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Live Updates: Event Finals at the 2025 World Gymnastics Championships in Jakarta

JAKARTA, Indonesia – The 2025 World Gymnastics Championships drew to a close on Saturday afternoon inside Indonesia Arena as five world champions were crowned, including the full circle moment of Brody Malone regaining the high bar title three years after winning in 2022 and two years after a nearly career-ending leg injury.

The top 8 athletes advanced to the final on each event. You can see the full list of qualifiers and results here.

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Meet the Medalists

We will update this section with medalists as both days of event finals unfold. See our detailed results page for more.

Day 1

  • Men’s Floor Exercise:🥇Jake Jarman (GBR) 🥈Luke Whitehouse (GBR) 🥉Carlos Yulo (PHI)
  • Women’s Vault:🥇Angelina Melnikova (AIN) 🥈Lia-Monica Fontaine (CAN) 🥉Joscelyn Roberson (USA)
  • Men’s Pommel Horse:🥇Hong Yanming (CHN) 🥈Mamikon Khachatryan (ARM) 🥉Patrick Hoopes (USA)
  • Women’s Uneven Bars:🥇Kaylia Nemour (ALG) 🥈Angelina Melnikova (AIN) 🥉Yang Fanyuwei (CHN)
  • Men’s Still Rings:🥇Donnell Whittenburg (USA) 🥈Adem Asil (TUR) 🥉Lan Xingyu (CHN)

Day 2

  • Men’s Vault:🥇Carlos Yulo (PHI) 🥈Artur Davtyan (ARM) 🥉Nazar Chepurnyi (UKR)
  • Women’s Balance Beam:🥇Zhang Qingying (CHN) 🥈Kaylia Nemour (ALG) 🥉Aiko Sugihara (JPN)
  • Men’s Parallel Bars:🥇Zou Jingyuan (CHN) 🥈Tomoharu Tsunogai (JPN) 🥉Daniel Marinov (AIN)
  • Women’s Floor Exercise:🥇Aiko Sugihara (JPN) 🥈Ruby Evans (GBR) 🥉Abigail Martin (GBR)
  • Men’s High Bar:🥇Brody Malone (USA) 🥈Daiki Hashimoto (JPN) 🥉Joe Fraser (GBR)

Day 2

Men’s High Bar

BRODY MALONE IS WORLD CHAMPION ONCE AGAIN! Daiki Hashimoto wins the silver, and Joe Fraser wins the bronze.

Tomoharu Tsunogai (JPN) HB: Tak full, on top of the high bar. Tak half to Kolman. Cassina, maybe a bit close. Liukin. Laid-out Tkatachev. Hop 1/1. Laid-out double-double, single step forward. 14.600 – off the podium.

Daniel Marinov (AIN) HB: Cassina, clean. Kolman is fingertips and he whips off the bar.

Carlo Macchini (ITA) HB: Pegan, stunning. Cassina is close and he has to muscle it. Kolman. Tak full, good. Tak half to Gienger, floats that. One-arm giant 1/1. Laid-out double-double, fights for the landing. 14.266.

Shi Cong (CHN) FX: Scary fall on his Cassina, fingertips, but he’s good. 13.100.

As they do the second-half touch, it’s incredible to reminisce on Brody’s comeback story. The devastating leg injury in 2023. The return in time for Paris but not the best individual performance. This would be full circle after his 2022 title. This is his return to Worlds since that injury!

Daiki Hashimoto (JPN) HB: Tak full, bit over. Tak half to Kolman. Cassina. Liukin, bends elbows. Laid-out Tkatchev. Hop 1/1. Laid-out double-double, fought for the stick but think he stepped out. 14.733 – into second!

Milad Karimi (KAZ) HB: Tak half to Liukin, great. Stalder laid-out Tkatchev, floats that. Cassina. Kolman. All so floaty. Endo. Laid-out double-double, couple steps. 14.366. Inquiry submitted, but score unchanged.

Joe Fraser (GBR) HB: Tak half to Kolman, good. Cassina. Laid-out Tkatchev to straddle Tkatchev. One-arm giant 1/1. Missed the handstand on the ensuing Tak full. Triple pike, small step. Great routine! 14.700. These guys are stepping it UP!

