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Gymnastics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's rhythmic individual all-around

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Women's rhythmic individual all-around
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
VenueAriake Gymnastics Centre
Date6 August 2021 (qualification)
7 August 2021 (final)
Competitors26 from 18 nations
Winning total107.800
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Linoy Ashram  Israel
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dina Averina  ROC
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alina Harnasko  Belarus
← 2016
2024 →

The Women's rhythmic individual all-around competition at the 2020 Summer Olympics was held at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre in Tokyo, Japan, with the qualification taking place on 6 August and the final on 7 August.[1]

Linoy Ashram became the first Israeli athlete to win a medal in the individual all-around competition and the first Israeli woman to win an Olympic gold medal. It was the first time a non-Russian athlete won the gold medal since 1996, and the first time an athlete from outside the former Soviet Union won in an Olympics where the traditionally-dominant former Eastern Bloc states participated.

Competition format

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The competition consisted of a qualification round and a final round. The top ten gymnasts in the qualification round advanced to the final round. In each round, the gymnasts performed four routines (ball, hoop, clubs, and ribbon), with the scores added to give a total.

Qualification

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Rank Name Total Qualification
1  Dina Averina (ROC) 27.625 (1) 27.600 (2) 28.275 (1) 22.800 (3) 106.300 Q
2  Arina Averina (ROC) 27.225 (2) 27.250 (3) 28.100 (2) 23.600 (1) 106.175 Q
3  Linoy Ashram (ISR) 23.500 (13) 28.250 (1) 27.850 (3) 23.500 (2) 103.100 Q
4  Alina Harnasko (BLR) 26.400 (3) 27.200 (4) 23.900 (14) 21.750 (5) 99.250 Q
5  Anastasiia Salos (BLR) 25.700 (4) 26.300 (5) 24.550 (11) 22.600 (4) 99.150 Q
6  Milena Baldassarri (ITA) 24.550 (6) 25.700 (7) 25.650 (7) 20.150 (14) 96.050 Q
7  Nicol Zelikman (ISR) 24.350 (8) 25.500 (9) 24.950 (8) 21.100 (9) 95.900 Q
8  Boryana Kaleyn (BUL) 24.100 (9) 25.800 (6) 26.600 (4) 19.150 (18) 95.650 Q
9  Viktoriia Onopriienko (UKR) 23.800 (10) 24.300 (11) 26.100 (5) 21.250 (6) 95.450 Q
10  Khrystyna Pohranychna (UKR) 24.600 (5) 23.800 (13) 25.700 (6) 19.000 (19) 93.100 Q
11  Sumire Kita (JPN) 23.150 (14) 23.900 (12) 24.550 (10) 21.200 (8) 92.800 R
12  Evita Griskenas (USA) 23.675 (11) 23.400 (16) 23.850 (15) 20.775 (12) 91.700 R
13  Laura Zeng (USA) 22.000 (20) 23.700 (14) 24.700 (9) 21.000 (10) 91.400 R
14  Katrin Taseva (BUL) 24.450 (7) 24.600 (10) 24.400 (12) 17.650 (22) 91.100 R
15  Alexandra Agiurgiuculese (ITA) 22.050 (19) 25.600 (8) 24.150 (13) 19.250 (17) 91.050
16  Ekaterina Vedeneeva (SLO) 22.800 (17) 23.550 (15) 22.550 (18) 20.800 (11) 89.700
17  Salome Pazhava (GEO) 23.550 (12) 21.950 (22) 23.500 (17) 20.650 (13) 89.650
18  Zohra Aghamirova (AZE) 23.000 (16) 23.400 (17) 21.500 (21) 19.900 (15) 87.800
19  Chisaki Oiwa (JPN) 23.100 (15) 19.600 (24) 23.600 (16) 21.250 (7) 87.550
20  Fanni Pigniczki (HUN) 21.200 (22) 22.400 (20) 21.350 (23) 19.450 (16) 84.400
21  Alina Adilkhanova (KAZ) 20.550 (24) 22.450 (19) 22.200 (20) 18.600 (20) 83.800
22  Rut Castillo (MEX) 22.350 (18) 22.700 (18) 21.500 (22) 16.200 (23) 82.750
23  Lidiia Iakovleva (AUS) 20.600 (23) 19.800 (23) 22.325 (19) 16.050 (24) 78.775
24  Ekaterina Fetisova (UZB) 19.800 (25) 19.400 (25) 17.950 (25) 18.350 (21) 75.500
25  Habiba Marzouk (EGY) 21.700 (21) 22.150 (21) 21.100 (24) 8.400 (26) 73.350
26  Márcia Lopes (CPV) 7.550 (26) 13.200 (26) 12.550 (26) 9.550 (25) 42.850
Source:[2]
  • Bold — top score in each of the four routines.
  • Italics — top score of all four routines.

