MAG rank after 7/8 flights

TEAM STANDINGS
1. Japan 364.291
2. USA 361.583
3. Germany 354.132
4. Russia 353.725
5. Romania 350.900
6. Ukraine 350.434
7. France 349.828
8. Great Britain 348.742
9. Spain 348.725
10. Canada 347.076
11. Brazil 346.626
12. Puerto Rico 344.460
13. Italy 343.642
14. Switzerland 340.646
15. Australia 339.574
16. Netherlands 336.077


AA STANDINGS
1. Uchimura JPN 92.256
2. Orozco USA 90.532
3. Leyva USA 89.848
4. Yamamuro JPN 89.765
…….. 5. Horton USA 89.689
6. Purvis GBR 89.132
7. Boy GER 88.697
8. Garibov RUS 88.664
9. Kuksenkov UKR 88.648
10. Nguyen GER 88.464
11. Martinez ESP 88.306
12. Tommasone FRA 88.231
13. Rivera PUR 87.831
14. Koczi ROM 87.732
15. Fokin UZB 87.698
16. Belyavsky RUS 87.632
…….. 17. Hambuchen GER 87.507
18. Dragulescu ROM 87.032
19. Shatilov ISR 86.732
20. Gonzalez CHI 86.665
…….. 21. Legendre USA 86.598
22. Stepko UKR 86.565
23. Bucher SUI 86.466
24. Gafuik CAN 86.457

China & Korea yet to compete.

Keatings gutted, GBR out

That’s the way it looks right now … with CHN and RUS yet to compete:

1. JPN 364.191 2. USA 361.583 3. GER 354.132 4. ROU 350.900 5. UKR 350.434 6. FRA 349.818 7. GBR 348.742

The top 8 teams qualify directly to Olympics.

A bad day for one of my favourite gymnasts, Daniel Keatings.

It’s not the end of the world. In fact, it MIGHT be good preparation for the host nation to be competing in the Olympic venue at the “test” event from January 10-18th, 2012.

They should easily place in the top 4 teams of 8 (ranking 9th-16th in Tokyo) — and move on to the Olympics. With 3 strong all-arounders, GBR should be in even stronger contention since team size will be reduced to 5 athletes for that meet.

The GBR girls made it through already, finishing in 8th place.

Truyens – Pommel 2010

The star from Belgium, Donna-Donny Truyens, will not likely make the Pommel final this year. (15.233) Too bad. He was 2nd at Universiade 2011 in China.

Pommels is easily the best apparatus at Worlds Tokyo. There are dozens of guys trying to qualify.

Click PLAY or watch Truyens at last Worlds on YouTube.

Tommasone, the French pommel specialist, might get there with 15,300.

Vault finalists … so far

It’s nice to see gymnasts from Hong Kong and Vietnam looking good to qualify for the final.

JPN – Okiguchi
ROM – Dragulescu … scandalously over-scored
HKG – Shek
NED – Wammes
VIE – Ha Thanh
BRA – Hypolito
ROM – Koczi
USA – Dalton

click for larger version

I’m waiting on a video of Dragulescu’s second vault. Both knees touched the mat, I believe.

Yet he was awarded 9.066 execution, an impossible score. Sound familiar? … Recall the judges sanctioned following his impossible score on Vault #2 of the 2004 Olympic Final?

Yusuke Tanaka – concussion

#FIG2011Tokyo #Gymnastics #Concussion

… We hear Yusuke Tanaka is doing fine after his floor mishap yesterday and will be back for the team final …

International Gymnast Magazine on Facebook

One of the stars of the Japanese men’s team suffered a concussion in competition during Floor preliminaries.

Not surprisingly, it was on a roll-out skill on Floor.

Similar — but worse — to what happened to Dragulescu at the 2007 European Championships.

Click PLAY or watch Dragulescu’s injury on YouTube.

If you really want to see Tanaka’s concussion, watch it here (VIDEO) … in gruesome slow motion.

Can Tanaka really recover that quickly?

I don’t think so.

I’m no expert. You’d be better to consult Dr. Michel Léglise from France, FIG Chief of Medical.

