Tag Archives: Viktoria Komova

Gymnastics World Championships: A Four-Way Tie On Uneven Bars And Other Firsts

Unprecedented: A 4-way tie for gold on Uneven Bars

It was an Uneven Bars final worth its weight in gold: For the first time in the history of the sport, four gymnasts — China’s Fan Yilin, Russians Viktoria Komova and Daria Spiridonova and American Madison Kocian — tied for the World title. Each of the four scored 15.366, setting the SSE Hydro crowd buzzing and tripling the duration of the awards ceremony.
Fan, Komova, Spiridonova and Kocian will forever be linked in the annals of Women’s Gymnastics, which has never seen anything like this. Ties for gold at Worlds have been more frequent in Men’s Gymnastics, including three-way splits on Pommel Horse in 1903 and 1992, and on High Bar in 1922. Five gymnasts tied for silver on Parallel Bars in 1922.

The first king of Britain

Since Beth Tweddle became the British women’s first World champion in 2006, the British men have been waiting for the gymnast who would win them a world crown as well. It came to an end Saturday as Max Whitlock spun his way to the Pommel Horse title, besting teammate Louis Smith by a mere tenth of the point. The two 2012 Olympic Pommel Horse medallists thus combined to produce their country’s best ever result in Gymnastics: British gymnasts on the first and second steps of the podium.
If anything helped Whitlock and Smith on Pommel Horse, it was the absence of reigning World and Olympic champion Krisztian Berki of Hungary, who did not qualify for the medal round. With a gold, three silvers and a bronze already in their pockets, Glasgow 2015 has is already Great Britain’s most successful World Championships. It’s not over yet, either: The British will have three more chances to medal tomorrow on the second day of finals.

Russia returns to the top
After failing to earn medals in team finals and the All-around competition, 2012 Olympic Vault bronze medallist Maria Paseka revived the Russian women with gold on Vault, her country’s first on the event since 2002. Paseka also deprived 2008 Olympic Vault champion Hong Un Jong of a second consecutive World title: the two competed the same vaults, though Paseka’s superior execution made the difference. Minutes later, during the incredible Uneven Bars final, Komova and Spiridonova earned Russia another two golds.

The rebound of Mr. Twist

Even in the absence of Kohei Uchimura, the Japanese hit parade continued Saturday, with twisting sensation Kenzo Shirai regaining the World Floor title he won in 2013. As Shirai slayed the audience and judges by nailing his quadruple twist final pass to win his second gold of this championships, Great Britain’s Max Whitlock was no less happy in silver, while Spain’s Rayderley Zapata won bronze.

In the name of the father

Greece’s Eleftherios Petrounias came to the World Championships with one mission: win a medal on Rings to honor his father, who recently passed away. By relegating China’s You Hao and 2014 World champion Liu Yang silver and bronze, respectively, Petrounias delivered a fitting memorial.

Fan Yilin (CHN), Viktoria Komova (RUS), Daria Spiridonova (RUS) and Madison Kocian (USA) share gold
Fan Yilin (CHN), Viktoria Komova (RUS), Daria Spiridonova (RUS) and Madison Kocian (USA) share gold

One more for Biles

Already golden in the team and All-around finals, American Simone Biles gave herself one more reason to smile, adding the bronze on Vault to her growing medal collection. The medal is Biles’s 12th at a World Championships, breaking the American record she set earlier this week.

Olympic qualifiers

Medallists from individual apparatus event finals in Glasgow advance directly to the 2016 Rio Olympic Games, provided their teams do not qualify. Ergo, Eleftherios Petrounias (GRE, gold on Still Rings), Hong Un Jong (PRK, silver on Women’s Vault) and Harutyun Merdinyan (ARM, bronze on Pommel Horse), all gymnasts whose teams did not compete at this World Championships, have qualified as individuals to next summer’s Olympics.

Rayderley Zapata (ESP, bronze on Men’s Floor) can also sleep easily, knowing that his place at the Games is secure as well, even if the Spanish men don’t qualify a team to Rio at April’s Olympic Test Event

2015 ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: Eight Things To Know About The Women’s Competition

History in the making
After winning the World All-around title in Antwerp in 2013 and Nanning in 2014, Simone Biles (USA) is favored to win for a third consecutive time in Glasgow, something no female artistic gymnast has ever done. Svetlana Khorkina (RUS) is the only woman ever to have won a triple crown in the All-around. Golden for the first time in Lausanne in 1997, she lost the title in Tianjin in 1999 before reclaiming it in 2001 in Ghent and again in Anaheim in 2003.

