Men's artistic individual all-around at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Sydney Super Dome | |||||||||
Dates | 16–20 September | |||||||||
Competitors | 97 from 32 nations | |||||||||
Winning score | 58.474 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics | ||
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Artistic | ||
Qualification | men | women |
Team all-around | men | women |
Individual all-around | men | women |
Vault | men | women |
Floor | men | women |
Pommel horse | men | |
Rings | men | |
Parallel bars | men | |
Horizontal bar | men | |
Uneven bars | women | |
Balance beam | women | |
Rhythmic | ||
Group all-around | women | |
Individual all-around | women | |
Trampoline | ||
Individual | men | women |
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 20 at the Sydney SuperDome. [1] There were 97 competitors from 32 nations. [2] Each nation could enter a team of 6 gymnasts (returning to the longstanding team size after one Games of teams of 7 in 1996) or up to 2 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Alexei Nemov of Russia, the nation's first victory in the event. Nemov, with a silver medal in 1996, became the 12th man to earn multiple medals in the all-around. Yang Wei of China took silver. Oleksandr Beresch earned bronze, Ukraine's first medal in the event.
This was the 23rd 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. [2]
Three of the top 10 gymnasts from the 1996 Games returned: silver medalist Alexei Nemov of Russia, seventh-place finisher John Roethlisberger of the United States, and tenth-place finisher Blaine Wilson of the United States. Russia's Nikolai Kryukov was the reigning (1999) World Champion; Ivan Ivankov of Belarus had won the 1997 World Championship. [2]
Latvia made its debut in the event. France made its 21st appearance, most among nations.
Major changes to the competition format were implemented in 2000. The competition continued to use a preliminary (qualifying) round and a final round, with scores cleared between rounds (no carryover). However, the preliminary round now used only one optional exercise for each apparatus rather than requiring both a compulsory and optional exercise. The team event scoring used a 6–5–4 format (each team had 6 gymnasts, selected 5 per apparatus, with 4 scores counting), a reduced version of the 1996 7–6–5 system, which reduced the number of gymnasts competing in every apparatus. Total scores and an overall rank were still used for all gymnasts, however. 2000 was also the year where the tie-breaking rules came into effect, which resulted in far less tie rankings or duplicate of medals than at the Games before that. Each exercise was scored from 0 to 10; thus the total preliminary score was from 0 to 60. The final total, with six exercises, was from 0 to 60. [2]
All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
Date | Time | Round |
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Saturday, 16 September 2000 | 10:30 | Qualifying |
Wednesday, 20 September 2000 | 19:00 | Final |
There were 97 gymnasts that competed during the qualification round on September 16, though only 52 competed on each apparatus. Fifty-three gymnasts competed in the all-around during the qualification round. The thirty-six highest scoring gymnasts advanced to the final on September 16. Each country was limited to three competitors in the final.
Rank | Gymnast | Nation | Prelim | Total | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alexei Nemov | Russia | 58.361 | 9.800 | 9.775 | 9.687 | 9.650 | 9.775 | 9.787 | 58.474 | |
Yang Wei | China | 57.449 | 9.700 | 9.750 | 9.712 | 9.712 | 9.750 | 9.737 | 58.361 | |
