Judges often shy away from discussing their experiences on the record, but in the fall of 1998, International Gymnast published an interview with Darlene Darst. Over a twenty-five-year career, Darst had become one of the most respected judges in American gymnastics, officiating at national championships, world championships, and two Olympic Games. When she retired in 1992, she left a sport in which evaluation was shaped not only by performance, but also by institutional and political pressures.
Darst describes those pressures operating on more than one level. Internationally, she recounts a judging culture influenced by nationalism and informal power alignments: pre-meet score expectations, behind-the-scenes lobbying, and the understanding that judges who consistently failed to support their own countries risked fewer future assignments. During the 1970s and early 1980s, many American judges and coaches interpreted these dynamics as a structural disadvantage for the United States, particularly in competitions dominated by Eastern Bloc federations. Informal cooperation among non-dominant countries emerged as a pragmatic response within a system that was rarely perceived as neutral.
As American gymnastics strengthened, however, Darst suggests that these justifications became less persuasive. She recalls increasing pressure from U.S. coaches, particularly Béla Károlyi, to adopt the same informal practices domestically, even as American gymnasts no longer depended on favorable judging to remain competitive. Methods once framed as compensatory gradually became normalized.
The episode that crystallized this shift for Darst occurred not at an international competition, but at the 1992 U.S. Championships. She was instructed to disregard a clear out-of-bounds deduction for Kim Zmeskal, despite the fact that applying the deduction would not have affected the final standings. For Darst, the request illustrated a broader problem: accuracy was being treated as optional, even when competitive outcomes were not at stake.
In her interview with Dwight Normile, Darst offers a candid account of judging in a subjective sport, one in which professional standing could be influenced by accommodation, and where national or institutional loyalty sometimes came into tension with strict rule enforcement. Her conclusion is restrained but pointed: technical reforms alone cannot ensure fairness if judges operate within systems that reward conformity more reliably than precision.









