China grabs gold, Brits steal show in gymnastics
By Will Graves | AP - LONDON
31st July 2012 02:53 PM
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Chinese gymnasts, left to right, Feng Zhe, Guo Weiyang, Chen Yibing, Zhang Chenglong and Zou Kai celebrate winning the gold medal during the Artistic Gymnastic men's team final at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Monday, July 30, 2012, in London. (AP)
Chen Yibing couldn't quite help himself. He needed to gloat. A little
at least.
When asked how a team that looked like a bit of a mess — at least by its lofty
standards — in men's gymnastics during qualifying on Saturday could turn it
around so suddenly and win a second straight Olympic gold so convincingly on
Monday night, Yibing smiled and smacked his hands together.
"Perfect!" he said in English.
Maybe not, but then again, perfection was hardly required. Not with expected
contenders Japan and the United States finding interesting ways to let gold
slip from their grasp.
The Japanese needed a little help from the judges to earn silver. The U.S., so
spectacular during qualifying, faded to fifth.
The only team besides China that seemed capable of rising to the occasion was
Britain, which earned its first team medal in a century by grabbing bronze.
It felt like something considerably shinier to the host nation, which had been
pointing toward this meet from the moment London was awarded the games seven
years ago.
The last time the Brits had medaled in the team competition came in 1912, when
they earned bronze a few months after the Titanic sunk.
"The beauty of what we've got is that this team isn't a one-hit
wonder," said Britain's Louis Smith, the team captain and unquestioned
leader.
Still, while the British have closed the gap between themselves and the rest of
the sport's elite, one thing remains clear. Nobody beats China when Olympic
gold is on the line.
China hardly looked like its normal efficient self as it bumbled through qualifying
on Saturday. It hardly mattered on Monday.
Their total of 275.997 left them well clear of the field and means China has
now won three of the last four Olympic titles.
The uncharacteristic miscues that marred their preliminary round, when they
finished sixth, vanished. The Chinese were their typical steadily spectacular
selves.
"Our coach and our fellow colleagues created a history," Yibing said.
"In the future we will have more new rising stars."
Though the 27-year-old Yibing is unlikely to be around when the games head to
Rio de Janeiro in 2016, there's another crop right behind him.
Whoever inherits the mantle from Yibing and company will have to find a way to
deal with an increasingly unstable landscape. The Japanese squeaked out silver
when judges adjusted three-time defending world all-around champion Kohei
Uchimura's score on pommel horse, providing the 0.7-point boost necessary to
hold off Britain.
The judges ruled upon review that Uchimura should receive credit for his
dismount, providing his score with the points necessary to keep the Japanese on
the medal stand.
"We practiced just like we thought but this is the Olympics and this is a
special environment and we really couldn't do as we planned," Uchimura
said. "It was really difficult."
Maybe, but not really to the home team. The Brits — with Prince William and
Harry cheering them on and Union Jacks flying throughout the O2 Arena — leaned
on Smith early then relied on their own rising stars to climb into third and
cement themselves as an emerging power in a sport long considered an
afterthought.
"It's a beautiful day for the sport of British gymnastics," Smith
said.
Not so much for the Americans.
The U.S. had touted this group as a team capable of winning gold for the first
time since the boycotted Los Angeles games in 1984.
The Americans certainly looked capable during qualifying, posting the top score
and performing with such confidence veteran Jon Horton joked afterward if the
U.S. could just get its gold from the finals and save everyone a lot of time.
It wasn't to be. The U.S. saw its hopes of a medal of any color evaporate
immediately. Sam Mikulak wobbled on floor exercise. Danell Leyva and John
Orozco bobbled on pommel horse. And the U.S. spent the second half of the meet
futilely trying to make up lost ground.
Though the Americans rallied from last to fifth, it was of small consolation.
"There's nothing we could have really done differently," Mikulak
said. "We're a young team. We've never experienced anything like this
before."
True. Leyva and Jake Dalton are 20. Mikulak and Orozco are 19. They will be
around for a while.
So will the Brits. While this probably marked the final games for the
23-year-old Smith, youngsters Sam Oldham and Max Whitlock are 19. The junior
ranks are packed with precocious talent that no longer views the chance to
compete on a world stage as something of a pipe dream.
"The juniors we've got coming through, there's so much depth," Smith
said. "Now everyone is going to be more motivated than ever."
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