Oleksandr Beresch | Ukraine | 58.049 | 9.675 | 9.762 | 9.550 | 9.675 | 9.750 | 9.800 | 58.212 | |
4 | Ivan Ivankov | Belarus | 56.949 | 9.575 | 9.725 | 9.762 | 9.500 | 9.700 | 9.762 | 58.024 |
5 | Oleksandr Svetlichny | Ukraine | 57.286 | 9.600 | 9.675 | 9.525 | 9.725 | 9.725 | 9.700 | 57.950 |
6 | Blaine Wilson | United States | 56.861 | 9.700 | 9.587 | 9.612 | 9.800 | 9.712 | 9.525 | 57.936 |
7 | Alexei Bondarenko | Russia | 57.812 | 9.637 | 9.725 | 9.712 | 9.400 | 9.675 | 9.775 | 57.924 |
8 | Yordan Yovchev | Bulgaria | 57.599 | 9.550 | 9.737 | 9.750 | 9.475 | 9.675 | 9.700 | 57.887 |
9 | Lihui Zheng | China | 57.311 | 9.612 | 9.650 | 9.575 | 9.612 | 9.675 | 9.350 | 57.474 |
10 | Lee Joo-Hyung | South Korea | 55.986 | 9.237 | 9.650 | 9.600 | 9.525 | 9.750 | 9.700 | 57.462 |
11 | Rareş Orzaţa | Romania | 56.560 | 9.312 | 9.612 | 9.637 | 9.662 | 9.462 | 9.700 | 57.385 |
12 | Yoshihiro Saito | Japan | 56.487 | 9.512 | 9.600 | 9.662 | 9.437 | 9.425 | 9.725 | 57.361 |
13 | Marian Drăgulescu | Romania | 57.349 | 9.637 | 9.300 | 9.562 | 9.562 | 9.487 | 9.550 | 57.098 |
14 | Paul Hamm | United States | 57.436 | 9.675 | 9.612 | 9.550 | 9.587 | 9.750 | 8.875 | 57.049 |
15 | Dimitri Karbanenko | France | 56.424 | 9.450 | 9.125 | 9.425 | 9.612 | 9.712 | 9.637 | 56.961 |
16 | Yann Cucherat | France | 56.323 | 9.262 | 9.662 | 9.575 | 9.212 | 9.612 | 9.600 | 56.923 |
17 | Eric López | Cuba | 56.574 | 8.662 | 9.600 | 9.675 | 9.687 | 9.612 | 9.575 | 56.811 |
18 | Naoya Tsukahara | Japan | 56.985 | 9.362 | 8.425 | 9.650 | 9.562 | 9.662 | 9.762 | 56.423 |
19 | Maxim Aleshin | Russia | 56.274 | 9.325 | 9.000 | 9.412 | 9.412 | 9.550 | 9.700 | 56.399 |
20 | Benjamin Varonian | France | 56.161 | 9.500 | 8.887 | 9.550 | 8.987 | 9.725 | 9.712 | 56.361 |
21 | Dimitrij Nonin | Germany | 56.049 | 8.937 | 9.437 | 9.587 | 9.012 | 9.587 | 9.750 | 56.310 |
22 | Cho Seong-Min | South Korea | 56.937 | 9.262 | 9.250 | 9.550 | 9.600 | 9.662 | 8.900 | 56.224 |
23 | Aleksei Sinkevich | Belarus | 56.622 | 8.750 | 9.587 | 9.500 | 9.137 | 9.575 | 9.512 | 56.061 |
24 | Dimitar Lountchev | Bulgaria | 54.948 | 9.037 | 9.562 | 9.075 | 9.375 | 9.437 | 9.525 | 56.011 |
25 | Kenichi Fujita | Japan | 56.560 | 9.512 | 9.637 | 9.600 | 9.575 | 8.750 | 8.800 | 55.874 |
26 | Omar Cortés | Spain | 55.061 | 8.112 | 9.675 | 9.550 | 9.325 | 9.537 | 9.650 | 55.849 |
27 | Roman Zozulya | Ukraine | 55.923 | 8.812 | 9.625 | 9.687 | 9.162 | 8.925 | 9.600 | 55.811 |
28 | Ioan Suciu | Romania | 56.773 | 8.712 | 9.725 | 9.325 | 9.212 | 9.400 | 9.412 | 55.786 |
29 | Philippe Rizzo | Australia | 54.123 | 9.350 | 9.637 | 8.775 | 9.087 | 9.187 | 9.750 | 55.786 |
30 | Lazaro Lamelas | Cuba | 55.722 | 8.775 | 9.262 | 9.437 | 9.262 | 9.275 | 9.575 | 55.586 |
31 | Víctor Cano | Spain | 55.748 | 9.087 | 9.650 | 9.462 | 8.825 | 8.875 | 9.662 | 55.561 |
32 | Craig Heap | Great Britain | 54.511 | 9.112 | 9.262 | 9.450 | 9.037 | 9.275 | 9.212 | 55.348 |
33 | Ivan Pavlovsky | Belarus | 56.374 | 8.925 | 9.500 | 9.312 | 9.437 | 8.375 | 9.362 | 54.911 |
34 | Alejandro Barrenechea | Spain | 54.911 | 8.162 | 8.612 | 9.575 | 9.237 | 9.587 | 9.237 | 54.410 |
35 | Alberto Busnari | Italy | 54.686 | 8.300 | 9.550 | 8.400 | 8.362 | 9.537 | 9.662 | 53.811 |
36 | Igor Cassina | Italy | 54.111 | 7.837 | 9.350 | 8.412 | 9.175 | 8.812 | 9.687 | 53.373 |
37 | Ilia Giorgadze | Georgia | 56.948 | DNS | ||||||
38 | Jeong Jin-su | South Korea | 56.574 | DNS | ||||||
39 | Andreas Wecker | Germany | 56.011 | DNS | ||||||
40 | Igors Vihrovs | Latvia | 56.186 | DNS | ||||||
41 | Stephen McCain | United States | 55.686 | DNS | ||||||
42 | Florentin Pescaru | Romania | 55.823 | Did not advance—3 per nation rule | ||||||
