Gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's artistic individual all-around

These are the results of the women's individual all-around competition, one of six events for female competitors in artistic gymnastics at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. The qualification and final rounds took place on September 17 and 21 at the Sydney SuperDome.[1]

Women's artistic individual all-around
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
VenueSydney Superdome
DateSeptember 21st, 2000
Competitors97 from 43 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Simona Amânar  Romania
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Maria Olaru  Romania
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Liu Xuan  China
← 1996
2004 →

World all-around silver medalist Viktoria Karpenko led the competition until the last rotation, but was thrown from first place after she stubbed her toe, tripped, and fell out of bounds on floor exercise.[2][3][4][5]

The all-around competition in the discipline of women's artistic gymnastics (WAG) was marred by three separate scandals.

The vault apparatus was set incorrectly for more than half of the meet, and consequently many gymnasts fell and/or were injured on the event. Officials blamed the series of falls and low scores on performance anxiety. It wasn't until Australian gymnast Allana Slater and her coach, Peggy Liddick, voiced concerns about the equipment that officials discovered the apparatus was five centimetres, or almost two inches, lower than it should've been. While athletes were given the opportunity to perform again, for some of them, the damage to their mental or physical health caused by the vault was irreparable.[6] Chinese gymnast Kui Yuanyuan and American gymnast Kristen Maloney both injured their legs while attempting to stick their landings, with Kui needing to be carried to an examination area and Maloney damaging a titanium rod that had recently been implanted in her shin. Romanian gymnast Andreea Răducan ultimately took gold while her teammates, Simona Amânar and Maria Olaru took silver and bronze, respectively.[7] This is the second all-around title won by a Romanian after Nadia Comăneci.

Andreea Răducan, who initially won the event, had her medal stripped after testing positive for pseudoephedrine, which was in a medication given to her by the team doctor. Raducan appealed the disqualification because she did not take the substance knowingly, nor was she responsible for the error; the IOC admitted Raducan was not at fault, but nonetheless upheld the decision, citing a strict liability standard.[8]

Finally, Dong Fangxiao was found in 2010 to have been 14 years old, two years under the minimum age to compete, at the Sydney Olympics. Consequently, all of her results from the Olympics were deleted from the records.[9]

Results edit

Qualification edit

Sixty-four gymnasts competed in the all-around during the qualification round on September 17. The thirty-six highest scoring gymnasts advanced to the final on September 21. Each country was limited to three competitors in the final.

Final edit

Rank Gymnast Vault Uneven
Bars
Balance
Beam
Floor
Exercise
Total
DSQ2   Andreea Răducan (ROU) 9.706 9.575 9.787 9.825 38.893
    Simona Amânar (ROU) 9.656 9.512 9.662 9.812 38.642
    Maria Olaru (ROU) 9.656 9.600 9.700 9.625 38.581
    Liu Xuan (CHN) 9.331 9.725 9.750 9.612 38.418
4   Yekaterina Lobaznyuk (RUS) 9.693 9.700 9.425 9.575 38.393
5   Yang Yun (CHN) 9.531 9.787 9.287 9.700 38.305
6   Elena Zamolodchikova (RUS) 9.731 9.725 9.700 9.112 38.268
7   Olga Roschupkina (UKR) 9.368 9.725 9.750 9.362 38.205
8   Lisa Skinner (AUS) 9.168 9.650 9.625 9.750 38.193
9   Esther Moya (ESP) 9.631 9.550 9.187 9.712 38.080
10   Svetlana Khorkina (RUS) 9.343 9.012 9.762 9.812 37.929
11   Viktoria Karpenko (UKR) 9.574 9.800 9.775 8.725 37.874
12   Laura Martinez (ESP) 9.518 9.612 9.062 9.637 37.829
13   Elise Ray (USA) 9.487 9.750 8.887 9.537 37.661
14   Amy Chow (USA) 9.443 9.737 9.225 9.187 37.592
15   Kate Richardson (CAN) 9.281 9.662 9.337 9.250 37.530
16   Allana Slater (AUS) 9.025 9.712 9.112 9.662 37.511
17   Martina Bremini (ITA) 9.325 9.600 9.375 9.187 37.487
18   Monica Bergamelli (ITA) 9.449 9.525 8.975 9.500 37.449
19   Kristen Maloney (USA) 9.543 9.587 8.887 9.412 37.429
20   Daniele Hypólito (BRA) 8.962 9.600 9.325 9.450 37.337
21   Sara Moro (ESP) 9.318 9.637 8.725 9.650 37.330
22   Halina Tyryk (UKR) 9.181 9.650 9.512 8.987 37.330
23   Lisa Mason (GBR) 9.356 9.262 9.537 9.012 37.167
24   Delphine Regease (FRA) 9.087 9.225 9.575 9.162 37.049
DSQ3   Dong Fangxiao (CHN) 9.293 9.025 9.275 9.300 36.893
25   Adriana Crisci (ITA) 9.187 9.062 8.962 9.675 36.886
26   Marina Zarzhitskaya (BLR) 9.387 9.637 9.150 8.700 36.874
27   Kana Yamawaki (JPN) 9.293 9.012 9.025 9.312 36.642
28   Jana Komrsková (CZE) 9.506 9.487 8.675 8.950 36.618
29   Nelly Ramassamy (FRA) 9.243 9.137 9.112 9.100 36.592
30   Alexandra Soler (FRA) 9.299 9.487 8.350 9.362 36.498
31   Emma Williams (GBR) 9.143 9.125 9.050 9.125 36.443
32   Yvonne Tousek (CAN) 9.081 9.150 9.225 8.825 36.281
33   Alena Polozkova (BLR) 9.100 8.225 9.275 9.562 36.162
DNF   Annika Reeder (GBR) 7.274 - - 9.262 16.5361

