U.S. gymnasts now focus on women’s all-around

  • By Diane Pucin Los Angeles Times
  • Wednesday, August 13, 2008 11:36pm
  • SportsSports

BEIJING — Shawn Johnson and Nastia Liukin have moved on to the next big thing already.

They are the smiling co-favorites for the Olympic gymnastics all-around gold medal, a competition that happens later today (PDT) at National Indoor Stadium.

Johnson and Liukin politely insisted that winning a team silver medal on Wednesday was fine, even if the U.S. had come into competition as favorites after defeating China at the 2007 world championships.

But glamour girls are made, after all, from the individual events. Olga Korbut, Nadia Comaneci, Mary Lou Retton, Shannon Miller, Svetlana Khorkina, they’re remembered for signature individual moments and medals. And so that’s what Johnson, 16, and Liukin, 18, are aiming for.

The two Americans qualified first and second for the all-around. They have been diplomatically friendly all season while they’ve been teammates. That’s over now and if the team result wasn’t what they’d hoped for (China won), the competition is far from over.

Liang Chow, Johnson’s personal coach and the U.S. team head coach, said Johnson and Liukin have had a “rocking” meet so far and pointed out that Johnson tied China’s Cheng Fei for best vault score Wednesday, that Johnson had the best balance beam score and that Liukin won the uneven bars.

But even as the Chinese team celebrated its first-ever Olympic team gold medal and was enveloped in an arena-embrace, a verbal hug from almost all the 15,000 fans on hand, another American, Alicia Sacramone, couldn’t wipe away her tears and paint on a smile as quickly as Johnson and Liukin.

Sacramone, 20, who fell twice and stepped out of bounds once on her final two routines in the team competition, has one more event left, the vault final Sunday.

A medal would be fine and Sacramone will smile again, but while Johnson and Liukin were able to immediately put away the team performance, Sacramone couldn’t.

Her teary eyes are being offered as photographic evidence on message boards and Internet sites that Sacramone was the one to blame for U.S. winning silver instead of gold.

She fell on her mount on the balance beam, the first major mistake for the U.S. Four more falls were to follow — two by Sacramone but also one each from Johnson and Liukin.

Sacramone, who postponed her sophomore year at Brown University to concentrate on gymnastics this Olympic season, was flustered after being held up twice before the balance beam when there was a scoreboard glitch.

“The judges decided to hold me and I guess I just let my nerves get the best of me,” Sacramone said. When the judges gave her the OK, Sacramone leaped onto the beam and fell off.

From there things tumbled downward for the Americans.

But, as Johnson said, there is never time to look back.

“I have to put my mind in a little box and ignore the bad things going on around me,” she said. “I’ve got to concentrate on myself too.”

(Optional add end)

Chow and Liukin’s coach and father Valeri Liukin both refused to get involved in the simmering controversy about the stated ages of three of China’s six team members — He Kexin, Yang Yilin and Jiang Yuyuan.

There are have been several published reports that none of them meet the international federation age rule of turning 16 during the Olympic year. “I don’t think about that,” Chow said. “Oh, I don’t know about that,” Valeri Liukin said.

Johnson and Nastia Liukin will face Yang and Jiang in the all-around finals. He, an uneven bars expert, will go up against Liukin on that apparatus in the event finals. And the 16-year-old who was listed as being 13 as recently as last November on a regional registration list, said, “You will see my difficult moves in the final,” suggesting more twists and turns on her already difficult routine. And certainly more to come in this meet as well.

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