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OLYMPIC HISTORY
Gymnastics has been an Olympic
sport from ancient times and from the start of
the modern Games in 1896. Until 1924, when gymnastics
settled into a format not unlike the one we know
today for artistic gymnasts, the sport also featured
rope climbing, tumbling, club swinging, pole vault
and even swimming among its disciplines.
At Paris in 1924, men competed
in individual and team events on each gym apparatus.
The women followed in Amsterdam in 1928. Since
then, the dominant force has been the Soviet
Union, while the former Soviet bloc countries
posed the biggest threat. China, too, with its
diminutive talent and aptitude for harsh regimes
of discipline, is a force to be reckoned with
in gymnastic pursuits, though its dominance
on the diving boards is not replicated so rigidly
in the gymnasium.
Two of the most famous
gymnasts in history are both Russian. Larysa
Latynina remains the most medalled Olympian
in history, with 18 medals between 1956 and
1964, including nine gold, five silver and four
bronze. Olga Korbut, the diminutive star of
the 1972 Games stole more hearts than she won
gold medals but her love affair with the media
was one of the highlights of the Munich Games.
Far more successful was
Nadia Comaneci, the Romanian whose brilliance
took the breath away. In 1976 at the Games in
Montreal, Comaneci, born in Onesti, Moldova,
she made history by becoming the first gymnast
to be awarded perfect scores of 10 for the efforts
on the uneven bars and the beam. As the row
of 10s popped up on the scoreboard, the audience
gasped. Afterwards, a journalist asked Comaneci
whether she had plans to retire. Looking bewildered,
she murmured: "I'm only 14."
If her efforts were impressive,
injuries sustained during competition have often
been almost as spectacular. Memorable moments
included the incident in which Shun Fujimoto,
of Japan, broke his kneecap in Montreal but hid
the injury from team-mates and coach so that
the team could carry on competing. Japan went
on to beat the Soviet Union 576.85 points to
576.45 and Fujimoto became a national hero.
Likewise Kerri Strug, a member of the winning
US team in Atlanta, captured the hearts of the
nation when her ankle popped as she landed from
the vault. She had to be carried off by her
coach and was supported by team-mates as they
received their gold medals. The incident doubtless
contributed to her vast Games earning power.
The nature of gymnastics
has seen many of its protagonists become multiple
medal-winners. The record for winning the most
gold medals in a single day across all sports
stands at four to Vitaly Scherbo, of Belarus,
who in 1992 also became the first gymnast to
win six gold medals at one Olympic Games. Equally,
Vera Caslavska, of Czechoslovakia, collected
seven individual gold medals, a record among
women, at the 1964 and 1968 Games. Nikolai Andrianov,
of the Soviet Union, won 15 medals, more than
any other man across all sports, between 1972
and 1980.
Among men in Sydney, watch
for Laoshuang, of China, Alexei Bondarenko, of
Russia, and Ivan Ivanenko, of Belarus, while
Ling Jie and Liu Xuan, of China, Anna Kovalyova
and Yekaterina Lobaznyuk, of Russia, and Liliya Podkopayeva, the gold medal-winner from Ukraine,
lead the women's artistic event.
Ekaterina Serebrianskaya, defending Olympic champion, and Elena Vitrichenko, her Ukraine teammate and the 1997 world champion,
are favourites in rhythmic gymnastics, while
gymnasts from Russia, Belarus and France are
expected to dominate in the debut trampolining
events.
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