1 Annika Reeder was forced to withdraw after being injured on the faulty vaulting horse.

2 Răducan originally won the event, but was disqualified after testing positive for pseudoephedrine.

3 Dong Fongxiao originally finished 25th, but was disqualified in 2010 after the IGF discovered she was 14 (and thus under the minimum age to compete) during the Olympics.

Remaining placings edit

Rank Name Country
5 Yelena Produnova   Russia
17 Loredana Boboc   Romania
29 Tetiana Yarosh   Ukraine
37 Elvire Teza   France
41 Dominique Dawes   United States
42 Mok Un-ju   North Korea
43 Sigrid Persoon   Belgium
44 Brooke Walker   Australia
45 Oksana Chusovitina   Uzbekistan
46 Tatyana Zharganova   Belarus
47 Irina Yevdokimova   Kazakhstan
48 Melina Sirolli   Argentina
49T Camila Comin   Brazil
49T Arlen Lovera   Venezuela
49T Lise Leveille   Canada
52 Julie Beaulieu   Canada
53 Julija Kovaliova   Lithuania
54 Miho Takenaka   Japan
55 Vasiliki Millousi   Greece
56 Irene Castelli   Italy
57 Laura Robertson   New Zealand
58 Choi Mi-seon   South Korea
59 Zuzana Sekerová   Slovakia
60 Joanna Skowrońska   Poland
61 Katerina Khristoforidou   Greece
62 Mojca Mavrič   Slovenia
63 Kateřina Marešová   Czech Republic
64 Gharde Geldenhuys   Namibia
65 Ling Jie   China
66 Trudy McIntosh   Australia
67 Olha Teslenko   Ukraine
68 Michelle Conway   Canada
69 Anne-Sophie Endeler   France
70 Alexandra Croak   Australia
71 Susana García   Spain
72 Sharna Murray   Great Britain
73 Alice Capitani   Italy
74 Kelly Hackman   Great Britain
75 Nataliya Naranovich   Belarus
76 Marta Cusidó   Spain
77 Adrienn Nyeste   Hungary
78 Son Un-hui   North Korea
79 Tatyana Grigorenko   Belarus
80 Huang Mandan   China
81 Anastasiya Kolesnikova   Russia
82 Melinda Cleland   Australia
83 Kui Yuanyuan   China
84 Anna Chepeleva   Russia
85 Tasha Schwikert-Warren   United States
86 Andreea Isărescu   Romania
87 Paula Thomas   Great Britain
88 Claudia Presăcan   Romania
89 Jamie Dantzscher   United States
90 Paloma Moro   Spain
91 Anna Meysak   Belarus
92 Denisse López   Mexico
93 Alona Kvasha   Ukraine
94 Ludivine Furnon   France
95 Crystal Gilmore   Canada
96 Laura Trefiletti   Italy
97 Yen Au Li   Malaysia

References edit

  1. ^ "Gymnastics at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games: Women's Individual All-Around". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  2. ^ IG Online Interview: Viktoria Karpenko
  3. ^ SYDNEY 2000: GYMNASTICS; A Champion Answers Disaster With Triumph
  4. ^ Khorkina claims gold at last
  5. ^ Svetlana Khorkina
  6. ^ "BBC - Allana Slater at Sydney 2000: Spotting the two-inch error that threw an Olympic final into chaos". 2023-05-01.
  7. ^ SYDNEY 2000: GYMNASTICS; Romania Sweeps as Controversy Swirls
  8. ^ Zaccardi, Nick (25 June 2015). "Andreea Raducan will not be reinstated as 2000 Olympic all-around champion after meeting with IOC president". OlympicTalk | NBC Sports.
  9. ^ "Underage gymnast costs China Sydney Olympics bronze". BBC Sport. 28 April 2010. Retrieved 28 April 2010.