Men's artistic individual all-around at the Games of the V Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Stockholm Olympic Stadium | |||||||||
Date | 12 July | |||||||||
Competitors | 44 from 9 nations | |||||||||
Winning score | 131.50 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Gymnastics at the 1912 Summer Olympics | |
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All-around | men |
Team | men |
Team, free system | men |
Team, Swedish system | men |
The men's artistic individual all-around was an artistic gymnastics event held as part of the Gymnastics at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme. The competition was held on 12 July at the Stockholm Olympic Stadium. [1] It was the fourth appearance of the event. [2] There were 44 competitors from 9 nations. [1] Each nation was limited to 6 gymnasts (a marked reduction from the 20 permitted in 1908). [3] The event was won by Alberto Braglia of Italy, the first man to successfully defend a title in the artistic individual all-around. The bronze medalist from 1908, Louis Ségura, this time took silver. Braglia and Ségura were the first two men to win multiple medals in the event. Italian Adolfo Tunesi earned bronze.
As in 1908, the individual results were not considered for any of the team competitions. As in 1900 and 1908, there were no separate apparatus events.
This was the fourth appearance of the men's individual all-around. The first individual all-around competition had been held in 1900, after the 1896 competitions featured only individual apparatus events. A men's individual all-around has been held every Games since 1900. [1]
Four of the top 10 gymnasts from the 1908 Games returned: gold medalist Alberto Braglia of Italy, bronze medalist Louis Ségura of France, sixth-place finisher Samuel Hodgetts of Great Britain, and seventh-place finisher Marcel Lalu of France. Marco Torrès of France (1909) had won a World Championship since the last Games; reigning (1911) World Champion Ferdinand Steiner of Bohemia did not compete in Stockholm.
Denmark, Luxembourg, and the Russian Empire each made their debut in the event. Bohemia, France, Great Britain, Hungary, and Italy each made their third appearance, tying the absent Germany (missing the event for the first time) for most among nations. Germany, Sweden, and Norway had gymnasts competing in the team events, but opted not to have individual gymnasts; Sweden and Norway cited their view that gymnastics should be a team sport with mass displays. [1]
Gymnasts competed on the horizontal bar, parallel bars, rings, and pommel horse. Three judges marked each performer in each of the four apparati; these 12 scores were summed to give a final score. The scoring was from 0 to 12; this led to a possible total of 36 on each apparatus and 144 for the grand total. [1]
Two three-hour sessions were held on a single day, from 9:30 to 12:30 and from 14:00 to 17:00. [1]
Date | Time | Round |
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Friday, 12 July 1912 | 9:30 | Final |
Results are listed in the order that they appeared in the Official Olympic Report, rather than the Olympic Order that exists today.
Rank | Gymnast | Nation | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alberto Braglia | Italy | 34.75 | 31.75 | 34.75 | 32.75 | 135.00 | |
Louis Ségura | France | 34.50 | 32.25 | 35.75 | 30.00 | 132.50 | |
Adolfo Tunesi | Italy | 35.75 | 30.50 | 35.00 | 30.25 | 131.50 | |
4 | Guido Boni | Italy | 34.75 | 28.25 | 35.25 | 29.75 | 128.00 |
Giorgio Zampori | Italy | 33.25 | 30.75 | 35.00 | 29.00 | 128.00 | |
6 | Pietro Bianchi | Italy | 31.75 | 30.75 | 33.75 | 29.50 | 127.75 |
7 | Marcel Lalu | France | 31.75 | 30.50 | 35.50 | 29.25 | 127.00 |
Marco Torrès | France | 30.75 | 31.00 | 35.00 | 30.25 | 127.00 | |
9 | Guido Romano | Italy | 34.50 | 30.00 | 32.50 | 29.25 | 126.25 |
10 | Antoine Costa | France | 30.75 | 29.75 | 34.25 | 29.75 | 124.50 |
11 | Louis-Charles Marty | France | 30.50 | 30.50 | 34.75 | 26.75 | 122.50 |
12 | Leonard Hanson | Great Britain | 29.50 | 31.50 | 31.75 | 28.50 | 121.25 |
13 | Elemér Pászti | Hungary | 33.75 | 27.00 | 30.50 | 27.75 | 119.00 |
14 | Auguste Pompogne | France | 31.00 | 28.00 | 32.00 | 27.00 | 118.00 |
15 | József Szalai | Hungary | 26.00 | 29.75 | 33.00 | 28.00 | 117.25 |
Antoine Wehrer | Luxembourg | 29.00 | 28.75 | 33.00 | 26.50 | 117.25 | |
17 | Imre Gellért | Hungary | 32.25 | 26.75 | 34.00 | 24.00 | 117.00 |
18 | Pierre Hentges | Luxembourg | 30.75 | 29.25 | 29.50 | 26.00 | 115.50 |
19 | János Krizmanich | Hungary | 33.00 | 26.75 | 28.75 | 26.50 | 115.00 |
20 | Nicolas Kanivé | Luxembourg | 28.50 | 29.50 | 31.25 | 22.25 | 111.50 |
21 | John Whitaker | Great Britain | 27.25 | 29.75 | 27.75 | 26.50 | 111.25 |
22 | Jean-Pierre Thommes | Luxembourg | 28.50 | 27.50 | 32.00 | 22.75 | 110.75 |
23 | François Hentges | Luxembourg | 30.25 | 27.00 | 32.50 | 20.75 | 110.50 |
24 | Emile Lanners | Luxembourg | 28.75 | 27.00 | 29.00 | 25.00 | 109.75 |
25 | Samuel Hodgetts | Great Britain | 27.25 | 28.25 | 27.75 | 25.25 | 108.50 |
26 | Arvor Hansen | Denmark | 22.50 | 28.50 | 29.50 | 27.00 | 107.50 |
