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.[1] 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.
Men's vault at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Sydney SuperDome | ||||||||||||
Dates | 16–25 September | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 80 from 31 nations | ||||||||||||
Winning score | 9.712 | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Background
editThis was the 20th appearance of the event, which is one of the five apparatus events held every time there were apparatus events at the Summer Olympics (no apparatus events were held in 1900, 1908, 1912, or 1920). Three of the eight finalists from 1996 returned: gold medalist Alexei Nemov of Russia, silver medalist Yeo Hong-Chul of South Korea, and eighth-place finisher Ivan Pavlovski of Belarus. Li Xiaopeng of China was the reigning (1999) world champion; Sergey Fedorchenko had been world champion in 1997.[1]
Latvia made its debut in the men's vault. The United States made its 18th appearance, most of any nation; the Americans had missed only the inaugural 1896 vault and the boycotted 1980 Games.
Competition format
editThe event used a "vaulting horse" aligned parallel to the gymnast's run (rather than the modern "vaulting table" in use since 2004). The 1996 gymnastics competition had introduced the "7–6–5" format, in which each team had 7 members, designated 6 for each apparatus, and had 5 count for team scores. In 2000, this was reduced across the board to a "6–5–4" format. Further, while in 1996 all 7 team members could compete on each apparatus for individual purposes, in 2000 only the 5 designated for that apparatus competed. The 2000 competition also eliminated the compulsory exercises; only voluntary exercises were done on each apparatus. The qualifying round scores were used for qualification for the team all-around, individual all-around, and apparatus finals.
The top eight gymnasts, with a limit of two per nation, advanced to the final. Non-finalists were ranked 9th through 80th based on preliminary score. The preliminary score had no effect on the final; once the eight finalists were selected, their ranking depended only on the final exercise. For the vault, the final consisted of two attempts per gymnast, with the average score of the two counting.[1][2]
Schedule
editAll times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
Date | Time | Round |
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Saturday, 16 September 2000 | Qualifying | |
Monday, 25 September 2000 | 15:38 | Final |
Results
editQualifying
editEighty gymnasts competed in the vault event during the qualification round on September 16. The eight highest scoring gymnasts advanced to the final on September 25. Each country was limited to two competitors in the final.
Final
editRank | Gymnast | Nation | Vault 1 | Vault 2 | Average |
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Gervasio Deferr | Spain | 9.800 | 9.625 | 9.712 | |
Alexei Bondarenko | Russia | 9.600 | 9.575 | 9.587 | |
Leszek Blanik | Poland | 9.225 | 9.725 | 9.475 | |
4 | Alexei Nemov | Russia | 9.262 | 9.650 | 9.456 |
5 | Sergey Fedorchenko | Kazakhstan | 9.212 | 9.587 | 9.399 |
6 | Blaine Wilson | United States | 9.425 | 9.300 | 9.362 |
7 | Ioannis Melissanidis | Greece | 9.212 | 9.312 | 9.262 |
8 | Dieter Rehm | Switzerland | 9.212 | 8.800 | 9.006 |
References
edit- ^ a b c "Horse Vault, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
- ^ Official Report, Results Book for Artistic Gymnastics.