The preliminary round of gymnastics ended with the U.S. men on top of the standings, with a score of 275.342. They are followed by Great Britain with 272.420, Japan with 270.503, and China, the favorites going in, with 269.985. Americans Danell Leyva and John Orozco led in the all-around.
It was an odd day of gymnastics, as favorites faltered and unknown gymnasts stepped up. Kohei Uchimura, the defending, three-time world champion in the all-around, fell on the high bar and pommel horse. Jonathan Horton, the lone returner from the U.S. bronze medal-winning team, fell on pommel horse and parallel bars. The prelims allow one dropped score per rotation, but China had to count some of their worst scores on pommel horse because so many gymnasts stumbled.
But the U.S. took the lead with steady performances, even on the events where they had previously struggled. All Orozco, Leyva and Sam Mikulak hit their pommel horse routines. They also brought in big numbers on their best events. The U.S. scored a 48 on vault and a 46.498 on the high bar.
With the home crowd behind them, the British gymnasts earned second place while battling the Chinese in the first subdivision. Louis Smithâs 15.8 on pommel horse and three scores over 16 on vault powered the team.
Something to keep in mind is these scores are thrown out after the prelims. The first round is used to qualify teams for the team final, and individuals for the all-around and event finals. China and Japan could rebound and oust the U.S. from the podium. However, their surprisingly bad start didnât help inspire confidence in the gymnasts who seemed invincible.
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