Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Rio 2016: Max Whitlock wins historic gymnastics gold for Britain in the men's floor

Whitlock produced a series of gravity-defying tumbles to win gold with a score of 15.633

Pritha Sarkar
Rio de Janeiro
Sunday 14 August 2016 19:30 BST
Comments
Gold medalist Max Whitlock of Great Britain stands on the podium at the medal ceremony for Men's Floor Exercise
Gold medalist Max Whitlock of Great Britain stands on the podium at the medal ceremony for Men's Floor Exercise (Getty)

Max Whitlock ended Britain's 120-year wait for an Olympic gymnastics gold medal by upstaging two-time world champion Kenzo Shirai to win the men's floor exercise title on Sunday.

Whitlock produced a series of gravity-defying tumbles to win gold with a score of 15.633, while Brazilian Diego Hypolito burst into tears of joy as he claimed silver, delighting the partisan crowd and making up for his flops at the last two Games.

There was more happiness for the home fans as Arthur Mariano picked up the bronze.

Shirai had been the favourite to become the first Japanese gymnast to win the floor exercise since Sawao Kato in 1968, but his gold medal hopes looked shaky when he almost sat down following a triple twisting front somersault.

When he stumbled forward following his next tumbling pass, he was completely out of the running for a medal.

But given the difficulty of Shirai's routine, Whitlock was still unsure where the 19-year-old would end up in the pecking order and he sat with his head down, jiggling nervously with his feet as he waited for the scoreboard to flash up his rival's result.

The crowd's main concern was that no one would leapfrog sentimental favourite Hypolito or Mariano.

Chants of "Diego, Diego, Diego" were ringing around the arena when the final contender, Sam Mikulak of the United States, began his routine. Wild cheers erupted as he stumbled following his first tumbling run.

That set off the celebrations for the Brazilian crowd and the tears freely flowed down Hypolito's face as he finally got on the Olympic podium following years of pain and disappointment.

All around champion Kohei Uchimura was fifth.

Reuters.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in