Frederick Richard wins all-around at US Olympic gymnastics trials, punches ticket to Paris
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Frederick Richard wowed the crowd in winning the high bar.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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MINNEAPOLIS – Frederick Richard is heading to his first Olympics after an all-around victory at the US gymnastics trials on June 29, vowing the American men would deliver “some medals in Paris”.
The United States have not won an Olympic men’s team gymnastics medal since their bronze in 2008.
Richard will spearhead the effort to end that drought alongside Brody Malone, Paul Juda, Asher Hong and Stephen Nedoroscik.
“I knew whatever team was chosen is a deadly team,” Richard, 20, said. “We shouldn’t even be aiming for just a medal, we should be aiming for gold.”
To book an automatic spot, Richard also had to finish in the top three on at least three of the six apparatus at the trials and he got the job done – wowing the Target Centre crowd in winning the high bar.
He was second on the parallel bars and third on floor exercise.
His all-around total of 170.50 was just two-tenths of a point better than Malone, who returned from a career-threatening knee injury in 2023 to win a third US national championship earlier in June.
Malone had his difficulties in Minneapolis, including a disappointing showing on pommel horse and a fall from the high bar – in which he won the world title in 2022.
But he never really looked in doubt of making a second straight Olympic team, which was filled out by selectors based on results of the US championships, as well as the trials, in a complicated computation aimed at maximising scoring potential at the Games.
Third-placed all-around finisher Shane Wiskus, a Tokyo Olympian, missed out as fourth-placed Juda and fifth-placed Hong, who were both on the bronze medal-winning team at the 2023 world championships, made it.
The fifth spot went to pommel horse specialist Nedoroscik, the 2021 world champion and a four-time national champion in the event.
“This is an extremely fair process based on the results from two competitions,” men’s programme director Brett McClure said. “The guys that performed at the level to make the team performed at the level to make the team.”
And he said he thought the process produced a team able to regain the Olympic podium as they inch closer to Japan, China, Ukraine and Britain in the degree of difficulty in their routines.
“That’s the expectation, that’s our goal,” McClure said. “That’s the objective, that’s what we’re shooting for. We’re going to be well-prepared to do that.”
The trials conclude on June 30 with four-gold former Olympic champion Simone Biles poised to book a third trip to the Games.
The women’s all-around winner gains an automatic spot on the team. Biles led the standings on 58.90 points after the opening night on June 28, with Jordan Chiles, part of the US silver medal-winning team in Tokyo, second on 56.400 and Tokyo all-around champion Sunisa Lee third on 56.025.
However, Shilese Jones withdrew on June 29, a day after she injured her left knee on a warmup vault. A member of the victorious US team at the last two world championships, she landed awkwardly shortly before the vault competition and limped off with the help of her coach. AFP

