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Giovedì, 18 Agosto 2016 20:57

With fourth Olympic title, Biles joins golden record club as Hambuechen and Verniaiev finally coronated

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Fabian Hambuechen (GER) Fabian Hambuechen (GER)

Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) - Biles floors the competition for fourth gold Simone Biles's Olympic finals ended as they began, with the American champion atop the podium, a gold medal around her neck.

After golds with the U.S. team, in the All-around and on Vault as well as bronze on Beam, the 19-year-old took her fourth Olympic title for her samba flavored Floor routine Tuesday, finishing comfortably ahead of her teammate, 2012 Floor champion Alexandra Raisman.

The U.S. sensation hereby joins an exclusive club of women to have won four golds in Gymnastics at a single Games: Agnes Keleti (HUN, 1956, including gold for Team portable apparatus, an event contested for the last time that year), Larisa Latynina (URS, 1956), Vera Caslavska (TCH, 1968) and Ekaterina Szabo (ROU, 1984).

Raisman, 22, was all smiles as she accepted her sixth Olympic medal, her third of these Games. Tumbling to bronze, Amy Tinkler, the youngest British athlete in Rio, earned her nation's second Olympic medal in Women's Artistic Gymnastics, four years after Elisabeth Tweddle made history with the same colour.

Gold at last for Verniaiev...

After coming within a toepoint of defeating Japan's Kohei Uchimura for the All-around title, 22-year-old Oleg Verniaiev finally got to stand on the top step of the podium on his best event, Parallel Bars. The 2014 World champion on the apparatus locked down his first Olympic gold - only his second major international title - after reigning World champion You Hao took himself out of contention with a fall on his dismount.

Danell Leyva has medalled at every Olympics and World Championships he's attended for the past five years. The 24-year-old American continued his streak Tuesday with silver, much to the delight of his coach and stepfather Yin Alvarez, who danced for joy from the sidelines. The 2011 World Parallel Bars champion was originally an alternate to the U.S. team, but was called in to replace injured teammate John Orozco just before the Games.

Often a finalist but rarely a medallist in major international competition, David Belyavskiy finally climbed onto an individual podium with bronze, one week after his silver with the Russian team.

...and for High Bar king Hambuechen

After four Olympic Games and a decade as the leader of the German team, Fabian Hambuechen finally has his long-awaited gold, at 28. The 2007 World champion on High Bar won bronze in 2008 and silver in 2012 but considered himself over the hill before the Rio Games, which he says will be his last. He nevertheless qualified first to the final.

The expected duel between Hambuechen and London gold medallist Epke Zonderland never materialized: "The flying Dutchman" fell to his stomach after a risky release combination and finished seventh. The challenge came instead from Leyva, whose performance gave him his second Olympic silver of the afternoon and third overall medal.

Britain's Nile Wilson, just 20 and in his first Olympics, took full advantage of his only individual event final, nailing his routine for bronze.

USA dethrones China to top medal table

China has been the dominant nation at the past two Olympic Games, but in Rio the USA, led by Biles, was number one with 12 overall medals. Their haul includes four golds, along with six silvers and two bronzes. Following up on their stunning success in London in 2012, Great Britain surpassed itself with its best-ever results, ending with six medals, including two historic golds, their first in Artistic Gymnastics. Until the very last moment the Russians weren't certain to take part in the Games, but they proudly collected eight medals, though just one title. With only two bronzes, China dropped to the 11th on the medal table, behind host Brazil

FIG: The International Gymnastics Federation is the governing body for gymnastics worldwide. It is the oldest established international sports federation and has participated in the Olympic Games since their revival in 1896. The FIG governs seven disciplines: Gymnastics for All, Men's Artistic, Women's Artistic, Rhythmic, Trampoline, Aerobic and Acrobatic. It counts 142 national member federations and boasts a 28-person staff at its international seat in Lausanne (SUI), host city of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

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