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2015 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships: Japan’s Day Of Glory: Men’s Team Ends 37-Year Gold Drought

Uchimura leads Japan on its day of glory

After silver at four straight World Championships — including a 0.1 heartbreaker last year in Nanning — the Japanese men finally reversed their fortunes to take gold Wednesday night in Glasgow.

Team gold for the first time since 1978 is the realisation of a dream for star Kohei Uchimura, who contributed heavily to his team’s victory, scoring 91.531 of Japan’s 270.818 points. The gymnast many believe is the best who ever lived has already won the past five consecutive World All-around titles in his own right but said before the competition that he would rather win gold with his team than a sixth consecutive individual title. The heavy favorite for Friday’s Men’s All-around final, he may well get to have both.

The anticipated Japan-China team showdown never materialized. Guided by master twister Kenzo Shirai, who slayed the competition on Floor with his quadruple twist, Japan distanced themselves by 2.7 points from the beginning and had extended their lead to 6.3 over China by the halfway point of the competition.

But falls from Yusuke Tanaka and Uchimura on the High Bar in the final rotation brought the team brutally back down to earth. By a margin of less than half a point, they held on following a late charge from Great Britain, which finished their competition on a high note on Floor before an adoring public.

Kohei Uchimura, "The Bolt of Gymnastics"
Kohei Uchimura, “The Bolt of Gymnastics”

“I would have liked to have had a perfect competition, so I feel bad about my fall on High Bar,” said Uchimura. “As the last competitor, I wanted to perfect all the way through.”

Still, after nearly four decades of waiting for a World title, Uchimura, Tanaka, Ryohei Kato, Kazuma Kaya, Kenzo Shirai and Naoto Hayasaka are guaranteed to return to Japan as heroes of the archipelago. If nothing else, they have made their mothers, who watched the competition waving Japanese flags from the stands, very proud.

Great Britain tumbles to new heights

Three years after their historic Olympic bronze in London, the British men’s team remained steady to finish on the podium for the first time ever at a World Championships, less than half a point behind Japan to boot. Inspired by the British women’s bronze a day ago, Louis Smith, Daniel Purvis, Kristian Thomas, Max Whitlock, Nile Wilson and Brinn Bevan took care to write a new chapter in British Gymnastics history themselves with their silver. For some team members, Glasgow 2015 had shades of London 2012: “We looked at the scoreboard and we didn’t know what color medal we would have,” Smith recounted. Competitions at home obviously agree with them.

China’s fall from grace

For the Chinese, 12 years of domination at the World level came to an end Wednesday night. From the beginning, Lin Chaopan, Deng Shudi, Zhang Chenglong, Xiao Ruoteng, Liu Yang and You Hao looked less precise than usual. China never held the lead, getting lost in the classification early before rebounding to take bronze on the strength of strong performances on Parallel Bars and High Bar. To challenge for the title, however, it was too little, too late. Less than a year before the Rio Olympics, the Chinese have accomplished little other than signalling to the rest of the world that their Olympic title is by no means assured. “China has a great history in gymnastics. For us, this is a warning,” said Zhang Chenglong. “We didn’t win this year, but we know that we are still one of the strongest nations.”

Russia off the podium again

Lost in the crowd in qualification, the Russian team of Nikita Nagornyy, Ivan Stretovich, Denis Ablyazin, Nikolai Kuksenkov and David Belyavskiy did not let themselves be forgotten in the final. After a quiet beginning on Pommel Horse and Rings, the team took off during the second half of the competition with exceptional performances on Vault and Parallel Bars. But they could not seal the deal on Floor Exercise, and like the Russian women the night before, watched the medal ceremony without taking part.

2015 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships: Japan's Day Of Glory: Men's Team Ends 37-Year Gold Drought
2015 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships: Japan’s Day Of Glory: Men’s Team Ends 37-Year Gold Drought

The United States had a dream

If the anticipated battle between Japan and China never quite got off the ground, the U.S. men happily stepped into the role of potential spoilers to Japan, if only for a moment. Paul Ruggeri, Donnell Whittenburg, Danell Leyva, Chris Brooks, Brandon Wynn and Alex Naddour trailed the Japanese by a mere 0.1 with two events to go. Unfortunately for the Americans, one of those events was their nemesis Pommel Horse. With a weak average of just over 14 points per gymnast, they too dropped out of the podium race to fifth overall.