Olympics-Gymnastics-Russia and China primed to end Japan's reign
Send a link to a friend
[July 16, 2021]
By Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan have secured gold or silver in the men's
team event at the last four Olympics but as the hosts will be
relying largely on a group of novice gymnasts at the Tokyo Games,
the stage is set for a new champion to emerge.
Since making his Olympic debut in 2008, Kohei Uchimura had
spearheaded Japan's bid to win the team gold in three successive
Games but in Tokyo he has opted to compete in just one event to
preserve his battle-scarred body.
The 32-year-old became the first man in 44 years to earn
back-to-back all-around Olympic golds in 2016, capping a remarkable
streak of topping the podium in all major international competitions
for two full Olympic cycles.
But with age and injuries taking their toll, the gymnast known as
"King Kohei" will only be competing on the horizontal bar - and even
then he was lucky to make the cut by the narrowest of margins.
The odds-on favourite for the all-around crown - where men compete
on the floor exercise, vault, parallel bars, horizontal bar, pommel
horse and the rings - is Russian world champion Nikita Nagornyy.
The 24-year-old has not lost a major all-around competition since
placing third at the 2018 world championships and he will be backed
by a Russian squad gunning for team gold after they narrowly lost to
Japan in the Rio Olympics five years ago.

The Russians, however, will be competing without their flag and
anthem because of doping sanctions.
An experienced Chinese squad, whose hopes of completing a hat-trick
of men's Olympic team golds in Rio fell short when they could only
finish third, will be seeking redemption.
Former world all-round champion Xiao Ruoteng, two-times parallel
bars world champion Zou Jingyuan, Olympic team bronze medallist Lin
Chaopan and Sun Wei, the only first-time Olympian on the China team,
make up the class of 2021.
[to top of second column] |

China won gold at the 2018 world
championships and finished second, behind Russia, in 2019.
But with the Russian team plagued by injuries over the past year,
taking Olympic team gold for the first time since 1996 could prove
to be an uphill challenge.
A big question mark hangs over Artur Dalaloyan, the 2018 all-around
champion, who had surgery for a torn Achilles tendon in April,
though the team said at the time that he would be ready for Tokyo.

Japan's team may be lacking in Olympic experience but some members
of the squad were part of the set-up that grabbed world championship
bronze in 2019; including Kazuma Kaya who won the parallel bars
bronze. Uchimura himself remains a formidable force on the
horizontal bar.
Among those to watch out for in the individual events will be Carlos
Yulo, who will be hoping to become the first Filipino to win an
Olympic gold.
The 21-year-old, who has lived and trained in Tokyo since 2016, took
gold on the floor exercise at the 2019 worlds and Southeast Asian
Games, and hopes to do the same at the Olympics.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Pritha
Sarkar)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
 |