London calling back
Gabrielle Douglas (USA), who reigned over the London Olympic Games in 2012 with gold medals in the All-around and with the American team, and Aly Raisman (USA), the Olympic champion on Floor Exercise and with the team, have rejoined the U.S. squad after a two-year absence. Viktoria Komova (RUS), second to Douglas in the All-around at the Olympics, is also making her big return to the World Championships in this pre-Olympic year.

An enduring legend
Still fresh at age 40, Oksana Chusovitina (UZB) is living proof that Gymnastics is not just a sport for adolescents: Her first international exploits date back to the World Championships in Indianapolis in 1991. With a collection of 11 World and two Olympic medals, Chusovitina, who has competed under four different national flags (USSR, Unified Team, GER and UZB), hopes to qualify for an unprecedented seventh Olympic Games in Rio, where she would set a new record for Olympic presence in Gymnastics.

The first big dance
Just a little more than a year ago, Seda Tutkhalyan stood proudly atop a podium in Nanjing, where she was coronated as the Youth Olympic Games All-around champion. As a first-year senior and first-time World Championships competitor in Glasgow, the young Russian will get the chance to test herself against older World and Olympic stars. Same goes for Brazil’s Flavia Saraiva and Great Britain’s Ellie Downie, who finished with silver and bronze, respectively, last summer in China. Also making her Worlds debut is China’s Wang Yan, who won two Youth Olympic golds in event finals.

Simone Biles
Simone Biles

American domination
Since 2011, the American team has monopolized the top step on the podium at the World Championships and Olympic Games. Last year in Nanning, the U.S. bested silver medallist China by an otherworldly 6.5 points in the final. Since 2003, the Americans have made a habit of marking their territory in the pre-Olympic year by winning the World team title. With the exception of the currently injured Aliya Mustafina in 2010, every female World All-around champion since 2007 has also held a U.S. passport.

Romania now and again
A small country population-wise, Romania nevertheless still counts among the great powers of Gymnastics 40 years after Nadia Comaneci stunned the world with her string of perfect 10s at the Montréal Olympic Games. Without injured star Catalina Ponor, who was expected to make her return to international competition in Glasgow, the women’s team will be counting on the dynamic Larisa Iordache, silver medallist in the All-around competition last year.

The Vault that will take your breath away
Specialists call it the “Produnova,” named for Yelena Produnova (RUS), who was the first to do it in competition. The gymnast approcaches the table going forward and executes two front flips before landing. This Vault, which carries an exceptionally high difficulty score (7.0), attracts only the most adventurous gymnasts, who risk heavy penalties in execution for not landing it correctly. Three gymnasts — Oksana Chusovitina (UZB), Yamilet Pena (DOM) and Dipa Karmakar (IND) — are the only ones daring to perform it today.

Diana Bulimar
Diana Bulimar

Happy returns
Seven Olympic medallists from the London Olympic Games and two from the Beijing Olympics are set to compete in Glasgow. From 2012, there’s Gabrielle Douglas (USA/gold in the All-around and gold with the U.S. team), Alexandra Raisman (USA/gold on Floor Exercise and gold with the U.S. team), Viktoria Komova (RUS/silver in the All-around and silver with the Russian team), Maria Paseka (RUS/bronze on Vault and silver with the Russian team), Ksenia Afanasyeva (RUS/silver with the Russian team), Larisa Iordache (ROU/bronze with the Romanian team) and Diana Bulimar (ROU/bronze with the Romanian team). From 2008, there’s Hong Un Jong (PRK/gold on Vault) and Oksana Chusovitina (GER/UZB/silver on Vault).

Six individual World champions will also be present: Oksana Chusovitina (USSR/UZB: Floor in 1991 and Vault in 2003), Vanessa Ferrari (ITA/All-around in 2006), Viktoria Komova (RUS/Uneven Bars in 2011), Simone Biles (USA/All-around in 2013 and 2014, Floor in 2013 and 2014, Beam in 2014), Hong Un Jong (PRK/Vault in 2014) and Ksenia Afanasyeva (RUS/Floor in 2011).