Skip to main content

MAG Qualifications - results so far

You will find the full results at Longines Timing's website here : http://www.longinestiming.com/Sport?sport=GG

There are also live results at the FIG website : http://www.fig-docs.com/live_results/5529/5529.php

Russia did pretty well everywhere except pommels, where they suffered one of their magnificent disasters, carrying four falls on that one event ... Ignatyev performed disappointingly in the all around, carrying two marks in the 12s.  Newcomers to the team, Stretovich and Polyashov, both performed creditably but unremarkably.  There is still time for them to make their mark at upcoming competitions as they progress to Rio.  The results show a team that appears more robust than this time last year; despite the pommel horse tussle, the team revived and regrouped in the following apparatus and, even without Garibov and Balandin, managed to stay in touch with their closest rivals.

The team is in 5th place, closely matched with Britain, and all the gymnasts will have a chance to improve in Tuesday's team final.  On floor, Russia recorded the highest team total.  On pommels, they registered 13th position.  Russia ruled rings, came fifth on parallel bars and fourth on high bar.  Their best all arounder, David Belyavski, stands in second position and will be joined in the individual final by Nikolai Kuksenkov (9th) barring a recurrence of the back injury that prevented his participation on all pieces in the Russia Cup. (A surprise here is that Britain's Max Whitlock, one of the front runners for silver behind King Uchimura, failed to qualify; he will be replaced by Daniel Purvis, and newcomer Nile Wilson.  This opens up the all around competition, with almost anyone in the top ten capable of medalling, although Uchimura remains regally in that top spot and looks unlikely to be toppled.)

Ablyazin qualified in first spot for floor, and second for rings, where he will be joined by Ignatyev.  He also stands second in vault.  Surprisingly, as it is their weak piece, Russia is the only country to have two representatives in high bar final, Kuksenkov (4th) and Belyavski (7th).

So despite that terrible pommel horse rotation, Russia has held its head high and will continue to participate in all finals except for p-bars and pommel horse.  All four senior members of the team have qualified to at least one final.  The men's competition is deep and intriguing - I think we can look forward to a great team final!

Germany and Azerbaijan compete in the final subdivision - we will have to wait and see what difference that makes to the final standings.

Molodyets to Russia, and good luck for the future!




















Comments

  1. Still one rotation to go I believe, we'll see if Belyavskiy can hold on to top 8 in HB

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think that Kuksenkov qualified to PB final ...
    John

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He did indeed. The two Chinese gymnasts ahead of him are 3rd and 4th place on Chinese team, bumping him up to 8th.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Aliya Mustafina - I competed as best I could

Picture credit RGF Aliya speaks in Sports Express http://news.sport-express.ru/2014-05-18/699607 I am very pleased with my performance today, I don't know what the judges didn't like about my bars, but I didn't ask them ... I did my routine fairly well without serious error. On beam I didn't have the start value but I received the highest execution score.  We will try to fix that before the World Championships. Considering the problems I had with my ankle, I think I performed to the optimum at the moment.  I did everything I could. I'm not  the least bit sorry that I performed here -  Very glad that I could help the team. I think my presence made things easier for the girls.   It is very difficult to compete at such serious senior competitions for the first time.  Of course they were very worried.   But I'm sure that with time they will learn to cope easily with their nerves (smiles). 

Remembering last summer - Nelli Kim, her judges and Viktoria Komova

In view of Nelli Kim's recent interview , Lupita and I thought it timely to revisit the performance of some of the WTC President's judges over past competitions ... this article from 27th August 2012 is reposted here, as a reminder. You will find a link to the FIG's newly published book of results at the Olympic Games here .  This year, they have broken down the judge's execution scores so you can see exactly how each judge evaluated the gymnasts' performances.  It makes for interesting reading - if only I had more time to analyse each judge's marking.  A skim reading already highlights multiple inconsistencies in individual judges' marks and makes you wonder why they bother with the jury at all. I have taken the time to look at the reference judges' scores for the top four in the women's all around.  The FIG explains here what their role is, and how they are selected.  I even used my calculator, which is a risky thing in my hands.  M...

Does Komova need gymnastics?

Komova - a prodigious talent for performance I have been pondering the nature of gymnastics talent recently, while viewing some videos of 1992 competitions on YouTube - you can find links to them if you like, by visiting RRG's Facebook page. What was it that made the Soviets so outstanding?  In the videos, you will see three champions, side by side, each competing close to perfect routines almost every time they hit the podium.  No sprung floor, no vaulting table, a Code that (1) required compulsory as well as optional routines to be prepared, (2) encouraged innovation in single moves of extreme difficulty, (3) required balanced performances of artistic as well as technical merit, and (4) recognised and rewarded virtuosity.   The three champions I am speaking of each satisfied the Code in different ways: Boguinskaia had unique and incredible grace and amplitude; Lyssenko expressed emotional intensity through an amazing combination of power, difficulty and artistry; Gutsu ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more