Know that many on the men’s side defend the skill:

Blythe Lawrence:

… The gymnasts themselves — at least the ones I’ve talked to here in Tokyo — do not think there’s a problem with performing roll out skills. “As scary as they look, Thomas skills are really very safe,” said Jonathan Horton, who does two in his floor routine. “I’ve been doing them since I was like 12 years old, and as long as you have proper air awareness and learn it right [it’s OK]. People get hurt on other things way more than they get hurt on roll out skills on floor.” …

… Examiner – Ban them! The case for getting rid of roll out skills on floor

If Dragulescu can get injured, anyone can. It takes only one slightly mistimed landing.

At minimum, FIG MTC should devalue each roll-out skill in the next Code of Points.

Banning would be more logical. How can FIG officials answer this question:

Why do you ban this skill for women and not for men?

… Roll out skills have already been banned for the women, thanks to the paralysis of 1978 World champion Elena Mukhina, who died of complications from the paralysis five years ago at age 46. Mukhina trained a Thomas (a 1.5 twisting, 1 3/4 somersault, introduced by American Kurt Thomas) for the 1980 Olympics. Until the day she landed it on her chin. …

Is it going to take an accident like Mukkina on the men’s side before FIG takes action?

In the meantime, the medical staff at Worlds needs watch Yusuke Tanaka closely. They’ve been very slow getting to injured athletes so far, by the way.

day 2 men’s Worlds begins

GBR is coming up next. I expect them to challenge the USA and GER for the Bronze medal as a team.

Here’s a flawed wrap-up video of host Japan’s performance yesterday. The narration isn’t exactly accurate.

Warning — the injury to Yusuke Tanaka is included at 1min 50sec. Skip that section if you can’t stomach seeing a concussion. I forced myself to watch.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

more videos on the FIG YouTube channel

related – FIG – Uchimura takes Japan into the lead

Nabieva – Bars and Vault

Very quiet this year compared with Rotterdam. She did her job on 2 apparatus.

Click PLAY or watch her Bars on YouTube.

Click PLAY or watch her Vault on YouTube.

This isn’t enough to stay on the team for Olympics, though. She’ll need to upgrade. And (possibly) add at least one more apparatus.

Men’s Worlds prelims day 1

It was an exciting day in Tokyo, especially since the host team competed in the very first session. A crowd was lined up before I arrived at the arena.

After half the men have competed, here are some of the top guys likely to qualify to the AA Final:

AA STANDINGS
1. Uchimura JPN 92.256
2. Orozco USA 90.532
3. Leyva USA 89.848
4. Yamamuro JPN 89.765

6. Boy 88.697
7. Kuksenkov 88.648
8. Nguyen 88.464
9. Rivera PUR 87.831
10. Kovzi 87.732
11. Fokin UZB 87.698

13. Dragulescu 87.032
14. Gonzalez CHI 86.665

Kohei was brilliant, the top AA so far despite putting his hands down on Vault.

He’s healthier than when he won last year, but has some lower leg injury bad enough that he considered withdrawing from Floor today.

Jon Horton did not qualify for the AA though he hit 6 for 6.Who will challenge Uchimura?

Leyva has as good a chance as any.

I congratulated his step Dad / coach who had to do his gesticulations from the audience today. Very happy with the competition, so far.

Boy doesn’t look as good as he did last year, finishing 2nd. But Dragulescu is back and looks GOOD. He easily qualified to Floor final. But judges should be again be reprimanded or banished for over-scoring his second vault. (VIDEO to come)

TEAM STANDINGS
1. Japan 364.291
2. USA 361.583
3. Germany 354.132

4. Romania 350.900
5. Ukraine 350.434
6. Brazil 346.626
7. Puerto Rico 344.460
8. Italy 343.642

The top 3 are safe to qualify a full team to the Olympics. But it’s not certain for Romania or Ukraine, both of which did a good job today.

Examiner:

The German reaction for their performance tonight: befuddled. Befuddled and dissatisfied, Philipp Boy said. It was unexpected …

In the 3-up, 3-count team final, anything could happen. Marcel Nguyen is possibly the second most talented gymnast in the world — if he could only get his act together and hit a meet. Nguyen is my nominee for the Longine’s Prize, too.

