Gymnastics at the 1948 Summer Olympics – Men's rings

The men's rings competition at the 1948 Summer Olympics was held at Earls Court Exhibition Centre on 12 and 13 August. It was the seventh appearance of the event.[1] There were 121 competitors from 16 nations, with each nation sending a team of up to 8 gymnasts. The event was won by Karl Frei of Switzerland, with his countryman Michael Reusch earning silver; they were the nation's first medals in the event. Zdeněk Růžička of Czechoslovakia took bronze.

Men's rings
at the Games of the XIV Olympiad
Veikko Huhtanen competing on the rings
VenueEarls Court Exhibition Centre
Dates12–13 August
Competitors121 from 16 nations
Winning score39.6
Medalists
Karl Frei
 Switzerland
Michael Reusch
 Switzerland
Zdeněk Růžička
 Czechoslovakia

Background

This was the seventh 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). Two of the top 10 gymnasts from 1936 returned: sixth-place finisher Michael Reusch of Switzerland and eighth-place finisher (and 1932 competitor) Heikki Savolainen of Finland. No world championship had been held since World War II; Alois Hudec, who did not compete in 1948, was still the reigning world (1938) and Olympic (1936) champion. Reusch had finished second at the 1938 world championship.[2]

Argentina, Cuba, Denmark, and Egypt each made their debut in the men's rings. The United States made its sixth appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the inaugural 1896 Games.

Competition format

The gymnastics format continued to use the aggregation format. Each nation entered a team of up to eight gymnasts (Cuba and Argentina had only 7; Mexico only 5, with one not starting in the rings; and Austria had one gymnast of its 8 not start in the rings). All entrants in the gymnastics competitions performed both a compulsory exercise and a voluntary exercise for each apparatus, with the scores summed to give a final total. The scores in each of the six apparatus competitions were added together to give individual all-around scores; the top six individual scores on each team were summed to give a team all-around score. No separate finals were contested.

For each exercise, four judges gave scores from 0 to 10 in one-tenth point increments. The top and bottom scores were discarded and the remaining two scores summed to give the exercise total. If the two scores were sufficiently far apart, the judges would "confer" and decide on a score. Thus, exercise scores ranged from 0 to 20, apparatus scores from 0 to 40, individual totals from 0 to 240, and team scores from 0 to 1,440.[3]

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
Thursday, 12 August 19489:00Compulsory
Friday, 13 August 19489:00Voluntary

