the specific muscle, which means more loads on shoulder or chest compare to maltese. I think what really makes inverted cross hard is the heavy loads and stability aspect
I think it’s the instability component of the inverted cross being in handstand, because Japanese handstand on floor is way easier than Maltese on floor; if it was just because of loading then that wouldn’t be the case
You’re right about that. But an inverted cross is going to be easier if you have a solid handstand on rings. Plus I think our shoulders are stronger, able to naturally hold more weight than our chests. Even if most guys can bench more than they shoulder press. It’s two different kinds of stress. But I totally agree that Maltese is way harder than inverted cross
I can do the Victorian but with floor support and without the rings. In reality, at 73 now, just managing 30” support hold. These guys are totally awesome.
@@daksta50 hahah that's a nice joke
You know its hard when the Muscle Up was the second one on the list.
When I see this, especially the first half, I realize how incredible still the pros are.
I feel fatigue only watching them. Wonderful athletes 💪🏼
My best move was to hang, attempt a muscle up, get a hernia, and never try again
Balandin 2 looks sick ... cant imagine how much training to be able to hold this element it looks like it defies physics.
Love this video
Pls give us some more contents like this!!
Magnificent bodyweight movements. Ill be glad if I ever manage to do an iron cross although I dont train for it. The easier elements like front lever can be reached with bit of practice and mostly muscle strength from pull ups.
the vangelder element and victorian + frontlever combo siet smooth
Damn dude, I'm over here just trying to get 20 dips in 😅. Excellent video man, keep it up!💪
If you can do 12, start adding weight on a belt/chain.
You will progress safely and much faster if you keep up the progressive overload.
Otherwise, you will plateau and become someone who used to do calisthenics and rings.
Stay healthy. That's the real secret. One injury will cost you six months to a year of progress.
Bro i just came from brandons vid and your progress is amazing
Got you to 500 subs, I'm your 500th sub.
Great video about insane moves friend
Thank you! Appreciate the support. 🙏🏻
great Job 🔥
Petrounias won his 11 Gold medal yesterday..amazing athlete 👏
This is some superhuman stuff
its crazy that the human body are capable of such movements
Amazing video 💙
And the hardest one is Onizuka Press, from inverted hang with straight arms press to victorian cross
Man not hating but I'm amazed that Tulloch's victorians were ever counted. Just shows how insane victorian is when the best gymnasts in the world struggle to hold it cleanly at all.
Handstand es lo más difícil para mi, ya ando sacando plancha y el handstand aún no me sale en anillas y eso que lo domino a la perfección en paralelas
Great compilation. A solid cross, upgraded with a few variations, and planche (straddled for now) are the main goals I strive for in regular workouts on my excellent FIG-certified backyard rings set. ... P.S., 1 armed chin up deserves to be FAR higher on this ranking, even some very high level gymnasts can't do it (which makes sense, it's not really a formal gymnastics skill so it's not like you train it for the sport)
One arm chin up is way more easier to achieve than others movements which are ranked higher, it deserve a low ranking
I agree with you on Maltese press and LXS, those make no sense but they’re ranked that way in the code of points when this video was published. But 360 pull isn’t nearly as difficult as azarian because you’re basically just going through FL/BL, without the transition to iron cross which is the hardest part
I've done a one arm chin up even with weight added and I can basically do nothing else from tier A except for muscle up and L-sit. The once arm chin up is actually an easy exersise for gymnasts, most of them can do more than 7 in a row
This is so cool
2:47
That troll smile =)
Can't do this stuff anymore. Sure miss the still rings!
Nice video man ✊🏻✌🏻
Thank you bro 🙏🏻 love your videos too
@@derekchen5749 Thanks 🤟🏻💪🏻
some of these will be just forever out of my comprehesion
its insane just absolute insanity
i will become a proffesional calishenic athlete and get the full planche though one day i will do that
Came here from Geek Climber 🔥 video
Appreciate the support!
