 |
|
Nastia Liukin (C), Shawn Johnson (L) of
the United States and China's Yang Yilin pose for photo after the awarding
ceremony of gymnastics artistic women's individual all-round final of
Beijing 2008 Olympic Games at National Indoor Stadium in Beijing, China,
Aug. 15, 2008. Liukin claimed the title of the event with a score of
63.325, Johnson ranked the second with a score of 62.725, and Yang Yilin
won the bronze with a score of 62.650. (Xinhua/Ren Long) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Aug. 15 (Xinhua) -- Nastia Liukin of the
United States edged her compatriot Shawn Johnson to win the women's all-around
after a breathtaking Olympic gymnastics competition on Friday.
Finishing one-two on the podium, the American duo let
the hosts' gold rush in the gymnastics pause after China wrapped up all the
first three titles (men's team, women's team, men's all-round) in the National
Indoor Stadium.
Liukin collected 63.325 points, after flawless
exercises on each of the four apparatus with a good combination of difficulty
and quality, beating Johnson by 0.600. The bronze medal went to Yang Yilin of
China in 62.650.
Coming out in her first Olympic Games, the
18-year-old Liukin struck the most-coveted gold medal which she had waited for
years.
She was an unlucky runner-up in the 2005 world
championship in Melbourne, beaten by Chellsie Memmel by 0.001 points in her
debut to the international arena, and the title also eluded her in the following
two championships.
"I still can't believe what happened," said a beaming
Liukin, who shared a sweet hug with her father and coach Valeri after the final
rankings flashed on the screen.
She contributed her victory to her parents, both
former Soviet Union world champions who moved to the United States when Nastia
was two years old.
"My parents definitely had a big influence on my life
and without them, I wouldn't have been here. My father is the reason why I won
the gold medal and on the other side, my mother gave more support, getting me
through the tough days."
Reigning world champion Johnson made no major
mistakes but Liukin was in a different class on uneven bars.
Johnson started her fight with the incredible
stability that gave her the title at last year's world championships, making
full advantage of her specialty vault.
She caught the attention of the judges and spectators
with a strong opening performance, gaining 15.875 points for an early lead.
But she suddenly dropped to third, behind Yang and
Liukin, after the second rotation as the two both giving the best on uneven
bars.
Liukin was awarded an awesome 16.650 points, with her
dazzling routine on uneven bars and a difficulty of 7.7, while Yang was even
better and acquired 16.725, the highest score of the day, equalling Liukin on
difficulty but better on execution.
A small sway on balance beam further jeopardized
Johnson's title hope, causing a chorus of sighs from the stands. Although
Johnson showed the self-possession beyond her age, reconcentrating on her own
game and finishing with no more mistakes, a gap of 0.600 points was hard for her
to close in the final exercise of floor.
Performing before Johnson, Liukin held her nerves and
an almost perfect presentation sent the audience into eruption.
The 15.525 points put Liukin firm on top of the
podium and Johnson also leapfrogged Yang after acquiring another 15.525 for her
solid performance.
"I was not disappointed at all. I'm happy to finish
on the podium and very proud to be here," said Johnson.
"I'm really proud of Nastia. She works very hard and
deserves it," she added.
China's Jiang Yuyuan crashed her medal hope after
missing her landing on her opening vaulting and finished sixth.
Italy's Vanessa Ferrari, all-around world champion in
2006, was still struggling with her injury. She tumbled before her hands touched
the mat after her opening manoeuver on floor and was only 11th after the four
rotations.
[1] [2] [3] [4]