Brody Malone (USA) HB: Will he get credit for the Winkler? We’ll see how he does and see if they credit it today… Took a bunch of his difficulty in qualifying. Looks straight to me. Tak full on top of the bars. Tak half to Liukin, BEAUTIFUL. Cassina. Kolman. Hop 1/1. Laid-out double-double, small hop. BRODY MALONE! The 2022 world high bar champion! That’s the best routine he’s done in a long time, and the Winkler LOOKED like it should get credit. Those handstands were on top of the bar. WOW. HE GETS THE CREDIT AND A 14.933! Top qualifying score was a 14.800 – the rest of the field will be chasing him! Watch it here.

Let’s close out this world championships!

Women’s Floor Exercise

Aiko Sugihara is in TEARS! She wins it! It’s her first world championships since 2019! And the Brits, Ruby Evans and Abigail Martin, go 2-3 after their teammates went 1-2 on men’s floor!

Dulcy Caylor (USA) FX: Double Y-turn. Double layout, large step back, borderline whether it was out of bounds, but it seemed like no. Full through to double back to punch front and has to hop back, very low. Falls out of her wolf turn a bit. Double pike, smallest of hops. Not her best. 12.966.

Sabrina Maneca-Voinea (ROU) FX: Top qualifier… Whip to double layout to front tuck, just a small hop, excellent! Tucked double-double, deep in the knees and swings her arms a bit as she steps out of it. Full-twisting double back, basically stuck. Double turn. 13.466 – she looks shocked. Ties Martin but loses the tie-breaker on E-score.

Rina Kishi (JPN) FX: Tucked double-double, large step back. Front layout to front double full, small hop to the side. Triple wolf turn but looked a bit short. Double Y-turn. 2.5 and a stumbling hop back. Double pike, bit under-rotated and rebounds forward flailing her arms. 13.033.

Aiko Sugihara (JPN) FX: Double L-turn. Double layout, small hop. 1.5 through to double back, somehow lands that in bounds and has the smallest of hops. Double Y-turn. 2.5 to front layout, small hop forward. Double pike, small hop. WOW. The artistry is lovely. Great difficulty. That could easily win it and she scores a 13.833 to move into first! Higher than Maneca-Voinea’s leading qualifying score. She LOVES it and puts a little air crown on.

Giulia Perotti (ITA) FX: First-year senior. Double wolf turn. Full-twisting double back, bit of an uncontrolled rebound and kicks her leg up. Front layout through to double pike, hop but seems to stay in bounds. Double Y-turn, seems to fall out of it quickly. Double back and juices it too much, rebounding and sitting it. 11.633.

Denisa Golgota (ROU) FX: Double wolf turn. Double layout to punch front, the form on the layout is not good – very split legs. But still so difficult. Full-twisting double back, legs again, small hop. Double back, small hop. Seemed to mis-time her steps on her last leap and didn’t go for it, so her D-score will take a hit.

Abigail Martin (GBR) FX: Full-twisting double back, large step back but stays in bounds. Big double layout, small hop. Double wolf turn, kind of fell out of it but finessed it. Punch front full through to double back and a small hop forward. 13.466.

Ruby Evans (GBR) FX: Front layout to Randi, good. Front full to front double full, hop back. Double layout, hop back. Double wolf turn. Double back, excellent height and a hop and another little one after that. 13.666 – tied the highest score from qualifications!

This will be close – four-tenths separated all of the qualifiers.

Men’s Parallel Bars

Zou Jingyuan secures his fourth world title! 19-year-old Tomoharu Tsunogai wins the silver, and Daniel Marinov, who had the 10th best qualifying score but got in due to Zhang Boheng and Daiki Hashimoto getting two-per-countried, wins the bronze!

Vladislav Poliashov (AIN) PB: Tokyo Olympian (was an individual, not part of the team gold). Two-time team world medalist, but he won’t win his first individual medal here. Was kind of off the whole time, making errors throughout and missing handstands. 13.966.

Shi Cong (CHN) PB: Also makes a major mistake early with an empty swing after. 13.100.

