Smooth apparatus: Guide to gymnastics at Paris Olympics

Suni Lee of the US practices during a gymnastics training session at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer Olympics Thursday in Paris. (AP)
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Updated 26 July 2024
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Smooth apparatus: Guide to gymnastics at Paris Olympics

  • The apparatus finals consist of the eight highest scoring gymnasts on each device (again with a maximum two per country)
  • The supreme test of a gymnast’s artistry, ability, athleticism, and bravery — blink and you miss the five or six seconds of high drama

PARIS: Don’t know your pommel horse from your uneven bars?

AFP Sport takes a look at the ins and outs of the artistic gymnastics competition which springs into life at the Paris Olympics on Saturday.

The men compete on six apparatus: floor, pommel horse, rings, vault, parallel bars and horizontal/high bar.

It’s four for women: vault, uneven bars, beam and floor.

The competition at Bercy Arena from Saturday to Aug. 5 is split into four phases: qualifications, team final, all-around final, and apparatus finals.

In this weekend’s qualifying, gymnasts compete as part of their country’s team or as individuals with results used to qualify gymnasts for the team final, the all-around and the apparatus finals.

Team results are based on the three highest scoring gymnasts on each apparatus.

The eight highest scoring countries secure their tickets to the team final, held over all the apparatus.

The top 24 qualifiers (maximum two per country) face off for the all-around title held over all apparatus again and regarded as gymnastics’ blue riband event.

The apparatus finals consist of the eight highest scoring gymnasts on each device (again with a maximum two per country).

Identical for both men and women — magic on a 12m x 12m mat, performing inch perfect tumbles across the diagonal with music only for the women.

The men’s equivalent to the women’s balance beam — placing the emphasis on core and shoulder strength as only the hands are allowed to touch the foam and leather-clad horse and two handles.

A ‘mere’ 5.75m off the ground, gymnasts need a helping hand from their coaches to clasp on to them. A moment of stillness is followed by a demonstration of strength and control like the iron cross: this is when the gymnast holds himself still, with arms outstretched horizontally, legs pointing downward, every sinew straining.

The supreme test of a gymnast’s artistry, ability, athleticism, and bravery — blink and you miss the five or six seconds of high drama. The men’s vaulting table is 10cm higher than the women’s. Watch out for American superstar Simone Biles, who nailed her spectacular signature Biles II Yurchenko double pike vault in training on Thursday.

Controlled movements swinging above and below the bars positioned at roughly head height and a shoulder width apart — a glue-like landing is what the beady-eyed judges will be looking for.

Or high bar is what is says on the tin — scarily high at around 2.78m off the ground. The solitary metal bar — uneven and parallel bars in contrast are made of fiberglass with a wood coating — is smaller in diameter to parallel bars and triggers gasps from the fans as the gymnast builds up to somersaults above the bar — hopefully to catch hold of it afterwards.

This apparatus is only for women gymnasts and comprises two bars of different heights and widths to allow the gymnast to seemingly swing from bar to bar. The high bar is 2.5m (8.2ft) off the ground, the low bar 1.7m. Watch out for Algerian teenager Kaylia Nemour, who boasts the most complex uneven bar routine as she seeks to become the African continent’s first gymnastics Olympic medallist.

The original concept came from the ‘grandfather of gymnastics’ — Johann Guts Muth — an early 19th century German physical education professor. Olga Korbut stunned fans at the 1972 Munich Olympics with the first ever backflip. At only 10cm wide it requires pinpoint accuracy and nerves of steel. The rectangular beam provides women gymnasts with a supreme test of balance, tumbling, jumps and leaps, while at the same time trying not to hit the deck.

Saturday, July 27 — Men’s qualification

Sunday, July 28 — Women’s qualification

Monday, July 29 — Men’s team final

Tuesday, July 30 — Women’s team final

Wednesday, July 31 — Men’s all-around final

Thursday, Aug. 1 — Women’s all-around final

Saturday, Aug. 3 — Men’s floor exercise final; Women’s vault final; Men’s pommel horse final

Sunday, Aug. 4 — Men’s rings final; Women’s uneven bars final; Men’s vault final

Monday, Aug. 5 — Men’s parallel bars final; Women’s balance beam final; Men’s horizontal bar final; Women’s floor exercise final


Hakimi declared fit for hosts Morocco’s AFCON bid

Updated 20 December 2025
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Hakimi declared fit for hosts Morocco’s AFCON bid

RABAT: Morocco captain and star player Achraf Hakimi is fit and ready for the host nation’s Africa Cup of Nations bid but may not start in the tournament’s opening game, coach Walid Regragui said on Saturday.
“Tomorrow will be my decision but he has more than done his job. His injury was not an easy one,” Regragui told reporters in Rabat where Morocco play minnows Comoros in the first match on Sunday.
“I still have another night to sleep and decide whether he starts or whether we protect him and see how it goes for the remaining games.
“He is able to start, but he might not start.”
Paris Saint-Germain right-back Hakimi, the African player of the year, has not played since coming off with a left ankle injury in a Champions League game against Bayern Munich on November 4.
The 27-year-old left the field in tears that night, clearly fearing for his chances of featuring at the Cup of Nations. The injury was later diagnosed as a severe sprain.
“I feel good. I am following the program given to me by the medical staff and the coach,” Hakimi, who also came sixth in this year’s Ballon d’Or ranking, said Saturday.
Regragui added: “He has made sacrifices over the last four or five weeks that nobody else could have made, and has set an example to the other players and the staff.
“Today we can see that the protocol we put in place after his injury has been more than positive but now we have the whole competition to manage.”
Morocco will also face Mali and Zambia in Group A as they bid to win a first Cup of Nations since 1976.
The tournament runs into the New Year and will finish with the final in Rabat on January 18.