27 | Villiam Nieminen | Finland | 24.25 | 25.00 | 30.00 | 26.50 | 105.75 |
28 | Charles Simmons | Great Britain | 23.00 | 28.50 | 30.50 | 23.50 | 105.50 |
29 | William Cowhig | Great Britain | 22.50 | 26.75 | 29.50 | 25.75 | 104.50 |
30 | Charles Jensen | Denmark | 25.25 | 26.25 | 27.00 | 25.25 | 103.75 |
31 | Edvard Jansson | Finland | 19.75 | 24.25 | 30.75 | 28.25 | 103.00 |
32 | Reginald Potts | Great Britain | 24.75 | 28.25 | 23.25 | 25.50 | 101.75 |
33 | Axel Andersen | Denmark | 20.00 | 26.50 | 30.00 | 22.25 | 98.75 |
34 | Carl Pedersen | Denmark | 20.00 | 28.25 | 28.25 | 20.75 | 97.25 |
Niels Petersen | Denmark | 23.75 | 25.50 | 25.00 | 17.00 | 97.25 | |
36 | Bohumil Honzátko | Bohemia | 23.75 | 25.50 | 25.00 | 17.00 | 91.25 |
37 | Anders Tamminen | Finland | 18.25 | 26.00 | 23.25 | 23.00 | 90.50 |
38 | Pavel Kushnikov | Russian Empire | 19.25 | 21.50 | 24.50 | 24.75 | 90.00 |
39 | Aleksandr Akhyun | Russian Empire | 18.50 | 23.25 | 25.25 | 20.75 | 87.75 |
40 | Einar Møbius | Denmark | 20.00 | 26.25 | 27.00 | 13.50 | 86.75 |
41 | Semyon Kulikov | Russian Empire | 17.50 | 21.50 | 24.00 | 16.50 | 79.50 |
42 | Fyodor Zabelin | Russian Empire | 17.00 | 22.50 | 22.00 | 14.75 | 76.25 |
— | Yrjö Vuolio | Finland | — | — | 29.00 | 23.25 | 52.25 |
Kaarlo Ekholm | Finland | — | — | 25.50 | 25.00 | 50.50 |
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The men's pommel horse event was part of the gymnastics programme at the 1932 Summer Olympics. It was contested for the fifth time after 1896, 1904, 1924, and 1928. The competition was held on Thursday, August 11, 1932. Ten gymnasts from five nations competed. Each nation was limited to three gymnasts. The event was won by István Pelle of Hungary, the nation's first medal in the pommel horse. Italy also earned its first medal in the event, with Omero Bonoli's silver. Frank Haubold took bronze, the United States' first medal in the event since 1904.
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The men's pommel horse competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. It was held on 5, 7, and 10 September at the Baths of Caracalla. There were 128 competitors from 28 nations, with nations in the team competition having up to 6 gymnasts and other nations entering up to 2 gymnasts. There was a tie for first place in the pommel horse. Boris Shakhlin of the Soviet Union and Eugen Ekman of Finland each received a gold medal. It was the third consecutive Games with a gold medal for the Soviets, as Shakhlin became the first man to successfully repeat as Olympic champion in the event. Ekman's medal was the only medal in men's artistic gymnastics in 1960 that did not go to the Soviet Union or Japan. Third place and the bronze medal went to Japan's Shuji Tsurumi.
The men's rings competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. It was held on 5, 7, and 10 September at the Baths of Caracalla. There were 129 competitors from 28 nations, with nations in the team competition having up to 6 gymnasts and other nations entering up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Albert Azaryan of the Soviet Union, the first man to successfully defend an Olympic title in the rings. Boris Shakhlin took silver, making it the third consecutive Games the Soviets finished in the top two. Takashi Ono tied with Velik Kapsazov for bronze, giving Japan its second consecutive Games with at least one bronze medal and Bulgaria its first medal in the rings.
The men's parallel bars competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. It was held on 5, 7, and 10 September at the Baths of Caracalla. There were 129 competitors from 28 nations, with nations in the team competition having up to 6 gymnasts and other nations entering up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Boris Shakhlin of the Soviet Union, the nation's second consecutive victory in the men's parallel bars. Giovanni Carminucci earned Italy's first medal in the event since 1932 with his silver. Takashi Ono of Japan took bronze for a second consecutive Games, making him the fourth man to win multiple medals in the event.
The men's horizontal bar event at the 2020 Summer Olympics was held on 24 July and 3 August 2021 at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre. Approximately 70 gymnasts from 35 nations competed on the horizontal bar in the qualifying round.
The men's artistic individual all-around competition at the 1956 Summer Olympics was held at the West Melbourne Stadium from 3 to 7 December. It was the twelfth appearance of the event. There were 63 competitors from 18 nations, with each nation entering up to 6 gymnasts. The event was won by Viktor Chukarin of the Soviet Union, the second man to successfully defend an all-around title and fourth to earn multiple medals of any color. His countryman Yury Titov took bronze. Takashi Ono of Japan earned silver. It was the first medal in the event for Japan, beginning that nation's nearly four-decade battle with the Soviet Union for dominance. Every men's all-around medal from 1956 to 1976 was won by a gymnast from one of those two nations; from 1952 to 1988, the Soviets won six of the ten gold medals while Japan won the other four.