Shinnosuke Oka (JPN) PB: Big mistake early and has to fight for it. Muscles through and keeps going. But it won’t be enough. 13.300. That means the Olympic all-around and high bar champion will leave with no medals here.

Angel Barajas (COL) PB: Capable of the second highest difficulty behind Zou. He won silver on high bar at the Olympics last year – the first Colombia gymnast to win an Olympic medal! Can he win his first world medal here? Really bringing the heat. So smooth. Does an interesting front double pike dismount, has to take a step. 14.366 – does a higher D-score than Zou but more than a point difference in execution.

Zou Jingyuan (CHN) PB: Parallel bars GOAT. If he hits, he wins… and he does! It’s just breathtaking. Double front half, fights for the stick. Everything is textbook. Poor guys that follow after him know they’re fighting for silver and bronze. This will be his fourth world title! He missed 2023 Worlds because he was at Asian Games or he might have another. He’s also the two-time reigning Olympic champion. 15.300 – 9.3 E-score! Watch it here.

Tomoharu Tsunogai (JPN) PB: Gets some great air, especially on his Bhavsar and Tippelt. Had some handstand deductions. Double front half and has to take a hop. 14.500.

Donnell Whittenburg (USA) PB: Already rings gold – this is just the cherry on top. Flew through that routine and wow was it great! Stuck the double front half after a little fight for it! 14.233.

Daniel Marinov (AIN) PB: Notably took some steps in his handstands. Very clean set. Full-twisting double back dismount, fights for the stick but has to take a small hop. 14.466.

Award Ceremony –

During the Award Ceremony, the Paris 2024 Fair Play Award was awarded to Ellie Black.

Award Ceremony –

Women’s Balance Beam

Zhang Qingying (CHN) BB: The top qualifier. Let’s see if she can best Nemour. She scored a 14.366 in qualifying… Switch leap mount to switch half to Korbut. Two-footed layout series to split jump. Switch ring to back handspring. Switch side 1/4 to straddle jump to Yurchenko loop. Switch leap to split half to straddle 3/4. Full turn. Double pike, large single step. back. Would have to think that will win it. Just technically superb. WOW. 15.166! Wins by nearly a point with a 6.9 D-score! Watch it here.

Sabrina Maneca-Voinea (ROU) BB: Roundoff full-twisting layout to two feet. Switch leap to split jump. Back handspring to two-footed layout, and she misses her foot, slipping and falling. Double turn. Front aerial. Side aerial. Switch half to back handspring. Double back, step back. 12.533.

Amanda Yap (SGP) BB: Singapore’s first-ever world finalist! Switch leap mount to switch half, small bobble. Switch ring. Back handspring to two-footed layout and whips it, wow! Full turn. She is attacking this routine. Front aerial to split jump to straddle jump, so graceful yet powerful. Front tuck. 1.5 twist dismount, large step forward. 13.333! Read our Q&A with Yap here!

Dulcy Caylor (USA) BB: Switch leap mount. Back handspring to layout stepout to layout stepout, clean. Side aerial, pretty sure she’s supposed to connect that to the split leap to straddle jump. Front aerial to split jump to Korbut. Double wolf turn, kind of stands out of it but also hits it? Major save for sure. Double pike and you can see the slip when she rebounds out of the roundoff into the pike, doesn’t get the height and can’t get the rotations around, falling forward. 11.800.

Kaylia Nemour (ALG) BB: Roundoff layout to layout stepout, beautiful. Two-footed layout. Front aerial to split jump to straddle jump. Switch leap to switch half. Side aerial. Full turn, downgrades after falling on that in qualifying and all-around final – smart move! Double pike, large step and slide. 14.300 – and she’s in the lead! 6.2 D-score! Upgraded overall! Watch it here.

Ellie Black (CAN) BB: Switch leap mount to switch half to Korbut. Double turn to single turn. Straddle jump to wolf jump. Punch front, really attacks it. Handstand to back handspring to two-footed layout, smallest of checks. Side somi. Little wobble on the dance? Lol. 2.5 twist, small hop back. 13.600 – improved from quals but not enough to take the lead.

