Canada's Ellie Black finishes 7th on balance beam at world championships

Ellie Black of Halifax finished in seventh place in the beam final on Sunday at the world gymnastics championships.

American Simone Biles sets world gymnastics record

Ellie Black places 7th in balance beam-apparatus final

9 years ago
Duration 4:00
Finishing with a score of 13.466 with a deduction made for a fall, Black finished 7th at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships on Sunday in the individual balance beam-apparatus final.

Ellie Black of Halifax finished in seventh place in the beam final on Sunday at the world gymnastics championships.

Black finished with 13.466 points.

Black nailed her high-risk beam routine in the qualifications but fell in both the all-around final on Thursday and in the event final.

"Ellie had a lot of pressure to repeat her performances from the Pan Am Games but it's hard to deliver those great performances back to back," said Canadian women's team high performance director Dave Brubaker.

"It just wasn't in the cards today for Ellie but we certainly know she's capable of that in the future."

Despite the letdown in the beam final, Black had no complaints after she led the Canadian team to a berth at the 2016 Rio Olympics and came up with a best-ever Canadian all-around world championship result with her seventh-place finish.

"The girls fought to be sixth in the world and it's the best team result and the best individual results we've ever had at a world championships," said Brubaker.

Brubaker also singled out Isabela Onyshko of Brandon, Man., for her 16th place finish in the all-around event.

"To move from 24th in the qualification to 16th in the final is a huge achievement," Brubaker said.

American Simone Biles sets world gymnastics record 

Simone Biles set the record by a female for career gold medals at the world gymnastics championships Sunday by winning the balance beam and floor exercise.

The 18-year-old now has 10 golds in all, breaking the mark held by Svetlana Khorkina, Gina Gogean and Larisa Latynina.

The three-time all-around champion posted a score 15.358 on beam, more than a point better than silver medallist Sanne Wevers of the Netherlands and bronze medallist Paulin Schaefer of Germany. The margin was nearly as big on floor exercise, where her score of 15.800 beat Russia's Ksenia Afanaseva by seven tenths. American teammate Maggie Nichols earned a bronze behind her best friend.

The two golds during the event finals gave Biles 14 total medals since she made her debut at the championships in 2013. She has won four gold medals at each of the last two world championships, more than any other country during that span.

Biles joked she was thinking about leading the U.S. women's team on strike before the team final last week because of a grueling training regimen put together by national team co-ordinator Martha Karolyi. Biles hardly looked exhausted on the last day of the meet, her beam routine a steady mix of rock-solid tumbling and elegant choreography. While the rest of the eight-woman final struggled on the four-inch wide plank, she was near perfect.

An hour later Biles was at it again. Floor is her favourite event, a 90-second showcase of the athleticism that makes her the LeBron James of her sport. She bounds so high during her tumbling passes she could easily clear good buddy Nichols. So long as she stays inbounds — unlike the wayward step she took in the all-around final — it's really not a matter of if she'll win the floor but by how much.

Men's all-around champion Kohei Uchimura of Japan added a gold in the high bar final, just topping American Danell Leyva and Cuban teenager Manrique Larduet. China's You Hao topped the field in the parallel bars final, with Oleg Verniaiev of the Ukraine second and Oleg Stepko of Azerbaijan third.

North Korea's Se Gwang Ri won his second straight gold in men's vault, edging Romania's Marian Dragulescu and Donnell Whittenburg of the U.S.