Advertisement

Back in the mix

After losing Paul and Morgan Hamm to injuries, a discouraged U.S. men's gymnastics team competes solidly during qualifying. The bronze might be within reach after all.

BEIJING 2008

August 10, 2008|Diane Pucin, Times Staff Writer

BEIJING -- An Olympic medal on the pommel horse is not out of the grasp of Alexander Artemev, who qualified for the finals in that event.

But now Artemev hopes to achieve something more than winning a single event. He'd like to help the U.S. win a men's gymnastics team medal.


Advertisement

Performing without feeling pressure and with five teammates who think they are being underestimated, Artemev flew through six routines Saturday as if he were back in his gym in Colorado with his father and coach, Vladimir, telling him that things will be fine.

While the three-time defending world champion Chinese men looked invincible in qualifying first for Tuesday's eight-team final, and the defending Olympic gold-medal Japanese men seemed to have a solid grasp on at least a silver medal after qualifying firmly second, only the bronze appears up for grabs.

And a U.S. team that seemed discouraged after losing Morgan Hamm and his brother, defending Olympic all-around gold medalist Paul Hamm, to injuries is now in that medal mix.

Four teams finished within 1.025 points of one another -- Russia, South Korea, Germany and the U.S., in that order. Even Germany's Fabian Hambuechen, who finished second behind China's Yang Wei in the all-around qualifying, says only one team medal will be in question Tuesday.

"China and Japan, they will fight for gold and silver, and the other teams will fight for the bronze," Hambuechen said.

Artemev seems ready to help the Americans take it.

As a world bronze medalist on the pommel horse in 2006 -- the same year he won the U.S. national all-around championship -- it seemed Artemev, 22, would be the successor to the Hamms as a team leader and Olympic medal winner.

But Artemev struggled with several mistakes at last year's world championships, and he was unsteady through the four-round Olympic qualifying process. When he fell three times on his pommel horse routines, Artemev was relegated to alternate. When Paul Hamm withdrew July 28 because of a hand injury, Raj Bhavsar was put on the team.

It wasn't until Morgan Hamm pulled out Thursday because of an ankle injury that Artemev was made a team member.

That was a day after the U.S. had its only chance to train on the National Indoor Stadium podium, so when Artemev walked onto the floor Saturday it was his first time touching the rings, vault, parallel bars, high bar, floor and, last, the pommel horse.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|