43 | Yevgeny Podgorny | Russia | 56.273 | |||||||
44 | Dieter Rehm | Switzerland | 54.423 | |||||||
45 | Saúl Cofiño | Spain | 54.286 | |||||||
46 | Flemming Solberg | Norway | 53.975 | Did not advance | ||||||
47 | Damian Istria | Australia | 53.973 | |||||||
48 | Kim Dong-hwa | South Korea | 53.124 | |||||||
48 | Diego Lizardi | Puerto Rico | 52.261 | |||||||
50 | Rúnar Alexandersson | Iceland | 52.149 | |||||||
51 | Lin Yung-hsi | Chinese Taipei | 51.674 | |||||||
52 | David Phillips | New Zealand | 49.461 | |||||||
53 | Pae Gil-su | North Korea | 48.411 | |||||||
54 | Li Xiaopeng | China | 47.962 | |||||||
55 | Xing Aowei | China | 47.574 | |||||||
56 | Nikolay Kryukov | Russia | 47.336 | |||||||
57 | Morgan Hamm | United States | 47.262 | |||||||
58 | Mutsumi Harada | Japan | 46.974 | |||||||
59 | Valeriy Honcharov | Ukraine | 46.611 | |||||||
60 | Jan-Peter Nikiferow | Germany | 46.587 | |||||||
61 | Sergej Pfeifer | Germany | 46.549 | |||||||
62 | Deyan Yordanov | Bulgaria | 44.274 | |||||||
63 | Florent Maree | France | 44.087 | |||||||
64 | Vasil Vetsev | Bulgaria | 43.362 | |||||||
65 | Sean Townsend | United States | 38.337 | |||||||
66 | Akihiro Kasamatsu | Japan | 38.311 | |||||||
67 | Valeriy Pereshkura | Ukraine | 38.236 | |||||||
68 | Huang Xu | China | 37.999 | |||||||
69 | Aleksandr Shostak | Belarus | 37.973 | |||||||
70 | Xiao Junfeng | China | 37.712 | |||||||
71 | Andreu Vivó | Spain | 37.612 | |||||||
72 | Zoltán Supola | Hungary | 37.586 | |||||||
73 | Vitaly Rudnitsky | Belarus | 37.399 | |||||||
74 | Marius Tobă | Germany | 37.337 | |||||||
75 | Aleksandr Kruzhilov | Belarus | 37.224 | |||||||
76 | Khristian Ivanov | Bulgaria | 37.211 | |||||||
77 | Rene Tschernitschek | Germany | 36.998 | |||||||
78 | Leszek Blanik | Poland | 36.325 | |||||||
79 | Mladen Stefanov | Bulgaria | 36.286 | |||||||
80 | Raouf Abdelraouf | Egypt | 35.212 | |||||||
81 | Sergey Fedorchenko | Kazakhstan | 29.162 | |||||||
82 | Marius Urzică | Romania | 29.049 | |||||||
83 | Lee Jang-hyeong | South Korea | 28.849 | |||||||
84 | Éric Casimir | France | 28.837 | |||||||
85 | Yeo Hong-cheol | South Korea | 28.762 | |||||||
86 | Norimasa Iwai | Japan | 28.699 | |||||||
87 | Ruslan Mezentsev | Ukraine | 28.462 | |||||||
88 | John Roethlisberger | United States | 28.412 | |||||||
89 | Kyle Shewfelt | Canada | 19.150 | |||||||
90 | Gervasio Deferr | Spain | 19.087 | |||||||
91 | Dimosthenis Tambakos | Greece | 18.574 | |||||||
92 | Sasha Jeltkov | Canada | 17.699 | |||||||
93 | Éric Poujade | France | 9.787 | |||||||
94 | Szilveszter Csollány | Hungary | 9.775 | |||||||
95 | Ioannis Melissanidis | Greece | 9.737 | |||||||
96 | Dmitry Drevin | Russia | 9.225 | |||||||
97 | Mitja Petkovšek | Slovenia | 8.687 |
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in the artistic gymnastics discipline contested in the gymnastics at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The qualification and final rounds took place on August 14 and August 18 at the Olympic Indoor Hall. There were 98 competitors from 31 nations. Each nation could enter a team of 6 gymnasts or up to 2 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Paul Hamm of the United States, the nation's first victory in the men's all-around since the 1904 Games in St. Louis and second overall. It was the first medal of any color for an American in the men's all-around since the 1984 Games in Los Angeles. South Korea took two medals, a silver for Kim Dae-Eun and a bronze for Yang Tae Young. The scoring of the final was disputed; Olympedia calls this "the most controversial men's gymnastic event ever."
