Gymnastics at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's artistic individual all-around

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.[1] There were 98 competitors from 31 nations.[2] 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 (the maximum possible under the new rule limiting finalists to two per nation), 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."[2]

Men's artistic individual all-around
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
Gold medalist Paul Hamm (2010)
VenueO.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Dates14–18 August 2004
Competitors98 from 31 nations
Winning score57.823
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Paul Hamm
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Kim Dae-Eun
 South Korea
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Yang Tae Young
 South Korea
← 2000
2008 →

Scoring controversy

The Korean team contested Yang Tae-Young's parallel bars score after judges misidentified one of the elements of his routine. The effect of this misidentification was that the start value was recorded as 9.9 rather than 10. Had the start value been assigned correctly—with no other changes to any scoring—Yang's score would have resulted in his winning the gold medal. However, as noted by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, as with many other sports controversies, (i) scoring the routine correctly initially may have affected the remainder of the competition and (ii) there were potentially other scoring errors that may have affected the results as well; thus, assigning who "would have won the event" but for the error is "something in the realm of speculation, not of certainty."[3]

The judges on the "A" panel were responsible for determining the start value of the routine. This value is determined during (not before) the routine, as a gymnast may change their routine at any time (and may fail to perform elements intended to be part of the routine). The three judges on the panel were Oscar Buitrago of Colombia, Benjamin Bango of Spain, and head judge George Beckford of the United States. The panel assigned Yang a start value of 9.9 after misidentifying a "Belle" element as a "Morisue" element.[3][2]

Kim Dong Min of South Korea, one of the judges on the "B" panel (responsible for determining execution scores), spoke to Buitrago about Yang's start value immediately following the parallel bar rotation. Buitrago explained how the value had been reached and thought Kim was satisfied. Kim later said that he was not satisfied; however, at the time, did not ask Buitrago to pursue the matter further.[3]

After Kim informed the Korean head coach Lee Joo-hyung of the issue, Lee raised the issue with the "A" panel and Adrian Stoica of Romania, the President of the Men's Technical Committee. Stoica presided over the Superior Jury, empowered to correct judging errors and control judges' scores. The precise timing of this discussion (during or after the medal ceremony) is disputed but was certainly after the competition had ended.[3]

The next morning, the Korean delegation sent written requests via fax to Stoica and to the President of FIG (Bruno Grandi) for a correction in the start value. That afternoon, Grandi responded that the rules did not allow a protest against the judges' marks, but that FIG was analyzing the marks and would take action against any judge who had made a serious mistake. The next day, the Technical Committee analyzed the routine and determined that the correct start value was 10. The FIG Executive Council temporarily suspended Bango, Buitrago, and Beckstead.[3]

On 22 August, the National Olympic Committees for the United States and Korea met with the IOC and proposed that gold medals be awarded to both Hamm and Yang. The IOC responded that it would not issue two gold medals, but would defer to FIG regarding re-allocation of medals if the scoring error was corrected.[3]

On 26 August, Grandi sent a letter, via the United States Olympic Committee, addressed to Hamm and requesting that he return the medal, including commenting that Yang was "the true winner" of the event. Hamm had allegedly made comments in the press stating that he would return the medal if requested to do so by FIG. The USOC, however, objected to the letter and refused to forward it to Hamm, responding that under FIG rules (including finality of judges' scores) that Hamm was "the Olympic gold medalist" in the event; the USOC demanded that FIG retract the "unacceptable request."[3][2]

Yang formally appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on 28 August. The CAS held a hearing on 27 September, receiving oral evidence and considering written submissions. On 21 October, the CAS dismissed the Korean Olympic Committee's appeal on the grounds that the appeal, coming after the end of competition, was made too late, and insufficient evidence of corruption or bad faith on the part of the judges was presented to overturn a strong preference for a "field of play" judgment rather than one made after the fact.[3][2][4]

Background

This was the 24th 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]

Six of the top 10 gymnasts from the 2000 Games returned: gold medalist Alexei Nemov of Russia, silver medalist Yang Wei of China, fourth-place finisher Ivan Ivankov of Belarus, sixth-place finisher Blaine Wilson of the United States, seventh-place finisher Alexei Bondarenko of Russia, and eighth-place finisher Yordan Yovchev of Bulgaria. The reigning (2003) World Champion was Paul Hamm of the United States; Yang had finished second and Hiroyuki Tomita of Japan was third.[2]

Colombia, Malaysia, and Tunisia each made their debut in the event. France made its 22nd appearance, most among nations.

Competition format

The competition generally followed the 2000 format, though with a significant change: the number of finalists was reduced from 36 to 24, with the maximum per nation cut from 3 to 2. The competition continued to use a preliminary (qualifying) round and a final round, with scores cleared between rounds (no carryover). The preliminary round used one optional exercise for each apparatus rather than requiring both a compulsory and optional exercise (as was done pre-2000). 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 had also been 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]

Schedule

All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 14 August 200412:30Qualifying
Wednesday, 18 August 200420:30Final

Results

Ninety-eight gymnasts competed in the individual all-around event in the artistic gymnastics qualification round on August 14, by performing on at least one apparatus. Forty-seven competed on all six apparati. The twenty-four highest scoring gymnasts advanced to the final on August 18.