Aiko Sugihara (JPN) BB: Switch leap mount to split ring to Korbut, solid. We shared that mount on our Insta a bit ago! Front aerial to split jump to straddle jump. Back handspring to layout stepout, floats that layout. Y-turn. Side aerial. Switch ring. Double pike, the pop she got was insane and she floats that to a stuck landing! WOW! Flavia gives her a massive hug as she leaves the podium. *crying* 14.166! The only one who topped that in qualifying was Zhang Qingying!

Flavia Saraiva (BRA) BB: Roundoff backhandspring mount, bit crooked but finesses it. Full turn. Back handspring to layout stepout, little arm swing. Switch ring, stunning. Front aerial to ring jump to back handspring. Side somi, bit of a bend forward. Sissone to split jump. Double pike, nearly stuck, smallest of steps. 13.900. Higher than qualifying, where she was second after tie-break over Sabrina Maneca-Voinea.

Men’s Vault

Carlos Yulo wins his second world vault title (first was in 2021) and is now the reigning Olympic and world champion on the event! Artur Davtyan returns to the podium after winning the title in 2022. Nazar Chepurnyi rounds out the medalists with his second world bronze on the event (first was in 2023).

Artur Davtyan (ARM) VT 1: Double front half, STUCK COLD. This final is bookended by two of the best to ever do it. 14.800. VT 2: Front handspring Randi, STUCK COLD. After a rough 2023 Worlds, the 2022 world champion with an incredibly redeeming performance here! 14.866. Average = 14.833! WOW. Those two.

Nazar Chepurnyi (UKR) VT 1: Double front half, stunning how he basically stands it up, small hop. 14.466. VT 2: Kas double, also basically stands it up, small hop, might’ve been on the line… no. 14.500. Average = 14.483 – puts him into second!

Huang Mingqi (CHN) VT 1: Front handspring Randi, great distance but takes a large step back. 14.366. VT 2: Triple-twisting Yurchenko, small hop back. 14.466. Average = 14.416.

Mukhammadzhon Iakubov (AIN) VT 1: Front handspring Randi, really excellent form, little stutter hop. 14.300. VT 2: Double front half, almost sticks it but chest is low and he has to take a small hop forward. 14.066. Average = 14.183.

Kazuki Minami (JPN) VT 1: Front handspring Randi, super short on the rotations and ankle crunches, falling to the side and putting his hand down. So disappointing after he fell in the floor final yesterday. 13.133. VT 2: 2.5 twist, stuck cold. He did that in podium too (check out Insta)! 14.366. Average = 13.749.

Carlos Yulo (PHI) VT 1: Front double pike half, STUCK COLD. Good squat, chest up pretty well for how hard that vault is. 15.200 – 9.5 E!!! If he hits the next one, he’ll probably win it… Front handspring Randi, small hop back, but so, so beautiful. WOW. He is a marvel. 14.533. Average = 14.866 – into first! Watch the first vault here.

Daniel Marinov (AIN) VT 1: Kas double, same has Brugnami’s second vault. Seems to get a little more pop and better rotation. Takes a large step back with the right foot and then has to take a couple more small hops. 14.300 – 9.1 E. VT 2: Double front half, very low chest – like almost touching his knees – small step back. Impressive he didn’t touch with that. 14.000. Average = 14.150.

Tommaso Brugnami (ITA) VT 1: Triple-twisting Yurchenko. Good Large sliding sleep and another small step. 14.366 – 9.166 execution! VT 2: Kas double and he STICKS IT COLD. wowowowowow. 14.566 – 9.266 execution! Average = 14.466. Setting the tone!

Day 1

Men’s Still Rings

It’s Whittenburg with the gold, Asil with the silver, and Lan with the bronze. The 2025, 2022, and 2021 world champions. Whittenburg is the first rings world champion from the U.S. The last U.S. man to win a medal on the event was Brandon Wynn in 2013 – a year before Whittenburg’s first Worlds. The last to win silver was Paul O’Neill in 1994.

