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US regain world women's gymnastics title

By Shigemi Sato (AFP) – 7 hours ago
Tuesday, October11, 2011
Source

McKayla Maroney of the United States performs on the floor (AFP, Yoshikazu Tsuno)

TOKYO — The United States regained the women's team title at the world gymnastics championships on Tuesday, as its newcomers worked together to make up for the absence of more experienced teammates.

They edged defending champions Russia, who came without injured all-around title holder Aliya Mustafina, while Olympic champions China finished in third spot.

The United States, the 2007 world champions, collected 179.411 points, with Russia second at 175.329. China scored 172.820, leaving them in the same position as last year.

"For sure, it's amazing. It's one of the greatest feelings I've ever had," 16-year-old US national champion Jordyn Wieber said after seeing the star-spangled banner rise at the Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium.

"We're really united and we're really cheering for each other. We have really come together," she said. "We tried not only to do well as a team but also have fun. I think it really helped us."

Wieber led the US squad, competing in all four events as the team was without world multiple-medallist Rebecca Bross and 2009 all-around champion Bridget Sloan through injury.

Jordyn Wieber of the US performs on the balance beam (AFP, Kazuhiro Nogi)

The team were further depleted when Beijing Olympic captain Alicia Sacramone, 24, the 2010 world vault champion, went home for surgery on an Achilles tendon she tore in training last week.

"I think we've sent a message that we are really strong as a country even losing one of our top members and we're still able to pull through and win," said Wieber, one of the four first-year seniors in the squad.

The Russian defeat could be partly attributed to errors by 2010 Youth Olympic all-around champion Viktoria Komova, 16, who played the key role for Russia in the absence of Mustafina.

McKayla Maroney, 16, scored 16.033 points as the United States led Russia in their first event, vault, by more than two points at 46.816-44.479.

Komova helped narrow the gap to 1.5 points in the next apparatus, uneven bars, with an error-free performance for 15.566 points.

But Komova fell from balance beam after triple backflips in rotation three and the gap with the Americans widened to more than three points.

In the final floor exercise, Komova stumbled back when she landed after tumbling forward to the tune of Swan Lake early in her routine. She could pick up only 13.800 points.

The US women held their nerves as Maroney, Weiber and Alexandra Raisman, 17, the only holdover from the 2010 world squad, put in solid performances on the floor.

"I'm still satisfied with the result," Russian women's coach Alexander Alexandrov said, adding that Komova had still not fully recovered from a knee injury she sustained in January.

He said that another key gymnast, European all-around champion Anna Dementyeva, had a high fever a few days ago and competed in just two events.

"She was really in bad condition. That's why she couldn't do what she could usually do", he said.

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Alicia Sacramone wins 10th medal

Updated: October 11, 2011, 1:39 PM ET
Associated Press
Source - ESPN

TOKYO -- Alicia Sacramone won a record 10th medal at the world gymnastics championships without setting foot on the floor.

Sacramone will receive a gold medal after the U.S. women ran away with the title at the world gymnastics championships Tuesday night even though she was back in the United States recovering from surgery to repair a torn Achilles. It's her 10th world medal, breaking the American record she'd shared with Shannon Miller and Nastia Liukin.

"Alicia is here with us in spirit, and we all knew that her heart was here," said Aly Raisman, who trains with Sacramone in the Boston area. "We did it for her. She deserved the gold medal and we are really happy that we got it for her."

Sacramone tore her Achilles last Thursday during training in Tokyo, a huge blow for the Americans. The 2008 Beijing Olympics captain is prized for her leadership skills along with big scores on the vault, where she was the defending world champion, as well as the balance beam and floor exercise. But Sacramone told her young teammates she had faith in them, and they used her injury as motivation in winning the third world title for the United States.

Sacramone returned to the U.S. on Saturday, and had surgery on Monday. Raisman said they'd exchanged text messages before the finals.

"She just told me she knew we were going to rock it and we were going to do amazing," Raisman said.

Sacramone sent a message to the team on Twitter afterward, saying, "Words can't describe how proud I am of all of you!"
FM
Alicia Sacramone: U.S. Gymnastics Team Wins World Championships in Spite of Injury

By Maggie Astor | October 11, 2011 11:13 AM EDT
Source - IB Times



The loss of Alicia Sacramone to a torn Achilles tendon did not deter the United States women's gymnastics team, which won gold in the World Championships in Tokyo on Tuesday.

In spite of being down to five members, the team hit all 12 of its routines and beat second-place Russia by four points, which is a huge margin in gymnastics.

"There's only one better way to follow a 20-for-20 performance [in the qualifications round], and that's 12-for-12 in team finals," John Geddert, the U.S. coach, told The Associated Press. "I think they're oblivious. I didn't see one ounce of nerves out there. It was, 'Let's have fun and go do gymnastics.'"

Sacramone, 23, had been the veteran of the team. She has competed at the elite level since 2002 and was the team captain in the 2008 Olympics, where the United States won the silver medal.

Sacramone flew back to the U.S. over the weekend and had surgery on her Achilles tendon on Monday. Her recovery time is unknown, but she hopes to make it back in time for the Olympics.

Her injury, along with an injury to alternate Anna Li, left the United States with a young and inexperienced team. Of the other U.S. gymnasts, only one, Alexandra Raisman, 17, had competed in the world championships before. The other four -- Gabrielle Douglas, 15; McKayla Maroney, 15; Sabrina Vega, 16; and Jordyn Wieber, 16 -- are all in their first year as senior national team members, but you wouldn't have known it from their performances on Tuesday.

"I was hoping for it, but I could not be 100 percent sure because there were so many newcomers," Martha Karolyi, the national team coordinator, told The Associated Press. "These girls were standing up very confident, very powerful out there."

The U.S. gymnasts impressed not only with their clean execution, but with their difficulty as well, especially on the vault. Two team members, Wieber and Maroney, competed one of the most difficult vaults in the world -- a back handspring onto the vault and a back flip with 2.5 twists -- and did it almost perfectly. For context, many Olympic-level gymnasts do the same vault with only 1.5 twists.

They also pushed the envelope on the floor exercise, where Maroney performed a back flip with 3.5 twists, making her one of the only gymnasts in the world to do that successfully.

The U.S. was able to breathe a bit easier after a Chinese gymnast, Huang Qiushuang, fell from the uneven bars, and the Russians' star gymnast, Victoria Komova, fell from the balance beam. But the team almost certainly would have won anyway.
FM

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