Final

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Rank Name Total
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Linoy Ashram (ISR) 27.550 (1) 28.300 (1) 28.650 (1) 23.300 (2) 107.800
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Dina Averina (ROC) 27.200 (2) 28.300 (1) 28.150 (2) 24.000 (1) 107.650
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Alina Harnasko (BLR) 26.500 (4) 27.500 (4) 27.600 (4) 21.100 (8) 102.700
4  Arina Averina (ROC) 26.850 (3) 27.900 (3) 27.800 (3) 19.550 (10) 102.100
5  Boryana Kaleyn (BUL) 25.900 (5) 25.625 (5) 26.650 (5) 22.450 (3) 100.625
6  Milena Baldassarri (ITA) 25.100 (7) 25.625 (5) 26.500 (6) 22.400 (4) 99.625
7  Nicol Zelikman (ISR) 23.700 (10) 24.150 (7) 25.600 (8) 22.150 (5) 95.600
8  Anastasiia Salos (BLR) 25.425 (6) 23.000 (10) 24.950 (9) 21.800 (6) 95.175
9  Khrystyna Pohranychna (UKR) 24.500 (8) 24.100 (8) 24.900 (10) 21.600 (7) 95.100
10  Viktoriia Onopriienko (UKR) 24.000 (9) 23.550 (9) 26.100 (7) 19.700 (9) 93.350
Source:[3]
  • Bold — top score in each of the four routines.
  • Italics — top score of all four routines.

Controversy in Russia

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The final result of the competition was considered controversial in Russia, as Israeli gold medalist Linoy Ashram dropped her apparatus during her ribbon routine.[4] The Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) claims that she did not receive a significant deduction (despite the fact that she did get a 0.700 deduction), which would have otherwise changed the standing due to the narrow score difference between Ashram and Russian silver medalist Dina Averina. Meanwhile, Olympic judges and supporters of Ashram note that Ashram's combined overall difficulty was over a point (+1.000) higher than Averina's, allowing Ashram to score well even had she received a 1.000 point deduction for dropping the apparatus.[5][6]

After the results were in, the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) coaches submitted an inquiry on Dina Averina's ribbon score, but the score was left unchanged.[7] Averina commented that she believed the judges were supporting Ashram and punishing her, and she considers herself the champion.[8][9] This position was universally supported by the Russian state-controlled media, which stated that Averina was the victim of "political games" and was purposefully denied gold, referring to it as "the conspiracy against Russia".[10][11][12][13]

Their claims were dismissed by the international governing body, the FIG (International Gymnastics Federation),[14] which confirmed that the FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics Technical Committee carried out a post-competition review of all evaluation components in every phase of the rhythmic gymnastics competition at Tokyo 2020. They stated:

"Following this process, we can confirm that no bias or irregularities were identified in the judging panels. The Rhythmic Gymnastics Technical Committee, therefore, confirms that the rankings and results of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games competitions in rhythmic gymnastics for both individuals and groups are fair and impartial. The FIG has set up strict criteria for objective selection of the most qualified and unbiased judges for the Olympic Games and we are pleased by their work."[15]

References

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  1. ^ "Rhythmic Gymnastics — Individual All-Around Schedule". Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Archived from the original on 6 August 2021. Retrieved 6 August 2021.
  2. ^ "Rhythmic Gymnastics — Individual All-Around — Qualification — Results" (PDF). Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 6 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Rhythmic Gymnastics – Final". Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Archived from the original on 6 August 2021. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  4. ^ Naidu, Richa (7 August 2021). "Rhythmic Gymnastics-Israel's Ashram claims individual gold, ending Russian dominance". Archived from the original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2021 – via www.reuters.com.
  5. ^ "FIG "appalled" by judge abuse and claims no bias from Tokyo 2020 panel". www.insidethegames.biz. 20 August 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Olympics: Russian team attacks Ashram's win, Israel fires back". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2021. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  7. ^ "Russia Fumes as Israel Ends Its Streak of Olympic Golds in Rhythmic Gymnastics". Archived from the original on 5 October 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2021 – via Haaretz.
  8. ^ "Дина Аверина о судействе на Олимпиаде: "Я не первый год в спорте. Я сразу же знала, что мне не поставят"". sports.ru (in Russian). 7 August 2021. Archived from the original on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  9. ^ "Дина Аверина: "Я прошла чисто и без потерь все четыре вида. Я считаю, что выиграла"". sports.ru (in Russian). 8 August 2021. Archived from the original on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  10. ^ LiubovB (8 August 2021). "Russia didn't win RG gold and all hell broke loose". Gymnovosti. Archived from the original on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  11. ^ "Russian gymnast Averina fell victim to political games — lawmaker". ITAR-TASS. 8 August 2021. Archived from the original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  12. ^ "Мария Захарова о серебре Дины Авериной: "Не могли затеявшие русофобскую войну против спорта гады допустить этой победы"". sports.ru (in Russian). 7 August 2021. Archived from the original on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  13. ^ "Outrage in Russia over 'biased' rhythmic judging in Tokyo". The Japan Times. 8 August 2021. Archived from the original on 10 August 2021. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
  14. ^ "World gymnastics group dismisses Russian complaints over Linoy Ashram's gold". www.timesofisrael.com. Archived from the original on 26 August 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
  15. ^ "FIG Statement about the Rhythmic Gymnastics competitions at the Olympic". gymnastics.sport/site/. Archived from the original on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2021.