Donnell Whittenburg (USA) SR: This feels like Whittenburg’s title to lose. He’s capable of a 6.0 set. The highest so far has been a 5.9 from China’s Lan… Handstands look good. Strength is good. The Whittenburg triple pike is AMAZING. Smallest of hops. 14.700 – Donnell is the world champion! Watch it here.

Glen Cuyle (BEL) SR: A bit low in some of the strength elements. Triple back is technically-superb through the air, no cowboying it seems, but he lands and bounds forward a bit. 13.933.

Harry Hepworth (GBR) SR: Was showing SUCH a good routine, but the landing seems like a stinger on the triple back and he falls forward putting hands down. You can see the disappointment on his face. 13.366.

Eleftherios Petrounias (GRE) SR: Easily the most decorated athlete of this final. He’s 34 and shows no signs of stopping, says full speed to LA. Laid-out double-double with a hop and a step. 14.300 will keep him off the podium. 14.300.

Caio Souza (BRA) SR: After the past three, the imperfections are clear despite a strong routine. Bobbly in handstands, some soft elbows. Just not as sharp. Triple back is great thought with just a small hop back, and he shouts with joy to celebrate. 14.166.

Adem Asil (TUR) SR: 2022 world champion. Reigning European champion (tied with Eleftherios Petrounias, who is also in this final). Into first after an excellent mix of execution and difficulty. Laid-out double-double with a hop forward. 14.566.

Zhang Boheng (CHN) SR: At a four-tenth disadvantage to Lan. Excellent work, but in comparison it is lacking. Laid-out double-double, small hop back. 14.466 – nearly 9.0 E-score.

Lan Xingyu (CHN) SR: 2021 world champion. Reigning Asian champion. Top qualifier, edged USA’s Donnell Whittenburg by 0.066. Pulls his body through so many strength skills that should absolutely be impossible for the human body. Just breathtaking work. Laid-out double-double is SO fast, low chest and a small hop forward. You’d think that’ll be on the podium for sure, but we’ve got a ways to go. 14.500!

Women’s Uneven Bars

It’s Kaylia, Angelina, and Yang on the podium!

Kaylia Nemour (ALG) UB: Connects it all. Fingers can’t type fast enough to keep up, just know she hit, she connected, and she won. The reigning Olympic AND world champion! Africa’s first world champion! 15.566 – wins by more than a point! Watch it here.

Leila Vasileva (AIN) UB: Inbar Shaposh to stalder 1/1 to Pak. Van Leeuwen to inbar half to piked Jaeger. Inbar 1/1 to full-twisting double back and takes a couple small steps out. Couple short handstands. 14.066.

Zoja Szekely (HUN) UB: Inbar 1/1. Inbar Shaposh to Pak to Stalder Shaposh to Gienger. Blind to Piked Jaeger. Short on the handstand before the 1/1 to full-twisting double back and lands before awkwardly slipping and falling. She pulled out of the all-around final due to injuring both knees on vault. 12.433.

Yang Fanyuwei (CHN) UB: Does she do the full-twisting Jaeger? The Fanyuwei!? Let’s see… Opening pirouette, form break – feel like she did something similar in qualifying? Does do the Fanyuwei! Rest of the routine was good. Full-twisting double back was good but took a couple stutter steps out. 14.500 – she loses the tie-breaker to Melnikova and is second right now.

Second half touch.

Kate McDonald (AUS) UB: Clear hip half to Maloney to clear hip 1/1. Piked Tkatchev to Pak – SOARING. WOW. The height is WILD. Van Leeuwen. Toe 1/1 to full-twisting double back and small hop forward. She was at war with the bars and she won by a landslide. 14.166.

Naomi Visser (NED) UB: Stalder piked Tkatchev to Pak. Excellent amplitude. Maloney to clear hip half to Ezhova. Stalder 1/1. Van Leeuwen – missed that connection. Toe 1/1 to full-twisting double back and a large hop forward. 14.066.

Angelina Melnikova (AIN) UB: Inbar 1/1 to inbar Shaposh to Pak to Van Leeuwen. Inbar half to piked Jaeger. Toe 1/1 to full-twisting double back, stuck. A couple short handstands, and some of those releases were yanky/close. 14.500 – she also increased her D-score by a tenth.

