Gymnastics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification

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This article describes the qualifying phase for gymnastics at the 2020 Summer Olympics (postponed to 2021[2] due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

The qualification system underwent a significant revision following the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio. The team events in artistic gymnastics will be reduced from five members to four, but a maximum of two further places will be available for competitors in individual events, in principle allowing one or two athletes per National Olympic Committee (NOC) to enter as specialists.

In a further move to link FIG competitions to the Olympics, it will now be possible to qualify for the Olympics on the basis of an aggregate of scores achieved over the Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series and the various continental artistic gymnastics championships.[3]

Timeline

Artistic Gymnastics
Event Date Venue
2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships October 25 – November 3, 2018 Qatar Doha
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships October 4–13, 2019 Germany Stuttgart
Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Throughout 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021 Various
2021 Continental Championships April–June 2021
Switzerland Basel
N/A
Brazil Rio de Janeiro
Egypt Cairo
Australia Gold Coast
Rhythmic Gymnastics
Event Date Venue
2018 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships September 10–16, 2018 Bulgaria Sofia
2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships September 16–22, 2019 Azerbaijan Baku
2021 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Series 2021 Various
2020–21 Continental Championships 2020 and 2021 Various
Trampoline
Event Date Venue
2019 Trampoline World Championships
November 28 – December 1, 2019 Japan Tokyo
2019–21 Trampoline World Cup series February 2019 to 2021
(6 competitions)
Various
2021 Continental Championships 2021 Various

Qualification summary

The table below lists the numbers of men and women from each NOC who have qualified for the gymnastics events at the 2020 Olympics.

Nation Artistic Rhythmic Trampoline Total
Men Women Individual Group Men Women
 Albania 1 1
 Argentina 1 1
 Armenia 1 1
 Australia 1 2 1 Yes 1 1 11
 Austria 1 1
 Azerbaijan 1 1 1 Yes 8
 Belarus 1 1 2 Yes 2 10
 Belgium 4 4
 Brazil 5 2 Yes 12
 Bulgaria 1 2 Yes 8
 Canada 1 4 2 7
 Cape Verde 1 1
 Cayman Islands 1 1
 Chile 1 1 2
 China 6 6 Yes 2 2 21
 Colombia 1 1
 Costa Rica 1 1
 Croatia 1 1 2
 Cuba 1 1 1
 Cyprus 1 1
 Czech Republic 1 1 2
 Egypt 1 2 1 Yes 1 1 11
 France 3 4 1 1 9
 Georgia 1 1
 Germany 4 4 8
 Great Britain 4 4 2 10
 Greece 1 1
 Hong Kong 1 1
 Hungary 1 1 2
 India 1 1
 Ireland 1 1 2
 Israel 2 1 2 Yes 10
 Italy 2 5 2 Yes 14
 Jamaica 1 1
 Japan 6 5 2 Yes 2 2 22
 Kazakhstan 1 1 2
 Lithuania 1 1
 Malaysia 1 1 2
 Mexico 1 1 1 1 4
 Netherlands 2 4 6
 New Zealand 1 1 1 3
 Nigeria 1 1
 
North Korea
1 1
 Norway 1 1 2
 Peru 1 1
 Philippines 1 1
 Poland 1 1
 Portugal 1 1 2
 Romania 1 2 3
 ROC 6 6 2 Yes 2 2 23
 Singapore 1 1
 Slovakia 1 1
 Slovenia 1 1
 South Africa 2 2
 South Korea 5 2 7
 Spain 5 4 9
 Sri Lanka 1 1
 Sweden 1 1 2
 Switzerland 4 1 5
 Chinese Taipei 4 1 5
 Turkey 4 1 5
 Ukraine 4 1 2 Yes 1 13
 United States 5 6 2 Yes 1 1 20
 Uzbekistan 1 1 1 Yes 8
 Vietnam 2 2
Total: 64 NOCs 98 98 26 70 16 16 324

