Gymnastics

Event Guide:

Medals Table
G S B Tot
1 CHN 51 21 28 100
2 USA 36 38 36 110
3 RUS 23 21 28 72
4 GBR 19 13 15 47
5 GER 16 10 15 41
6 AUS 14 15 17 46
Olympic History

History Timeline

It all started in Athens in 1896...

Team GB

Competitor List

Take a look at the British athletes heading for Beijing

Tweddle comes close to bronze

GB gymnast misses out by 0.025

  • Tweddle: Unfortunate

    Tweddle: Unfortunate

Women's uneven bars:
Gold: He Kexin (Chn)
Silver: Nastia Liukin (US)
Bronze: Yang Yilin (Chn)

Men's rings:
Gold: Chen Yibing (Chn)
Silver: Yang Wei (Chn)
Bronze: Oleksandr Vorobiov (Ukr)

Men's vault:
Gold: Leszek Blanik (Pol)
Silver: Thomas Bouhail (Fra)
Bronze: Anton Golotsutskov (Rus)

Women's trampoline:
Gold: He Wenna (Chn)
Silver: Karen Cockburn (Can)
Bronze: Ekaterina Khilko (Uzb)

Also see

Great Britain's Beth Tweddle came agonisingly close to scooping a medal in the uneven bars final, eventually finishing fourth.

The 23-year old went last in the competition, knowing that she needed at least 16.650 to secure bronze ahead of China's Yang Yilin, but her total of 16.625 fell fractionally short.

Fourth was, however, Tweddle's best-ever Olympic finish and follows on from Louis Smith's unexpected bronze in the pommel horse final, Team GB's first ever individual gymnastics medal.

Gold eventually went to China's He Kexin who has found herself at the centre of a wave of controversy, with various sources claiming she is below the minimum required age of 16.

He's score of 16.725 was matched by Nastia Liukin of the United States, but judges gave the home favourite the nod to move into first place and take the top prize.

Dominant

China have now secured seven of the available ten gymnastic gold medals, and He's win comes quick on the back of Chen Yibing's victory in the men's rings.

Chen registered a score of 16.600 points to finish ahead of compatriot Yang Wei and Oleksandr Vorobiov of Ukraine.

The men's vault also went down to a tie-break, with Poland's Leszek Blanik coming out on top ahead of Thomas Bouhail of France.

World champion Blanik's two vaults earned the same average score of 16.537 points as Bouhail, but the complicated average system came out in favour of the Pole.

Russia's Anton Golotsutskov won another bronze after also coming third in the floor final on Sunday.

Romanian Marian Dragulescu was on his way towards gold when his second vault ended up with him on the floor and he could then only finish fourth.

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