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The two exercises (compulsory and voluntary) for each apparatus were summed to give an apparatus score; the top 6 in each apparatus participated in the finals; others were ranked 7th through 117th. In the final, each gymnast performed an additional voluntary exercise; half of the score from the preliminary carried over.
There were 113 competitors from 26 nations; nations entering the team event had 6 gymnasts while other nations could have up to 3 gymnasts. [1] Japan reached the height of its success in the event this year, thoroughly dominating the event by taking the top five places (with the final Japanese gymnast placing 10th).
Hikaru Mori (森ひかる, Mori Hikaru, born 7 July 1999) [1] is a Japanese individual and synchronised trampoline gymnast. She won the silver medal in the women's individual event at the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia.
The final score for each team was determined by combining all of the scores earned by the team on each apparatus during the compulsory and optional rounds. If all six gymnasts on a team performed a routine on a single apparatus during compulsories or optionals, only the five highest scores on that apparatus counted toward the team total.
Mitsuo Tsukahara 22 December 1947 (aged 24) Tokyo, Japan Liechtenstein: Bruno Banzer 17 June 1947 (aged 25) Mexico: Rogelio Mendoza 2 May 1944 (aged 28) Mexico City, Mexico New Zealand: Terry Sale 5 July 1951 (aged 21) Auckland, New Zealand North Korea: Ho Yun-hang 20 October 1950 (aged 21)
The rhythmic gymnastics individual all-around qualification took place at Paris' Porte de La Chapelle Arena on Thursday, Aug. 8, and a series of new action shots from the competition had fans ...
Mitsuo Tsukahara 22 December 1947 (aged 20) Tokyo, Japan Mexico: Enrique García 15 July 1943 (aged 25) Chihuahua, Mexico: José González 15 January 1946 (aged 22) Tlaxcala, Mexico: Rogelio Mendoza 2 May 1944 (aged 24) Mexico City, Mexico: Armando Valles 6 May 1941 (aged 27) Mexico City, Mexico
The women of the 2008 and 2012 Olympics US Gymnastics teams are no longer the sweet-faced teens you watched on TV. Now in their 20s and beyond, these talented ladies are no longer competing on ...