Perfect
haha i think there are a few issues here and there, but thank you!
BRUTALYTY💪💀!!!¡!!
amazing video!
was the "Caruso" added to the gymnastic moves?
Thank you! No, it is not officially added until it is used in competition.
But if it's not considered a gymnastic move why should someone use it in a competition?
@@giuseppe9771it will be evaluated then and there if someone uses it
Don't forget us when you're famous
Are those elements ranked by the code of points? I never realized a one arm chin up was an actual code skill. Dude, super cool video!! I loved it. That Azarian to Victorian ……, shoot only in my dreams
Most of these are, but some like you mentioned (MU, HSPU, OAC) are not, I just threw them in since they’re iconic and relatable 👍🏻 appreciate the kind words!
Gymnastics is daddy of all sports
how do you do this 360 pullups
Ain't no way I have the balance for a ring handstand but I can do front lever back lever and 360° turn. This really made me wonder if training for gymnastic skills is more different from hypertrophy calisthenics than I thought it was
That escalated fast
guy in red doing yan mingyong at 3:03 was impressive
his name is yan mingyon
hs pushup is relatively in the impossible moves of you dont roll your feet around the lines, meanwhile straddle pl is almost free skill when u unlock it on floor/pbars
Absolument
Wahhhhhhhhohhhhh⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡
I'm inspired
why do no ring gymnast do Victorian anymore? seems to be Maltese and cross all the time in the past few years
Too risky
@@diniaadil6154 seems like its just too difficult to be honest, even pros struggle to get good form on it throughout history
Kept rewinding thinking I missed the easy part.
Onizuka otz, scarxlus, manuel caruso💯
Crazy how strong Balandin was in his prime
Facts, a true pioneer of butterfly elements
Gotta say, that elements after B only work without gravity
Were azarian planche and azarian maltese downrated by 1 point? They used to be E and F difficulty, but in your video they are D and E
Yeah I think they were overperformed/too meta so they were downgraded a few years back
Liked for solar system by sub focus
What about this still-ring combo - an Iron cross to back salto straight-leg swing to a double tuck back salto and finishing with the Iron Cross. What grade rank would be that combo, and was it named for somebody?
Video said easy to impossible and it starts off with handstand push ups
Calisthenics watching this video: 💀
Meanwhile, me struggling to hold Support Hold for more than 30 seconds :)
Why is the Zenetti harder than the Van Gelder? BL to planche is bigger ROM than BL to maltese. Is momentary moving that much assistance? In my opinion is more like quick moving.
Great question!
Zanetti is performed from a static BL hold, and like you said, does not use any momentum unlike the Van Gelder, which uses a “springlike” bouncing motion. If you watch some of Zanetti’s earlier performances, he will actually do a very small downward motion before initiating the press to make it slightly easier.
Even though the Zanetti ROM is less than Van Gelder, the hardest part is just pressing up from BL in the first place, which is easier with the momentum from the bounce.
Another good example that demonstrates this is 4:36 (Carmona), where he presses up after using a bit of downward momentum
@@derekchen5749 thx for the explination! It's clear now.
Zanetti can be performed either to maltese or to planche, not sure why they did not just make separate entries in the COP though
@@IGNACY-fp8zo Because the press to Planche and press to Maltese are essentially the same skill and difficulty. The press to maltese cross is easier, but holding maltese cross is harder. The press to Planche is harder, but holding the 2 sec planche, is easier. Pick your poison.
Oh I know that guy who did the iron cross lol, I’m also working on getting it soon aswell
He’s a beast, you’ll be there too
The whole new level of planche movements seems to only be possible with PEDs, otherwise we obviously would see "zannettis" (its interesting that countries with a lot more experience in gymnastics could not figure out that this "zanneti" movement was possible, its absurdly obvious. Maybe because it was not possible because required absurd strenght, therefore PEDS) before 1960s.
