Gymnastics at the 1928 Summer Olympics – Men's rings

The men's rings event was part of the gymnastics programme at the 1928 Summer Olympics. It was one of seven gymnastics events for men and it was contested for the fourth time after 1896, 1904, and 1924. Scores from the rings event were added to the results from other individual apparatus events to give aggregate scores for the individual and team all-around events. Eighty-eight gymnasts from eleven nations competed, with each nation having a team of 8 gymnasts. The event was won by Leon Štukelj of Yugoslavia, the nation's first medal in the rings event. For the second consecutive Games, Czechoslovakian gymnasts took both silver and bronze: Ladislav Vácha finished second and Emanuel Löffler is credited with a third place finish. Vácha, the bronze medalist in 1924, was the first man to win multiple medals in the event.

Men's rings
at the Games of the IX Olympiad
Leon Štukelj (1958)
VenueOlympic Stadium
Date8 August
Competitors88 from 11 nations
Winning score57.75
Medalists
Leon Štukelj
 Yugoslavia
Ladislav Vácha
 Czechoslovakia
Emanuel Löffler
 Czechoslovakia

Löffler's bronze medal may be the result of a math error.[1] His scores in the compulsory and voluntary exercises were 27.25 and 28.25, respectively, which would result in a total score of 55.50.[2] This score is consistent with the individual all-around and team all-around scores for Löffler and Czechoslovakia.[2][3] However, his total score is listed as 56.50 instead in the Official Report for the rings apparatus.[4] A score of 55.50 would have placed Löffler fourth in the rings, behind Italy's Romeo Neri at 56.00.

Background

This was the fourth appearance of the event, which is one of the five apparatus events held every time there were apparatus events at the Summer Olympics (no apparatus events were held in 1900, 1908, 1912, or 1920). Six of the top 10 gymnasts from 1924 returned: bronze medalist Ladislav Vácha of Czechoslovakia, fourth-place finisher Leon Štukelj of Yugoslavia, fifth-place finisher Bedřich Šupčík of Czechoslovakia, seventh-place finisher Jan Koutný of Czechoslovakia, eighth-place finisher Ferdinando Mandrini of Italy, and ninth-place finisher Vittorio Lucchetti of Italy. The 1926 world championship podium had Štukelj (who had also won in 1922), Vácha, and Šupčík atop it, in that order.[1]

The Netherlands made its debut in the men's rings. Hungary competed for the first time since 1896. The other nine nations had all competed in 1924. The United States made its third appearance, most of any nation.

Competition format

Each gymnast performed a compulsory exercise and a voluntary exercise. The maximum score for each exercise was 30 points. The rings was one of the apparatus used in the individual and team all-around scores. It accounted for 29 of the score.[5]

Schedule

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 8 August 1928Final

Results

Source: Official results;[6] De Wael[7]

Rank Gymnast Nation Score
Leon Štukelj Yugoslavia57.75
Ladislav Vácha Czechoslovakia57.50
Emanuel Löffler Czechoslovakia56.50
4Romeo Neri Italy56.00
5Mauri Nyberg-Noroma Finland55.00
6Bedřich Šupčík Czechoslovakia54.75
7Paul Krempel United States54.50
8Jan Gajdoš Czechoslovakia54.25
Georges Miez Switzerland54.25
Armand Solbach France54.25
11Edvard Antonijevič Yugoslavia54.00
12Heikki Savolainen Finland53.75
13Janez Porenta Yugoslavia53.25
14Vittorio Lucchetti Italy53.00
15Al Jochim United States52.75
Anton Malej Yugoslavia52.75
Václav Veselý Czechoslovakia52.75
18Jan Koutný Czechoslovakia52.50
Eugen Mack Switzerland52.50
Josip Primožič Yugoslavia52.50
Martti Uosikkinen Finland52.50
22Josef Effenberger Czechoslovakia52.00
23Melchior Wezel Switzerland51.75
24Mario Lertora Italy51.50
25Alfred Krauss France51.25
26André Lemoine France50.75
Edi Steinemann Switzerland50.75
28Giuseppe Lupi Italy50.50
Ezio Roselli Italy50.50
30Giuseppe Paris Italy50.25
István Pelle Hungary50.25
32Jaakko Kunnas Finland50.00
33Antoine Chatelaine France49.75
Urho Korhonen Finland49.75
Ferdinando Mandrini Italy49.75
36Hermann Hänggi Switzerland49.50
37Dragutin Cioti Yugoslavia49.25
Boris Gregorka Yugoslavia49.25
39Rezső Kende Hungary49.00
Stane Derganc Yugoslavia49.00
41Elias Melkman Netherlands48.75
Étienne Schmitt France48.75
Ladislav Tikal Czechoslovakia48.75
44August Güttinger Switzerland48.50
Mario Tambini Italy48.50
46Jean Larrouy France48.00
47Glenn Berry United States47.75
Jean Gounot France47.75
49Hans Grieder Switzerland47.50
Georges Leroux France47.50
Nic Roeser Luxembourg47.50
52Otto Pfister Switzerland47.25
53Mathias Logelin Luxembourg47.00
54Fränz Zouang Luxembourg46.75
55Mozes Jacobs Netherlands46.00
56Rafael Ylönen Finland45.00
57Miklós Péter Hungary44.75
58Frank Haubold United States44.50
Josy Staudt Luxembourg44.50
60Birger Stenman Finland43.00
61Herman Witzig United States42.75
62Kalervo Kinos Finland42.50
Gyula Kunszt Hungary42.50
Harold Newhart United States42.50
65Edouard Grethen Luxembourg42.25
66Jean-Pierre Urbing Luxembourg41.75
67Arthur Whitford Great Britain41.50
68John Pearson United States41.25
69Mathias Erang Luxembourg40.25
70Elemér Pászti Hungary40.00
Willibrordus Pouw Netherlands40.00
72Albert Neumann Luxembourg39.75
Israel Wijnschenk Netherlands39.75
74Bart Cronin Great Britain39.25
Frank Kriz United States39.25
76József Szalai Hungary39.00
77Pieter van Dam Netherlands38.25
E. W. Warren Great Britain38.25
79Jacobus van der Vinden Netherlands37.25
80Géza Tóth Hungary36.25
81Klaas Boot Netherlands36.00
82E. A. Walton Great Britain35.50
83T. B. Parkinson Great Britain34.50
84Henry Finchett Great Britain34.25
85Samuel Humphreys Great Britain33.75
86Hugo Licher Netherlands32.75
87G. C. Raynes Great Britain31.25
Imre Erdődy HungaryDNF

References

  1. "Rings, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  2. Official Report, p. 651.
  3. Official Report, p. 668.
  4. Official Report, p. 660.
  5. Official Report, p. 646.
  6. "1928 Summer Olympics official report" (PDF).
  7. "Gymnastics 1928".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.