RankGymnastNationPrelim Total
Paul Hamm  United States58.0619.7259.7009.5879.1379.8379.83757.823
Kim Dae-Eun  South Korea56.8119.6509.5379.7129.4129.7759.72557.811
Yang Tae Young  South Korea57.9249.5129.6509.7259.7009.7129.47557.774
4Ioan Silviu Suciu  Romania57.3989.6509.7379.5509.7379.3129.66257.648
5Rafael Martínez  Spain56.6369.5009.6879.5759.6129.7009.47557.549
6Hiroyuki Tomita  Japan57.6499.0629.7379.7629.6259.6379.66257.485
7Yang Wei  China57.3749.6009.7259.7379.5129.8008.98757.361
8Marian Drăgulescu  Romania57.4369.6129.5259.5629.8509.4379.33757.323
9Brett McClure  United States56.3239.4129.7129.1629.6259.7259.61257.248
10Roman Zozulya  Ukraine57.2739.5259.4129.5759.5009.7629.22556.999
11Isao Yoneda  Japan56.9249.6509.5759.3379.7009.6129.02556.899
12Georgy Grebenkov  Russia56.1489.5879.1259.6629.4379.6509.36256.823
13Alexei Bondarenko  Russia56.9369.6009.1509.6009.4009.4509.60056.800
14Yernar Yerimbetov  Kazakhstan57.4249.3128.9629.5379.6259.2259.73756.398
15Luis Vargas  Puerto Rico56.5878.3379.6129.5009.4629.5629.66256.135
16Ruslan Mezentsev  Ukraine56.7119.5128.9759.3879.4379.6379.11256.060
17Benoît Caranobe  France56.6359.1129.4009.5759.1879.0879.61255.973
18Igors Vihrovs  Latvia56.4239.6878.8629.1879.7009.0009.43755.873
19Pavel Gofman  Israel56.7239.1009.2629.4259.1129.7259.06255.686
20Eric Lopez Rios  Cuba56.3989.1378.6009.5009.7009.6758.83755.449
21Sergei Pfeifer  Germany55.9879.3129.0259.5879.0879.1629.21255.385
22Ilia Giorgadze  Georgia56.0128.7379.5879.4879.3379.6628.46255.272
23Fabian Hambüchen  Germany56.0619.4758.2878.5129.4129.3879.75054.823
24Andreas Schweizer  Switzerland55.4368.4509.0629.6759.2259.4508.75054.612
25Sven Kwiatkowski  Germany55.835Did not advance—2 per nation rule
26Dan Potra  Romania55.749
27Maksim Devyatovsky  Russia55.611
28Abel Driggs  Cuba55.274Did not advance
29Adam Wong  Canada55.160
30Alejandro Barrenechea  Spain55.098
31Grant Golding  Canada55.011
32Jorge Hugo Giraldo  Colombia54.997
33Mosiah Rodrigues  Brazil54.899
34Igor Cassina  Italy54.849
35Rúnar Alexandersson  Iceland54.798
36Vlasis Maras  Greece54.699
37Oriol Combarros  Spain54.662
38Ng Shu Wai  Malaysia54.649
39Dimitri Karbanenko  France54.561
40Víctor Cano  Spain53.987
41Matteo Morandi  Italy53.974
42Denis Savenkov  Belarus53.624
43Filipe Bezugo  Portugal52.923
44Enrico Pozzo  Italy52.812
45Sasha Jeltkov  Canada52.649
46Filip Yanev  Bulgaria52.586
47Wajdi Bouallègue  Tunisia52.511
48Naoya Tsukahara  Japan48.187
49Takehiro Kashima  Japan47.799
50Guard Young  United States47.611
51Xing Aowei  China47.499
52Răzvan Şelariu  Romania47.487
53Blaine Wilson  United States47.386
54Robert Juckel  Germany47.074
55Xiao Qin  China46.974
56Vadym Kuvakin  Ukraine46.824
57Florent Maree  France46.811
58David Kikuchi  Canada46.437
59Kim Seung-il  South Korea46.324
60Johan Mounard  France46.124
61Anton Golotsutskov  Russia46.073
62Alberto Busnari  Italy45.535
63Andriy Mykhailychenko  Ukraine45.412
64Teng Haibin  China45.099
65Ivan Ivankov  Belarus38.837
66Huang Xu  China38.761
67Morgan Hamm  United States38.662
68Hisashi Mizutori  Japan38.337
69Daisuke Nakano  Japan38.312
70Kim Dong-hwa  South Korea38.012
71Lee Seon-seong  South Korea37.899
72Yann Cucherat  France37.874
73Jason Gatson  United States37.799
74Yevhen Bohonosiuk  Ukraine37.424
75Pierre-Yves Bény  France37.312
76Jo Seong-min  South Korea37.274
77Matthias Fahrig  Germany37.249
78Kyle Shewfelt  Canada36.748
79Matteo Angioletti  Italy36.361
80Marius Urzică  Romania29.187
81Valeriy Honcharov  Ukraine28.899
82Aleksey Nemov  Russia28.887
83Thomas Andergassen  Germany28.836
84Li Xiaopeng  China28.699
85Jury Chechi  Italy28.499
86Philippe Rizzo  Australia27.350
87Jesús Carballo  Spain27.099
88Christoph Schärer  Switzerland27.037
89Ken Ikeda  Canada26.524
90Yordan Yovchev  Bulgaria19.512
91Gervasio Deferr  Spain19.387
92Jevgēņijs Saproņenko  Latvia19.287
93Daniel Popescu  Romania19.187
94Róbert Gál  Hungary19.137
95Aleksandr Safoshkin  Russia18.962
96Ri Jong-song  North Korea18.837
97Kim Hyon-il  North Korea18.649
98Dimosthenis Tambakos  Greece9.850

See also

References

Citation
Electronic source