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The men's pommel horse competition was one of eight events for male competitors of the artistic gymnastics discipline contested in the gymnastics at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The qualification and final rounds took place on August 14 and August 22 at the Olympic Indoor Hall. There were 80 competitors from 31 nations, with nations competing in the team event having up to 5 gymnasts and other nations having up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Teng Haibin of China, the nation's first victory in the pommel horse since 1984 and second overall. Marius Urzică of Romania took silver to become the first man to win three medals on the pommel horse. Takehiro Kashima put Japan back on the pommel horse podium for the first time since 1988 with his bronze.
The men's vault competition was one of eight events for male competitors of the artistic gymnastics discipline contested in the gymnastics at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. The qualification and final rounds took place on August 14 and August 23 at the Olympic Indoor Hall. There were 79 competitors from 30 nations, with nations competing in the team event having up to 5 gymnasts and other nations having up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Gervasio Deferr of Spain, the third man to successfully defend an Olympic title in the vault and sixth man to win multiple medals of any color. Latvia and Romania each earned their first men's vault medals, with Evgeni Sapronenko's silver and Marian Drăgulescu's bronze, respectively.
The men's vault competition at the 2008 Summer Olympics was held on August 9 and 18 at the Beijing National Indoor Stadium. The eight competitors with the highest scores in qualifying, among the gymnasts electing to make two vaults, proceeded to the men's vault finals. There, each gymnast performed two vaults; the scores from the final round determined final ranking. There were 16 competitors from 13 nations that made a second vault attempt. The event was won by Leszek Blanik of Poland, the nation's first victory in the men's vault. Blanik was the seventh man to win multiple medals in the event, adding to his 2000 bronze. France earned its first medal in the event with Thomas Bouhail's silver. Anton Golotsutskov of Russia took bronze, putting the nation back on the podium after a one-Games absence.
The men's parallel bars competition at the 2008 Summer Olympics was held on August 9 and 19 at the Beijing National Indoor Stadium. The eight competitors with the highest scores in qualifying proceeded to the men's parallel bars finals. There, each gymnast performed again; the scores from the final round determined the final ranking. There were 75 competitors from 27 nations that competed on the parallel bars, with nations in the team event entering up to 5 gymnasts while other nations could enter up to 2. The event was won by Li Xiaopeng of China, the first man to win three medals in the parallel bars as well as the first man to win two non-consecutive gold medals in the same apparatus. Yoo Won-Chul of South Korea took silver. Anton Fokin won Uzbekistan's first parallel bars medal in its debut as an independent nation.
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The men's vault competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 25 at the Sydney SuperDome. There were 80 competitors from 31 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Gervasio Deferr of Spain, the nation's first medal in the men's vault. Poland also earned its first medal in the event, with Leszek Blanik's bronze. Silver went to Alexei Bondarenko of Russia.
The men's pommel horse competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 24 at the Sydney SuperDome. There were 80 competitors from 29 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Marius Urzică of Romania, the nation's first victory in the men's pommel horse. France earned its first medal in the event, with Eric Poujade's silver. Bronze went to Alexei Nemov of Russia, his second consecutive bronze medal in the event. Urzică and Nemov were the eighth and ninth men to win multiple medals in the pommel horse.
The men's rings competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 24 at the Sydney Super Dome. There were 78 competitors from 29 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Szilveszter Csollány of Hungary, the nation's first victory in the rings. Csollány, who had taken silver in 1996, became the eighth man to win multiple medals in the event. The silver this time went to Dimosthenis Tampakos of Greece—the first medal in the event for a Greek gymnast since 1896. Yordan Yovchev earned Bulgaria's first rings medal since 1960 with his bronze.
The men's parallel bars competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 25 at the Sydney Super Dome. There were 81 competitors from 30 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Li Xiaopeng of China, the nation's first victory in the parallel bars. Lee Joo-Hyung earned South Korea's first medal in the event with his silver. Russia also received its first medal since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, with Alexei Nemov's bronze.