Skye Blakely (USA) UB: Incredible Skye is here after the Achilles last year before Trials. New quad and eyes are on LA! Stalder 1/1 to toe-on piked Tkatchev. Stalder piked Tkatchev to Pak. Toe 1/1 to Van Leeuwen. Toe half. Double front half, the smallest of movement with her left foot. Really one of her best routines – it looked like she hit all of her handstands. Floated through those releases and great extension. 14.166 in qualifying – 14.333 here! Watch it here.

Men’s Pommel Horse

19-year-old Hong Yanming wins the title, followed by 18-year-old Mamikon Khachatryan with the silver and Patrick Hoopes with the bronze!

Mamikon Khachatryan (ARM) PH: Another 18-year-old! The next generation is here! He swings beautifully and it’ll be tight… 14.600 as well, but Hong wins the tie-breaker!

Nariman Kurbanov (KAZ) PH: The Olympic silver medalist loses his balance early and it is rough going before he eventually comes off.

Hong Yanming (CHN) PH: Great swing, but the 19-year-old comes in at a difficulty disadvantage. This is stunning though – just superb. 9.0 execution and he’s into the lead with a 14.600!

Aidan Li (CAN) PH: Cal guy! Second to Patty (Air Force) at NCAAs… Off early unfortunately. 12.366.

Alexander Yolshin-Cash (GBR) PH: The newcomer of the British team and following in the footsteps of the legendary Max Whitlock as the squad’s pommel specialist! His extensions is beautiful – you can see the potential. A bit slow into the handstand. 14.366.

Zeinolla Idrissov (KAZ) PH: Qualified 8th. Was swinging so well, but the major mistake comes on the dismount. Loses it, splitting his legs as he comes around and doesn’t get the extra turns in. Major downgrade on his D-score. 13.666.

Patrick Hoopes (USA) PH: Has been so consistent this season, and it’s another hit here! Excellent rhythm. Dismount – almost goes the wrong way but barely noticeable. 14.566 – into 1st! Watch it here.

Hamlet Manukyan (ARM) PH: The reigning European champion, and only 18 years old! He is FAST. Flies through it. Great lift. Positions are beautiful. Mistake on the dismount where he breaks form and bends his legs, but somehow he finesses it and finishes strong! 14.433!

– Award Ceremony –

In between vault and pommel horse, the U.S. women and Japanese men are awarded the Fujitsu Infinity Award, which honors one men’s and one women’s team that demonstrated exceptional spirit and technical precision at the meet.

Also a pause for the award ceremony.

Interesting that the anthem for the AIN athletes is still from a Russian composer. Piano Concerto No. 1 from Tchaikovsky.

– Award Ceremony –

Women’s Vault

Angelina Melnikova wins the vault title! Lia-Monica Fontaine takes silver, and Joscelyn Roberson wins the bronze! Really impressive of Joscelyn, who earlier this week struggled adjusting to the equipment here among other things. She didn’t even know if she’d do vault in qualifying, then she sticks a Lopez to make it through to the final, and then she does another different vault from her norm to secure the bronze.

Charlize Moerz (AUT) VT 1: Balks it. Does a front handspring tuck half – insane height. That’ll do it for the medals. 12.700. VT 2: Juices the Tsuk full and takes a large bouncing hop back. 13.166. Average = 13.133.

Angelina Melnikova (AIN) VT 1: Clean double-twisting Yurchenko with a small hop back. Leg form gets wonky in the second half and she splits them as she lands. 14.100. VT 2: Cheng, not as good as qualifying, kind of stumbles out of it with a couple steps, but she quickly salutes and celebrates. Form in the air is very split. 14.433. Average = 14.466 with the 0.2 bonus.

Lia-Monica Fontaine (CAN) VT 1: Double-twisting Yurchenko, basically stands it up. Stunning. Large step back and then another smaller one. 13.933. VT 2: Half-on, half-off, large hop back. Flared that out. 13.733. Average = 14.033 – into first! Watch it here.

