Uchimura
errors take gloss off Japan's team gold
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[October 29, 2015]
By Pritha Sarkar
GLASGOW (Reuters) - 'Attain perfection' is
the mantra of Japanese gymnast Kohei Uchimura, and while winning the
team title at the world gymnastics championships on Wednesday fulfilled
a lifelong dream, his performance was far from flawless.
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The Olympic all-around champion incurred a penalty for stepping out
of the area after his vault, then let a frenzied atmosphere get to
him as he crash landed off the horizontal bar.
Not exactly the performance expected from the holder of a record
five world all-around titles who strives to "perform perfectly all
my routines in the same competition".
When asked how it felt to help Japan end their 37-year wait for a
men's world team title, Uchimura gulped and struggled to find the
words to describe his emotions.
"I really wanted to have a perfect routine, so I feel really bad,"
he said. "But I have never won a team competition, and even though
it wasn’t perfect, we still won the gold medal.
"The next time I am the last competitor, I want to do what is
expected of the last competitor.”
Uchimura had no monopoly on errors, with team mate Yusuke Tanaka
falling off the parallel bars and horizontal bar.
Luckily for Japan, however, nemesis China made even more mistakes.
Zhang Chenglong, the only survivor from China's all-conquering 2012
Olympic team, tumbled out of the area on the floor exercise before
three scrappy performances on the pommel horse, including a fall by
Xiao Ruoteng, left them seventh.
So accustomed to success after winning 10 of 11 world men's titles
and three of the five Olympic golds on offer since 1994, China
refused to leave Glasgow without a team medal.
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Three spectacular displays on the parallel bars, topped by Deng
Shudi's score of 16.066, saw them stage a remarkable rally to snatch
bronze with a combined total of 269.959.
The color of the medal did not sit well, however.
"Today we lost not because of how others performed. We lost because
of our own mistakes," Zhang told reporters.
"Chinese gymnastics has a very great history and this performance is
a warning for us before the Rio Olympics."
The errors allowed Britain to collect a surprise silver and end the
duopoly that had ruled men's gymnastics since 2007.
"China and Japan have dominated for so many years. It's a given you
expect them to be first and second," Briton Kristian Thomas said.
"We have laid down a marker that says they are definitely beatable."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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