Results

RankGymnastNationCompulsoryVoluntaryTotal
Karl Frei Switzerland19.819.839.6
Michael Reusch Switzerland19.519.639.1
Zdeněk Růžička Czechoslovakia18.819.738.5
4Walter Lehmann Switzerland19.219.238.4
5Josef Stalder Switzerland18.819.538.3
Emil Studer Switzerland18.919.438.3
7Vladimír Karas Czechoslovakia18.919.338.2
8Heikki Savolainen Finland19.019.138.1
9László Baranyai Hungary18.719.237.9
Olavi Rove Finland18.819.137.9
11Veikko Huhtanen Finland18.719.137.8
Christian Kipfer Switzerland18.819.037.8
Ferenc Pataki Hungary18.918.937.8
14André Weingand France18.718.937.6
15Elkana Grønne Denmark18.618.937.5
16Kalevi Laitinen Finland18.618.837.4
17Paavo Aaltonen Finland18.718.637.3
Jey Kugeler Luxembourg18.718.637.3
Aleksanteri Saarvala Finland18.518.837.3
Sulo Salmi Finland18.718.637.3
Leo Sotorník Czechoslovakia18.818.537.3
Lajos Tóth Hungary18.418.937.3
23Antoine Schildwein France18.518.737.2
24Robert Lucy Switzerland18.318.737.0
25[4]Pavel Benetka Czechoslovakia18.018.936.9
Vratislav Petráček Czechoslovakia18.418.536.9
27Lajos Sántha Hungary18.618.236.8
Einari Teräsvirta Finland18.418.436.8
29Alphonse Anger France18.418.336.7
Ferenc Várkõi Hungary18.917.836.7
31Melchior Thalmann Switzerland17.818.736.5
32Marcel de Wolf France17.618.836.4
Raymond Dot France18.418.036.4
Jozsef Fekete Hungary17.818.636.4
Miroslav Málek Czechoslovakia17.419.036.4
Ali Zaky Egypt17.718.736.4
37Gyözö Mogyorosi Hungary17.618.736.3
38Lucien Masset France17.618.636.2
39Guido Figone Italy18.317.836.1
40Savino Guglielmetti Italy17.718.336.0
Poul Jessen Denmark17.818.236.0
Josy Stoffel Luxembourg17.818.436.0
43János Mogyorósi-Klencs Hungary17.6518.235.85
44René Schroeder Luxembourg17.218.535.7
Ernst Wister Austria17.817.935.7
46Gustav Hrubý Czechoslovakia17.018.535.5
47Michel Mathiot France17.517.935.4
48Freddy Jensen Denmark17.517.835.3
49Arnold Thomsen Denmark17.717.435.1
50Mohamed Roushdi Egypt16.918.135.0
51Ángel Aguiar Cuba16.818.134.9
52Konrad Grilc Yugoslavia17.717.134.8
53Vilhelm Møller Denmark17.317.434.7
54Gunner Olesen Denmark16.717.934.6
Ed Scrobe United States17.816.834.6
56Moustafa Abdelal Egypt17.017.534.5
57Frank Turner Great Britain17.616.834.4
Quinto Vadi Italy17.616.834.4
59Ivica Jelić Yugoslavia16.018.334.3
60Domenico Grosso Italy17.017.234.2
Volmer Thomsen Denmark16.417.834.2
62Luigi Zanetti Italy16.217.934.1
63Karl Bohusch Austria16.417.533.9
Jack Flaherty Great Britain17.416.533.9
Fernando Lecuona Cuba17.116.833.9
66Auguste Sirot France17.815.933.7
67Stjepan Boltižar Yugoslavia16.916.633.5
Danilo Fioravanti Italy17.316.233.5
69Mahmoud Abdel-Aal Egypt16.017.233.2
Roberto Villacián Cuba17.216.033.2
71Alec Wales Great Britain16.9516.233.15
72Egidio Armelloni Italy15.7517.333.05
73František Wirth Czechoslovakia16.616.433.0
74Baldomero Rubiera Cuba16.0516.932.95
75Vincent D'Autorio United States16.316.632.9
76Pierre Schmitz Luxembourg17.015.732.7
77Miro Longyka Yugoslavia16.016.632.6
78Jos Bernard Luxembourg16.615.932.5
Josip Kujundžić Yugoslavia14.518.032.5
80Drago Jelić Yugoslavia15.017.432.4
81Polo Welfring Luxembourg17.115.232.3
Georges Wengler Luxembourg16.915.432.3
83Pedro Lonchibuco Argentina16.216.032.2
Willi Schreyer Austria16.515.732.2
85Rafael Lecuona Cuba16.815.232.0
86Hans Sauter Austria16.215.631.8
87William Bonsall United States16.0515.731.75
88Menn Krecke Luxembourg16.814.631.4
89Hans Friedrich Austria14.017.331.3
90George Weedon Great Britain16.814.431.2
91Mohamed Aly Egypt17.313.731.0
Ray Sorensen United States16.814.231.0
93Percy May Great Britain14.516.330.8
94Ahmed Khalaf Ali Egypt15.015.730.7
95Ali El-Hefnawi Egypt15.015.530.5
96Frank Cumiskey United States15.514.830.3
97Enrique Rapesta Argentina15.7514.530.25
98Robert Pranz Austria15.514.329.8
99Joe Kotys United States15.414.229.4
100Ken Buffin Great Britain14.514.829.3
101Ettore Perego Italy13.814.728.5
102Bill Roetzheim United States14.513.027.9
103Jakob Šubelj Yugoslavia12.015.827.8
104Ahmed Khalil El-Giddawi Egypt12.014.426.4
105Alejandro Díaz Cuba13.013.226.2
106Arturo Amos Argentina14.012.126.1
107Ivor Vice Great Britain11.512.123.6
108Glyn Hopkins Great Britain12.011.023.0
109Jorge Soler Argentina10.012.822.8
110César Bonoris Argentina10.512.022.5
111Karel Janež Yugoslavia9.512.321.8
112Raimundo Rey Cuba9.7510.520.25
113Roberto Núñez Argentina7.511.519.0
114Børge Minerth Denmark17.817.8
115Louis Bordo United States16.7516.75
116Jorge Castro Mexico6.58.014.5
117Gottfried Hermann Austria14.2514.25
118Rubén Lira Mexico7.06.213.2
119Dario Aguilar Mexico6.05.411.4
120Everardo Rios Mexico11.011.0
121Jorge Vidal Argentina8.08.0

References

  1. "Gymnastics at the 1948 London Summer Games: Men's Rings". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  2. "Rings, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  3. Official Report, p. 343.
  4. The Official Report places Benetka 27th in this event, but his score would put him in 25th. Other sources place him 25th.
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