Karina Schoenmaier (GER) VT 1: Great pop off the table on a Cheng (!!!) despite questionable hands touching – didn’t get the half-on, more like 1/4 on – 12.533. Gets the D-score of the Cheng, but she also gets the 2 point deduction for lack of support with the second hand. That was appealed and denied. VT 2: Beautiful double-twisting Yurchnenko, small hop back. Easily one of the best here. 14.033. Average = 13.483.

Anna Kalmykova (AIN) VT 1: Falls on her front handspring Rudi. Very short, kind of crumples forward and puts her hands down. 12.866. VT 2: Yurchenko 1.5, tidy and a single hop to the left. 13.533. Average = 13.199.

Lisa Vaelen (BEL) VT 1: Front handspring Rudi, small hop back. Great block and height. Form issues in the second half. 14.100. VT 2: Tusk full, small hop back. Clean. 13.233. Average = 13.866 after 0.2 bonus – Roberson retains lead.

Joscelyn Roberson (USA) VT 1: That’s a hard thing to follow… Goes for the full off instead of the Cheng (flashed the Cheng D-score initially), and it looks beautiful. Hop forward. 13.966. VT 2: Double-twisting Yurchenko, knees in the air and looked a bit under-rotated, but decent landing, just a small hop and a step. Low chest. 13.600. Average = 13.983 with the 0.2 bonus. Watch it here.

Deng Yalan (CHN) VT 1: WOAH. She balks completely and jumps over the table – doesn’t touch. You can see the devastation on her face. Wow. She was a real contender for gold. VT 2: The crowd is lifting her up. You can see how emotional she is. Waiting and waiting and she won’t go for the second. DNS as the judges tell her no, you’re done.

Men’s Floor Exercise

Jake Jarman wins it as the Brits go 1-2! Luke Whitehouse with the silver. Carlos Yulo the bronze.

Milad Karimi (KAZ) FX: 2.5 twist to front double pike, stuck. Front double full to front double tuck, stuck. Triple twist to the side, stuck. Tucked double-double, single step back with left foot. Double Arabian half, stuck. ONE pass wasn’t stuck. Not the difficulty of Jake, but we’ll see. He did his absolute best! 13.600 – off the podium.

Jake Jarman (GBR) FX: Triple-twisting double layout, small hop and on the line. 2.5 to front double tuck, close to the line. 3.5 twist stuck to the side. Triple-double, stuck. Triple twist to the side, stuck. Tucked double-double, stuck. So much difficulty, but is it enough to outweigh those early line errors? 14.866 – it is enough! In the lead!

Tikumporn Surintornta (THA) FX: Front double full to front double tuck, stuck cold. Front full to front double pike, small hop back. 3.5 twist to the side, stuck. 2.5 twist, stuck. Double Arabian, large step forward. Massive moment for Thailand! 13.700.

Kazuki Minami (JPN) FX: Front double full to front double tuck and stumbles back many steps, falling. Devastating as he’s one of the most ambitious tumblers in the world and won silver on this event in 2021 and 2023. But no medal this year. 12.533.

Second half touch happening now.

Luke Whitehouse (GBR) FX: Triple tuck, small hop back – much improved from day 1. Front double full to front double tuck, small hop forward. Randi to the side, small hop to the side. Front double pike, basically stuck. Triple twist, another basically stuck. Tucked double-double, definitely stuck. He’s the three-time reigning European champion for a reason! 14.666 – takes the lead! Watch it here.

Krisztofer Meszaros (HUN) FX: Front full to front double pike, low in the knees and big hop back. 2.5 twist to front double tuck, stuck. Front double full. Randi, large hop back but stays in bounds. Tucked double-double, single step forward, low chest. 13.266.

Carlos Yulo (PHI) FX: 2.5 to front double pike, hop forward. Double-twisting double layout, single step. 3.5 twist to the side, hop. Front double full to front layout, small hop. STUCK full-twisting double layout. 14.533 – takes the lead. Watch it here.

Kameron Nelson (USA) FX: Triple pike, right foot sliding step, one foot OOB. Triple tuck, one hop back. 2.5 to front layout. Front full to double front. Full-twisting double layout dismount, small hop back. 14.133. Watch it here.

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