Lets keep in mind gymnasts are not like most of the calisthenics dudes that dont train legs, and they have to endure a lot of more extenuating movements in addition to the strenght draining planches and front levers. The problem itself is not the movements, but they have to be realized with other movements in a routine.
If you guys think its not PEDs making these movements possible, (i believe they had already tried in training but could not incorporate on the routines because it demands too much strenght), keep in mind that there is even a surge of doping in RHYTHMIC GYMNASTICS (egypt whole rhythmic gymnastics team got caught)! So imagine on the current trend of suspiciously unknown countries rising in gymnastics doing complex stuff that not even tradicional countries did years ago, think of what they are using to perform such things now, or abusing the anti doping weakness of their own countries.
I mean if for such low intensity activity like rhythmic gymnastics they are takind PEDs, imagine an current all around athletes that even go to the finals on specific events on the next day.
You don't need PEDs to perform any of these skills. A few years of consistent and smart training and you're good
Rings ain’t nothing to play with 🥵🔥
I will do a Super Idol Becoming Uncanny version of this and the harder the skills get, the more uncanny he gets. 50 phases extended.
People don't understand how godly this is truly unbelievable that a person can do that
Can you do the same for high bar?
inspired me to do calisthenics fr
You should be inspired to gymnastics
Onizuka and caruso aren't gymnasts but street workout athletes btw, both showed at vic cross
Where is inverted butterfly?(straight arm reverse muscle up)?
No ones done it yet
@@vurve3406 ik bro.
Btw,has anyone done the one arm victorian cross?
Muscle-up is only scored in Juniors though, right?
Yeah it’s technically not an A element, I just included it bc it’s iconic/relatable. Some of the other elements aren’t scored either like HSPU
as a judge, i cannot understand the victorian. the additional D score would be totally wiped out by either: 1 - false grip, 2 body not horizontal or 3 no neutral head. NOBODY has yet to compete a victorian without at least one - usually two - of these deductions.
Bro, i can do front lever but my explosive strength cant do the muscle up🥲
Onizuka is goated
Zanetti is BL 2 sec to full planche or maltese
yep! forgot to include the planche variant
Why did you put inverted muscle up between lower to butterfly and Inverted cross? That doesn't seem right 🤔
Do you mean before? IMU is bent arm (like a really deep HSPU) which is difficult but still easier than the straight arm crosses in terms of absolute strength requirement. The hardest part is the initiation by biceps
where would one arm hefesto be (new element by matteo spinazzola)
It’s like I’m watching an Anime. Holy.
Le gymnaste c est l homme le plus fort du monde
Wow a platoon of Spider men
I Did Victorian Cross but suck at planche/maltese
I can do ring support hold for 10 seconds 😀
the V sit only has old legend footage lol
Have anyone done front lever to reverse planche?
I think someone has done it on parallel bars, not rings though
@m4rianito on IG, one of his stories has a FL to Victorian to rev planche
Funny thing is, reverse planche has never been done on rings lmao
There is no person that has done a reverse planche with perfect form. Going from a front lever to reverse planche is impossible. 🤣
Is maltese planche that harder than standard full planche? Geniuenly asking.
Elle est différente. La full planche est plus difficile que la maltesse à équilibrer aux anneaux, mais la maltesse est plus stressante pour le biceps.
I’m humbled
the absolute peak of human capabilities........
I used to think that you cant get higher than a finger full planche.
Why is "Li Xiaoshuang" is only a C while the "Butterfly" is a D? Can someone explain?
This is a great question lol
Yeah. Great question!
Actually, great question..
I think because its more of a bounce-like motion to get into the butterfly making it slightly less challenging, rather than going straight from a dead hang
inverted cross > maltese???
Yall lost me with that inverted muscle-up. Good god!
Le gymnaste est le plus complet
Funny how onizuka has a better tulloch than tulloch
Any other G elements people have tried and failed or H elements that people have thought up but know are probably impossible?
Reverse planche, inverted butterfly are a few of the really famous ones that haven’t been done yet