Brazil had a good meet, especially on Vault. The 2016 host nation has never qualified a full men’s team for the Olympics and are doing everything possible at least to finish in the top 16 teams in order to get to the test meet in January.

USA had an excellent meet, with no falls on Pommel horse. The weak apparatus now is Rings, but it didn’t hurt them that badly. It’s the weakest apparatus overall at Worlds 2011 now that few teams are carrying Rings specialists.

Netherlands had a bad meet. But Epke still has a (long) shot at qualifying for the H Bar final. And I’d say van Gelder is my favourite for the Bronze on Rings behind the top 2 Chinese.

The top 3 on each apparatus from Finals qualify directly to Olympics (van Gelder’s now “cleared” for Olympic qualification after his odd ‘drug revelation’ of Worlds 2010.)

Other top stories today:

• The “springy” floor caused grief for the guys too, but not as much as for the girls. Men can adjust to equipment changes faster, I postulate.

Yusuke Tanaka, suffered a concussion on a roll-out skill on Floor — more on that later. As you know, I feel those skills should be banned or devalued.

Why does FIG ban them for women and encourage men to compete more than one in a routine? Dragulescu, for example, competed two today though he’s one of the gymnasts who nearly killed himself in the past on a roll-out. (European championships a few years ago)

• There are men from all over the world doing some of the best routines in the world.

Gonzales from Chile really is one of the best Floor / Vault competitors. Ha Thanh from Vietnam did a near perfect Yurchenko double pike today. Amazing. (A girl from Vietnam already qualified to the Vault final.)

Uzbekistan’s Narmetov on Pommels showed a combination of 2 turning long travels into dismount. Very cool. Great swing, too.

Regulo Carmona from Venezuela on Rings was fantastic. As was Fokin from Uzbekistan on P Bars.

Those are just a few.

• The men’s execution judging is terrible. Truly, it’s a stretch to call it judging. Regardless of execution, scores are boxed between about 7.8 and 9.1 for a “hit” routine. It doesn’t matter if you are ugly, or Uchimura.

I was an FIG judge for many years. We prided ourselves on getting the score correct, regardless of consequences. But — for some reason — today MAG and WAG judges only care about staying “in range”. E scores are an embarrassment in 2011. A complete joke.

I’ll post examples over the coming days.

And more highlight routines.

International Gymnast Magazine on Facebook has been the fastest to post result. Longines has been unreliable, to be generous.

Here are a few of the top guys who MIGHT qualify to the apparatus:

HB STANDINGS
1. Y. Tanaka JPN 15.600
2. Uchimura JPN 15.533
3. Hambuchen GER 15.500
4. Orozco USA 15.266
5. Boy GER 15.266
6. Zonderland NED 15.133
7. Horton USA 15.066
8. Wammes NED 14.833

PB STANDINGS
1. Uchimura JPN 15.391
2. Berbecar ROM 15.366
3. Leyva USA 15.366
4. K. Tanaka JPN 15.366
5. Tsolakidis GRE 15.300
6. Boy GER 15.233
7. Fokin UZB 15.166
8. Nguyen GER 15.133

SR STANDINGS
1. Zanetti BRA 15.533
2. Yamamuro JPN 15.533
3. Van Gelder 15.383
4. Horton 15.366
5. Morandi ITA 15.366
6. Carmona VEN 15.333
7. Uchimura JPN 15.233
8. Orozco USA 15.033

PH STANDINGS
1. Berki HUN 15.866
2. Bertoncelj SLO 15.500
3. Uchimura JPN 15.433
4. Hidvegi HUN 15.266
5. Naddour USA 15.233
6. Kobayashi JPN 15.200
7. Busnari ITA 15.200
8. Orozco USA 15.000

FX STANDINGS
1. Dragulescu ROM 15.566
2. Hypolito BRA 15.500
3. Uchimura JPN 15.466
4. Legendre USA 15.433
5. Gonzalez CHI 15.400
6. Koczi ROM 15.400
7. Dalton USA 15.366
8. Kosmidis GRE 15.366

Those I’ve bolded were some of the best I’ve seen, so far.

… more to come …

This meet’s just getting started.

best links – IG – Uchimura, Japanese Men Lead Tokyo Worlds