Artistic

Men's events

Team places
Event Standard Qualified national team
Teams of four
2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships Team places 1–3  China
 ROC
 Japan
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships Team places 1–9
(among non-qualified teams)
 Ukraine
 Great Britain
 Switzerland
 United States
 Chinese Taipei
 South Korea
 Brazil
 Spain
 Germany
Total 48 (12 teams of 4)
Individual quotas
Event Standard Qualified gymnast
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships[6]
(1 quota per NOC)
All-around  Carlos Yulo (PHI)
 Manrique Larduet (CUB)
 Ludovico Edalli (ITA)
 Milad Karimi (KAZ)
 Loris Frasca (FRA)
 Robert Tvorogal (LTU)
 Alexander Shatilov (ISR)
 Ferhat Arıcan (TUR)
 Artur Davtyan (ARM)
 David Huddleston (BUL)
 Bart Deurloo (NED)
 Daniel Corral (MEX)
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships[7]
(max. 3 quotas per NOC across all apparatus)
Floor  Artem Dolgopyat (ISR)
Pommel horse  Rhys McClenaghan (IRL)
 Cyril Tommasone (FRA)
Rings  İbrahim Çolak (TUR)
 Marco Lodadio (ITA)
 Samir Aït Saïd (FRA)
Vault  Shek Wai Hung (HKG)
 Lê Thanh Tùng (VIE)
 Marian Drăgulescu (ROU)
Parallel bars  Ahmet Önder (TUR)
Horizontal bar  Tin Srbić (CRO)
 Tyson Bull (AUS)
FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series
2018–2020
(1 quota per NOC across all apparatus)
Floor  
Rayderley Zapata (ESP
)
Pommel horse  
Kohei Kameyama (JPN
)
Rings  Eleftherios Petrounias (GRE)
Vault  
Shin Jae-hwan (KOR
)
Parallel bars  You Hao (CHN)
Horizontal bar  Epke Zonderland (NED)
2020 Individual All-Around World Cup series
(1 quota per NOC)
All-around  ROC
 China
 Japan
2020 Continental Championships
(1 quota per NOC; all-around qualification)
Africa  Omar Mohamed (EGY)
 Uche Eke (NGR)
Asia  Đinh Phương Thành (VIE)
 Loo Phay Xing (MAS)
Americas  United States
 Brazil
Europe  ROC
 Adem Asil (TUR)
Oceania  Mikhail Koudinov (NZL)
Reserved places Host nation Host nation qualified above
Tripartite invitation  Matvei Petrov (ALB)
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
(Reallocation)
All-around  )
Total 50

Women's events

Team places
Event Standard Qualified national team
Teams of four
2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships Team places 1–3  United States
 ROC
 China
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships Team places 1–9
(among non-qualified teams)
 France
 Canada
 Netherlands
 Great Britain
 Italy
 Germany
 Belgium
 Japan
 Spain
Total 48 (12 teams of 4)
Individual quotas
Event Standard Qualified gymnast
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships[6]
(1 quota per NOC)
All-around  )
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships[7]
(max. 3 quotas per NOC across all apparatus)
Vault  Yeo Seo-jeong (KOR)
Uneven Bars
Balance beam
Floor
FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series
2018–2020
(1 quota per NOC across all apparatus)
Vault  Jade Carey (USA)
Uneven bars  Fan Yilin (CHN)
Balance beam  Urara Ashikawa (JPN)
Floor[9]  Vanessa Ferrari (ITA)
 Lara Mori (ITA)
2020 Individual All-Around World Cup series
(1 quota per NOC)
All-around  United States
 China
 ROC
2020 Continental Championships
(1 quota per NOC; all-around qualification)
Africa  Zeina Ibrahim (EGY)
 Naveen Daries (RSA)
Asia  Milka Gehani (SRI)
 Pranati Nayak (IND)
Americas  Rebeca Andrade (BRA)
 Luciana Alvarado (CRC)
Europe  ROC
 Larisa Iordache (ROU)
Oceania  Emily Whitehead (AUS)
Reserved places Host nation Host nation qualified above
Tripartite invitation[10]  Raegan Rutty (CAY)
2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
(Reallocation)
All-around  )
Total 50

