Skip to main content

A bad day at the office

First year senior Anastasia Grishina is the Russian team's leading all around gymnast at these Championships.  Picture by kind permission of the RGF.


I have to give credit to Romania today - they recalled Romanian teams of the past and performed with confidence and energy to beat Russia to first place in qualifications.  Ioana Iordache leads the unofficial all around with a display of light and precise acrobatics that must position her as a favourite for the individual Olympic title if she can reproduce her form of today once more, on that much anticipated July day in London.

This was a strong, perhaps the strongest possible, Romanian team, drawing on Olympic champions past and, maybe, future.  As I had predicted, Iszbasa, Ponor, Iordache, Bulimar and Haidu pulled out all the stops to give their best and take first place against a somewhat below-power Russian team.  It remains to be seen whether the Russians can turn their form around in two days flat and contend for gold in the final. 

The thing I can say in the Russians' favour is that they do have some wiggle room, both within the team of gymnasts presented and, more widely, gymnasts at home in Moscow.  The team undoubtedly missed the experience and strength of both Ksenia Afanasyeva and Tatiana Nabyeva, Komova competed on bars and beam only, and Mustafina made uncharacteristic errors on both floor and bars.  In the end, the team's effort rested significantly on youth, with Grishina showing progress in both her technique and her competitive demeanour.  Sidorova made a good account of herself on beam and indeed carried the burden of the team's efforts here on her shoulders as start off gymnast, while Paseka delivered two competent vaults to keep the team afloat. 

The team were determined to avoid falls on beam and both Sidorova and Grishina more than held the boat steady for a strong routine from Viktoria Komova, who delivered a picturesque and technically accomplished routine, despite a few wobbles.  Komova's stature and bearing in Brussels has been altogether lighter and more mature than in Tokyo; she has grown, not only physically, but mentally and, one suspects emotionally. 

Perhaps it was the effort of suppressing all those nerves that got to the Russians.  Seeming a little subdued, they progressed to floor, where Sidorova managed a nice performance marred by some serious errors that kept her score down in the 12.9s.  Both Mustafina and Grishina followed in the same vein.  Their team total entitles them to claim the 9th best slot on floor on this piece, a record I am sure they will wish to improve on in Saturday's final.  No Russians in the floor finals on Sunday.

A competent performance on vault was followed by some great exercises on the uneven bars from Grishina and Komova, where sadly Mustafina looked rather tired and suffered some uncharacteristic errors.

So in the end, Russia did well to finish second behind Romania, but ahead of a confident British team who presented some very nice gymnastics.  The fact they could do this whilst counting such a disastrous floor rotation speaks volumes for their talent, but Russia will not be able to afford such mistakes again.  I will not predict what might happen on Saturday, let alone in July, but to me the Romanian team does look much stronger here.

Individually, Grishina led this team with a creditable second place in the unofficial individual all around.  Anastasia qualified to event finals in vault, bars and beam, accompanied by her 2010 Junior Europeans team mate Komova on bars and beam.  She is developing an impressive portfolio of international competition experience, is taking up an increasingly responsible role within the team, and looks set to rival Mustafina for the second all around spot for Russia in London if Mustafina cannot fully overcome the mental and physical trauma of last spring before July.

Hey ho, from tomorrow everything starts again from scratch.  Fight on, girls.

Full results are available at the following links :

Team summary results

Detailed team results

Individual results (unofficial all around competition)

Vault qualifications

Uneven bars qualifications

Beam qualifications

Floor qualifications

You will also find a good collection of videos at the Full Twist blog.  Enjoy!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

European Gymnastics votes to allow Russian participation in UEG competitions

The RGF confirms via Telegram.  Angelina Melnikova attended the Congress in Prague and gave a speech. ‘ ✅ The European Gymnastics Congress voted to reinstate Russian athletes' eligibility for competitions under the organization's auspices. This opens access for artistic and rhythmic gymnastics to qualifying tournaments for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. In trampoline, athletes can qualify for the Olympics without going through European competitions. 🗳 Delegates from 46 of the 50 countries that are members of European Gymnastics participated in the vote. Twenty-seven countries voted to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete. The Russian delegation was led by Marat Filippov, Vice President of the Russian Olympic Committee and Secretary of the Presidential Council for Physical Culture and Sport.   💬 Oleg Belozerov, President of the Russian Gymnastics Federation, noted the importance of the decision: "We positively evaluate the position taken by European Gy...

Melnikova withdrawn from Bundesliga

  Angelina Melnikova has issued a statement about her participation in the Bundesliga.     The mayor of Chemnitz has withdrawn the gymnast’s invitation to participate in the final.     Angelina’s words: ‘I didn't receive an invitation to the Bundesliga final. Unfortunately, the public attention and political discussions were much greater than the organizers expected. I am grateful to TSV Tittmoning-Chemnitz for the opportunity to participate in the semi-finals and, most importantly, for their respectful and kind attitude. In Germany, I received tremendous support from spectators, athletes, coaches, and referees. A sports arena is a place where athletes meet each other and demonstrate their abilities in their favorite sport. Sport provides the opportunity to showcase the results of their hard work and athletic prowess. Everyone deserves equal opportunities in all areas of life, and every athlete deserves to compete equally in the sports arena and fulfill their dr...

Ksenia Afanasyeva takes retirement

Leading Russian gymnast since 2007, Ksenia Afanasyeva has retired from gymnastics for medical reasons, reports Alexei Fililov from R Sport.   Valentina Rodionenko explained that Ksenia has a serious kidney illness. She is in hospital and will take not just days but weeks to recover. Afanasyeva is not just a brilliant gymnast but also a kind, humourous and intelligent team captain.  Her presence will be missed by both spectators and fellow competitors in Rio. Ksenia's place on the Russian team travelling to Rio on Sunday will be taken by the experienced and well prepared Evgenia Shelgunova. RRG would like to wish Ksenia a full recovery.  Get well soon, Ksenia and we will look forward to hearing about your next steps in your new life. http://m.rsport.ru/artist_gym/20160721/993115276.html

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more