The men's horizontal bar competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 16 and 25 at the Sydney Super Dome. There were 79 competitors from 28 nations; nations competing in the team event could have up to 5 gymnasts in the vault, while other nations could have up to 2 gymnasts. The event was won by Alexei Nemov of Russia, the nation's first post-Soviet victory in the horizontal bar. Nemov, a bronze medalist in 1996, was the 10th man to win multiple medals in the horizontal bar. Benjamin Varonian earned France's first medal in the event since 1976 with his silver. Lee Joo-Hyung won South Korea's first medal in the event with his bronze.
The men's vault competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. The qualification and final rounds took place on July 20, 22 and 29th at the Georgia Dome. There were 105 competitors from 31 nations, with nations in the team event having up to 7 gymnasts and other nations having up to 3 gymnasts. The event was won by Alexei Nemov of Russia, the nation's first victory in the men's vault after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Yeo Hong-Chul gave South Korea its third consecutive podium appearance in the event, this time with silver. Vitaly Scherbo of Belarus was the fifth man to win multiple medals in the vault, adding bronze to his 1992 gold.
The men's pommel horse competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. The qualification and final rounds took place on July 20, 22 and 28th at the Georgia Dome. There were 102 competitors from 31 nations, with nations in the team event having up to 7 gymnasts and other nations having up to 3 gymnasts. The event was won by Li Donghua of Switzerland, the nation's first victory in the men's pommel horse since 1928. It was the first time since 1980 that the pommel horse did not have a tie for first place. Marius Urzică earned Romania's first pommel horse medal with his silver, while Alexei Nemov earned Russia's first as a nation separate from the Soviet Union with his bronze.
The men's horizontal bar competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. The qualification and final rounds took place on July 20, 22 and 28th at the Georgia Dome. There were 105 competitors from 31 nations, with nations in the team event having up to 7 gymnasts and other nations having up to 3 gymnasts. The event was won by Andreas Wecker of Germany, the nation's first victory in the men's horizontal bar since 1896. Wecker, who had won silver four years earlier, was the ninth man to win multiple medals in the event. Silver in 1996 went to Krasimir Dunev, Bulgaria's first horizontal bar medalist since 1980. There was a three-way tie for bronze: Russia and Belarus earned medals in their first independent appearances with Alexei Nemov and Vitaly Scherbo, respectively, while Fan Bin earned China's first medal in the event since 1984.
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. The qualification and final rounds took place on July 20, 22 and 24th at the Georgia Dome. There were 111 competitors from 31 nations. Each nation could enter a team of 7 gymnasts or up to 3 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Li Xiaoshuang of China, the nation's first victory in the event and first medal of any color since 1984. Two nations making their debut as independent nations after the dissolution of the Soviet Union took silver and bronze. Scherbo had won the event as a member of the Unified Team in 1992; he was the 11th man to earn multiple all-around medals.
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 18, 20, and 22nd at the Olympic Gymnastics Hall. There were 89 competitors from 23 nations. Each nation could send a team of 6 gymnasts or up to 3 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Vladimir Artemov of the Soviet Union, the nation's sixth victory in the event. The Soviets swept the medals, with Valeri Liukin taking silver and Dmitri Bilozertchev bronze. It was the third medal sweep in the men's all-around; France had done it in 1900 and Japan in 1972.
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. The qualification and final rounds took place on 27, 29 and 30 August at the Sports Hall. There were 113 competitors from 26 nations. Each nation could send a team of 6 gymnasts or up to 3 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Sawao Kato of Japan, the third man to successfully defend an Olympic title in the event; it was Japan's third consecutive victory in the event. The Japanese gymnasts swept the medals, with Eizo Kenmotsu earning silver and Akinori Nakayama. Kato and Nakayama, who had also taken bronze in 1968, were the eighth and ninth men to win multiple medals overall in the event. It was the first medal sweep in the event since France did it in the first edition in 1900. This broke the Soviet Union's five-Games medal streak, with their best gymnast finishing fourth.
The men's individual all-around competition was one of eight events for male competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. The qualification and final rounds took place on July 29, 31 and August 2 at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion. There were 71 competitors from 19 nations. Each nation could send a team of 6 gymnasts or up to 3 individual gymnasts. The event was won by Kōji Gushiken of Japan, the nation's fourth victory in the event. The United States won its first medal in the event since the 1904 Games in St. Louis with Peter Vidmar's silver. China, making its debut in the event, received bronze with Li Ning finishing third.