Rhythmic

Individual all-around

Event Standard Qualified NOC
2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships
Places 1–16 (max. 2 per NOC)
All-around  Azerbaijan
 Belarus
 Belarus
 Bulgaria
 Bulgaria
 Israel
 Israel
 Italy
 Italy
 Japan
 ROC
 ROC
 Ukraine
 Ukraine
 United States
 United States
2021 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series
Top 3 (max. 1 per NOC)
All-around  Ekaterina Vedeneeva (SLO)
 Sabina Tashkenbaeva (UZB)
 Ekaterina Fetisova (UZB)
 Chisaki Oiwa (JPN)
2021 Continental Championships
All-around (max. 1 per NOC)
Africa  Habiba Marzouk (EGY)
Asia  Alina Adilkhanova (KAZ)
Americas  Rut Castillo (MEX)
Europe  Fanni Pigniczki (HUN)
Oceania  Lidiia Iakovleva (AUS)
FIG Executive Board invitations Host nation Host nation qualified above
Tripartite invitation  Márcia Lopes (CPV)
2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships
(Reallocation)
All-around  Salome Pazhava (GEO)
Total 26

Group all-around

Event Standard Qualified team
2018 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships
Team places 1–3
All-around  ROC
 Italy
 Bulgaria
2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships
Team places 1–5
All-around  Japan
 Belarus
 Israel
 China
 Azerbaijan
2020 Continental Championships
All-around (1 per continent)
Africa  Egypt
Asia  Uzbekistan
Americas  Brazil
Europe  Ukraine
Oceania  Australia
FIG Executive Board invitations Host nation Host nation qualified above
2019 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships
(Reallocation)
All-around  United States
Total 14

Trampoline

Men's events

Event Standard Quotas awarded Qualified NOC
2019 Trampoline World Championships[11]
Top 8 (max. 1 per NOC) 5  China
 Belarus
 ROC
 Japan
 France
2021 Continental Championships 1 per continent 0 Europe Unused
0 Asia Unused
1 Africa  Egypt
0 Oceania Unused
1 Americas  Colombia
2019–2020 Trampoline World Cup series Up to 14 gymnasts qualified 8  Belarus
 China
 ROC
 Japan
 New Zealand
 Portugal
 Australia
 Ukraine
Host nation 0 0–1 gymnasts
Tripartite invitation 0 0–1 gymnasts
Reallocation of Tripartite Commission 1  Aliaksei Shostak (USA)
Total 16
  • Both the host quota and the tripartie quota were redistributed, as Japan qualified already and no eligible tripartie eligible countries competed at the 2019 Worlds.

Women's events

Event Standard Quotas awarded Qualified NOC
2019 Trampoline World Championships[11]
Top 8 (max. 1 per NOC) 6  China
 Japan
 Great Britain
 Canada
 France
 ROC
2021 Continental Championships 1 per continent 0 Europe Unused
0 Asia Unused
1 Africa  Egypt
0 Oceania Unused
0 Americas Unused
2019–2020 Trampoline World Cup series Up to 14 gymnasts qualified 8  China
 Japan
 Great Britain
 ROC
 United States
 New Zealand
 Australia
 Mexico
Host nation 0 0–1 gymnasts
Tripartite invitation 0 0–1 gymnasts
Reallocation of Host Country 1  Samantha Smith (CAN)
Total 16

Notes

  1. ^ On 23 June 2021, it was reported that Dominici had tested positive for a banned substance and was excluded from the Olympics.[8]

References

  1. FIG
    . Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  2. ^ "Joint Statement from the International Olympic Committee and the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee". IOC. 24 March 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2022.
  3. ^ Gymnastics Qualification schedule for the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
  4. ^ Canceled. Qualification was reallocated to Asian athletes not yet qualified via the 2019 World Championships.
  5. ^ Held during the first day of the 2021 Australian National Championships.
  6. ^ a b Athletes from NOCs with a qualified team are not eligible.
  7. ^ a b Athletes from NOCs with a qualified team, or who have secured a place via the All-around are not eligible.
  8. ^ "Dominici (ARG) FIG suspension for doping". Retrieved 15 Jul 2021.
  9. ^ "Tokyo - Giorgia Villa si infortuna a Napoli e perde i Giochi. Ferrari in squadra, Lara Mori individualista" [Tokyo – Giorgia Villa is injured in Naples and loses the Games. Ferrari in the team, Lara Mori individualist.]. Federazione Ginnastica d'Italia (in Italian). 13 July 2021.
  10. ^ Rutty, Raegan [@raeganrutty] (28 June 2021). "The Tokyo Olympic Games" – via Instagram.
  11. ^ a b "100 days to go: Trampoline Worlds will give taste of Tokyo 2020".