Gymnastics at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics – Boys' trampoline
The Boys’ trampoline competition at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics was held on 22 August 2014. The event took place in Nanjing Olympic Sport Complex Gymnasium, Nanjing, China. There are 12 contestants from 12 different NOCs competing in this event.
Boys’ trampoline at the II Summer Youth Olympic Games | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Nanjing OSC Gymnasium | ||||||||||||
Date | 22 August | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 12 from 12 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
|
Gymnastics at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics | ||
---|---|---|
Artistic![]() | ||
Qualification | Boys | Girls |
Individual all-around | Boys | Girls |
Vault | Boys | Girls |
Floor | Boys | Girls |
Pommel horse | Boys | |
Rings | Boys | |
Parallel bars | Boys | |
Horizontal bar | Boys | |
Uneven bars | Girls | |
Balance beam | Girls | |
Rhythmic![]() | ||
Group all-around | Girls | |
Individual all-around | Girls | |
Trampoline![]() | ||
Individual | Boys | Girls |
Qualification
Order | Athlete | 1st Routine | 2nd Routine | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Rank | Score | Rank | Score | Rank | ||
1 | ![]() |
45.605 | 1 | 57.260 | 1 | 102.865 | 1 Q |
2 | ![]() |
45.160 | 2 | 55.435 | 2 | 100.595 | 2 Q |
3 | ![]() |
43.950 | 7 | 54.980 | 3 | 98.930 | 3 Q |
4 | ![]() |
44.525 | 4 | 53.560 | 4 | 98.085 | 4 Q |
5 | ![]() |
43.190 | 9 | 52.470 | 5 | 95.660 | 5 Q |
6 | ![]() |
44.810 | 4 | 50.565 | 7 | 95.375 | 6 Q |
7 | ![]() |
44.380 | 5 | 50.510 | 8 | 94.890 | 7 Q |
8 | ![]() |
40.800 | 10 | 50.610 | 6 | 91.410 | 8 Q |
9 | ![]() |
44.050 | 6 | 21.665 | 9 | 65.715 | 9 R |
10 | ![]() |
38.130 | 12 | 19.710 | 10 | 57.840 | 10 R |
11 | ![]() |
43.345 | 8 | 11.980 | 12 | 55.325 | 11 |
12 | ![]() |
39.450 | 11 | 14.120 | 11 | 53.570 | 12 |
Notes: Q=Qualified to Final; R=Reserve
Final
Rank | Athlete | Difficulty | Execution | Flight | Penalty | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | 15.400 | 24.600 | 17.340 | 0.000 | 57.340 |
![]() | ![]() | 14.600 | 24.600 | 17.735 | 0.000 | 56.935 |
![]() | ![]() | 15.400 | 23.100 | 17.540 | 0.000 | 56.040 |
4 | ![]() | 15.400 | 24.000 | 16.415 | 0.000 | 55.815 |
5 | ![]() | 15.000 | 22.200 | 17.215 | 0.000 | 54.415 |
6 | ![]() | 3.200 | 4.800 | 3.000 | 0.000 | 11.000 |
7 | ![]() | 1.500 | 2.400 | 1.875 | 0.000 | 5.775 |
8 | ![]() | 1.700 | 2.100 | 1.890 | 0.000 | 5.690 |
gollark: Which may also make it more parseable without knowing ALL words.
gollark: Although my idea works somewhat differently to that one, since it replaces verbs/adjectives/etc as dedicated differently-working words with combinators, so you can use arbitrary things verbuously or adjectivally.
gollark: Hmm. Evidently we need a shiny new data structure with more funlolz.
gollark: In an actual language you would have `do` and `apply-adjective` and such be one syllable.
gollark: In that form it's basically just a tree written differently, but you could do `dup` and `rot` and `swp` and whatever instead of spoken languages' `this` and `that` backrefs.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.