Skip to main content

Congratulations, Russia!



Russia won today's team final at the European Gymnastics Championships with an impressively consistent performance - not one fall!  Led by the charismatic David Belyavski, the team showed leadership over the entire field, finishing first in every apparatus except rings and high bar.  It was a very close competition against Britain, who last won Europeans just before the Olympics in 2012.  Russia's victory at the equivalent time in Olympic preparations leaves open the possibility that they could perform even better in Rio.  Their team score of 271.378 was roughly half a point higher than Japan's winning score at the Glasgow World Championships last winter.

Russia's 'shock' events were pommels and vault; pommels showing a huge turn round in form as Russia has so very often faltered there.  Not only did Britain feel the absence of their leader Max Whitlock on these pieces, it is true to say that Russia have also improved considerably.  Their strategy of developing specialists with extraordinary levels of difficulty has so far paid off this year.  They have also worked hard on team spirit and execution.  The flowering of 19 year old Nikita Nagorny as a regular member of the senior team has added depth, and perhaps the youngster has also injected some energy and confidence into the team's blood vessels.  As we progress to Rio, let's hope that all the gymnasts can stay healthy - and that, perhaps, Emin Garibov can return to full strength to reinforce the team's efforts on what is still a relative weakness, high bar.  Russia left Ivan Stretovich at home this time, but who else is in reserve?; this is a magnificent team, but they do need more strength in depth.

No single member of the team competed all six apparatus, underlining the impression that this was a very cohesive and happy team effort.  In the unofficial AA (noting that only three gymnasts competed six apparatus in the entire competition) Ukraine's Oleg Verniaiev came out on top, closely followed by Britain's Nile Wilson and Daniel Purvis.   Allowing for the fact that they each missed their weakest pieces in today's competition, both Nagorny and Belyavski could, hypothetically speaking, have competed to the level of the top AA gymnasts here.

CONGRATULATIONS to the entire team - it was wonderful to see you defend your title in such style.  It was a tense, tight competition and you all performed incredibly well under pressure.

I just wanted to add - 36 out of 36 clean routines in the top two teams - that has to be good for European gymnastics.

Full results here, including D scores - http://gym.longinestiming.com/File/00000F0200000002FFFFFFFFFFFFFF04





Comments

  1. I really think this is a big confidence booster going into the Olympics for them. They finally proved to themselves and the World that they can compete at the top level. Let's hope they can ride this momentum to the podium in Rio!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm really impressed by Nagorny's progress. well done and congrats to the Russian team.
    John

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Russia Cup - the road to Nanning!

The Russian MAG and WAG teams take their preparation for World Championships in Nanning one step further this week, as key players compete in the annual Russia Cup in Penza.  There will be team, all around and event finals. The WAG team Last year the gymnasts were rather depleted and suffering the effects of injury; this year the national squad is still short of some of its top members, but has greater diversity and experience up and coming into the ranks, so it will be an interesting time.  Last year saw St Petersburg gymnast and fan favourite Tatiana Nabiyeva lead the all around, ahead of Alla Sosnitskaya, Anna Pavlova, Anna Rodionova, Ekaterina Kramarenko and Polina Fyodorova.  With the individual-only World Championships up coming in Antwerp, I remember writing that Russia might well decide to send a team of only three gymnasts, such was the paucity of available talent.  The final reckoning saw Russia fare a little better than this, although performance lacked depth and re

Andrei Rodionenko explains Russia's performance at Worlds - Lupitatranslates

Rodionenko with European Champion David Belyavski  Courtesy RGF/Elena Mikhailova This is the interview that many people on the internet have already commented on, regarding Andrei Rodionenko's alleged racism.  The original, Russian language version, appears on VTB Bank's website (VTB are sponsors of Russian gymnastics).  It takes cleverer people than me to decide what is racism, what is deliberately perjorative, and what is inferred in an interviewer's question.  For now, I will not comment on this, therefore, but I would ask you to read Lupita's translation carefully before you form your own opinion.   I am providing some links below which might help you to decide where you stand. Definition of racism Definition of sexism BBC Sport article by Matthew Syed : Is it wrong to note that 100m winners are always black?            Updated 24/10 CSKA Moscow: UEFA opens racist chants case             http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/24654499 Andrei

Komova, Grishina, Afanasyeva, Kuksenkov on roster for Voronin Cup, 15-17 December

2012 Olympians Viktoria Komova, Anastasia Grishina, Ksenia Afanasyeva, and Nikolai Kuksenkov will compete in the Voronin Cup, Moscow, 15-17 December.   Aliya Mustafina, Emin Garibov, Denis Ablyazin and Alexander Balandin are out with injury or in recovery - expect them back next spring. http://itar-tass.com/sport/1629215

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more