2019 Tokyo World Cup | 2019 Szczecin European Championships | 2019 NCAA Gymnastics Championships |
2019 Szczecin European Championships | |
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Official logo | |
City |
Szczecin, Poland |
All-Around Gold Medalist |
|
Vault Gold Medalist |
Maria Paseka (RUS) |
Uneven Bars Gold Medalist |
Anastasiya Ilyankova (RUS) |
Balance Beam Gold Medalist |
Alice Kinsella (GBR) |
Floor Exercise Gold Medalist |
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Preceded by |
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Succeeded by |
The 36th European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held on April 10-14 at the Netto Arena in Szczecin, Poland.[1] There was no junior competition this year.
Format of Competition[]
All participating gymnasts, including those who were not part of a team, participated in a qualification round. The results of this competition determined which individuals participated in the remaining competitions, which included:
- The all-around competition, in which only the twenty-four highest scoring individuals in the all-around competed. Each country was limited to only two gymnasts in the all-around final.
- The event finals, in which the eight highest scoring individuals on each apparatus competed. Each country was limited to two gymnasts in each apparatus final.
Competition Schedule[]
April 11 | Qualifications |
April 12 | All-Around |
April 13 | Vault Event Final |
Uneven Bars Event Final | |
April 14 | Balance Beam Event Final |
Floor Exercise Event Final |
Results[]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
All-Around | Mélanie de Jesus Dos Santos France (FRA) |
Ellie Downie Great Britain (GBR) |
Angelina Melnikova Russia (RUS) |
Vault | Maria Paseka Russia (RUS) |
Coline Devillard France (FRA) |
Ellie Downie Great Britain (GBR) |
Uneven Bars | Anastasiya Ilyankova Russia (RUS) |
Angelina Melnikova Russia (RUS) |
Alice D'Amato Italy (ITA) |
Balance Beam | Alice Kinsella Great Britain (GBR) |
Mélanie de Jesus Dos Santos France (FRA) |
Lorette Charpy France (FRA) |
Floor Exercise | Mélanie de Jesus Dos Santos France (FRA) |
Eythora Thorsdottir Netherlands (NED) |
Angelina Melnikova Russia (RUS) |
Notable Moments[]
- Mélanie de Jesus Dos Santos became the first French gymnast to win the all-around title since Marine Debauve in 2005.
- Alice Kinsella became the first British gymnast to win a European title on balance beam.
Medal Count[]
Rank | Country | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | France | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
2 | Russia | 2 | 1 | 2 | 5 |
3 | Great Britain | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
4 | Netherlands | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
5 | Italy | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Gallery[]
External Links[]
References[]
European Championships | |
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Bucharest 1957 • Krakow 1959 • Leipzig 1961 • Paris 1963 • Sofia 1965 • Amsterdam 1967 • Landskrona 1969 • Minsk 1971 • London 1973 • Skien 1975 • Prague 1977 • Copenhagen 1979 • Madrid 1981 • Gothenburg 1983 • Helsinki 1985 • Moscow 1987 • Brussels 1989 • Athens 1990 • Nantes 1992 • Stockholm 1994 • Birmingham 1996 • Saint Petersburg 1998 • Paris 2000 • Patras 2002 • Amsterdam 2004 • Debrecen 2005 • Volos 2006 • Amsterdam 2007 • Clermont-Ferrand 2008 • Milan 2009 • Birmingham 2010 • Berlin 2011 • Brussels 2012 • Moscow 2013 • Sofia 2014 • Montpellier 2015 • Bern 2016 • Cluj-Napoca 2017 • Glasgow 2018 • Szczecin 2019 • Mersin 2020 • Basel 2021 • Munich 2022 • Antalya 2023 • Rimini 2024 |