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Mo Huilan
Mo3
Mo at the 1996 Olympic Games

Nickname(s)

Lanlan

Country represented

800px-Flag of the People's Republic of China China

Born

November 7, 1979 (age 33)[1]
Guilin, Guangxi, China

Years on National Team

1990-1997

Coach(es)

Zijuan Yuan

Current status

Retired

Mo Huilan (simplified Chinese: 莫慧兰; traditional Chinese: 莫慧蘭; pinyin: Mò Huìlán; born 1979 in Guilin, Guangxi) is a Chinese gymnast who competed at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. She was one of China's most successful gymnasts in the 1990s. She is known for performing routines of exceptional difficulty and technique and expressive qualities across all four events but also for extreme inconsistency. She is a fraternal twin; her sister Mo Huifang was also a gymnast.

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Featured Gymnast for October 2015

Gymnastics Career[]

Both Huilan and Huifang began gymnastics in 1985 in Guangxi. In 1990, they were invited to attend a camp in Beijing to test for admission to the Chinese national training center. Huifang was accepted; Huilan was not. However, showing the determination that would serve her well in her competitive career, Huilan talked the coaches into allowing her to remain in Beijing with her sister. Eventually, Huifang was injured and retired from gymnastics; Huilan, in contrast, thrived and improved.

Mo made her international debut at the 1993 Cottbus Cup, where she placed a modest sixth in the all-around. The next year at the Asian Games, however, she nearly swept the competition with gold medals in the team, balance beam, uneven bars, and vault and a bronze in the all-around.

She came to the attention of the international gymnastics community at the 1994 World Championships in Brisbane, Australia, where she achieved a seventh-place finish in the all-around final, the highest of any Chinese gymnast. Although she placed out of the medals on floor exercise, her routine, which was choreographed to Leroy Anderson's "Typewriter Song", was a hit with the audience. Her performance on the uneven bars, where she debuted her own version of the Gaylord salto, also gained recognition and appreciation. Mo was the first female to perform this skill, a front tuck over the bar to recatch.

At the 1995 World Championships in Sabae, she showed an increased level of difficulty on all events, including a textbook Yurchenko double full, a double layout on floor exercise and beam routine highlighted by a dynamic two foot layout and blind double stag leaps. Her team won the first medal for China in the team competition. Her preliminary scores qualified her in first place for the all-around, but a fall from beam dropped her to sixth place in the all around final. She won the beam title performing her difficult routine immaculately, and tied for silver on the uneven bars with all around champion Lilia Podkopayeva.

Mo was expected to be a major medal contender at the 1996 Olympics. However, the competition would prove to be disappointing for the entire Chinese team. Errors in the prelims kept Mo from qualifying for the beam and bars event finals; mistakes and falls from several of her teammates kept the Chinese squad from earning a medal in the team competition. In the all-around, Mo produced a beautiful Yurchenko double full and a solid routine on the unevens and balance beam. She was in first place going into the last rotation, floor exercise but stepped out of bounds and dropped to fifth place. She did not leave the Olympics empty handed, winning a silver on vault behind Romanian Simona Amânar. This makes her the first Chinese female gymnast to win a medal on vault at the Olympic/World Championship level.

After the Olympics, Mo participated in exhibitions and shows in the United States before returning to competition. She continued to compete through the 1997 season. However, after less than stellar performances at the World Championships and other meets, she quietly retired from gymnastics.

Medal Count[]

Year Event TF AA VT UB BB FX
1993 Cottbus International 6 2nd
1994 Hiroshima Asian Games 1st 3rd 1st 1st 1st
Brisbane World Championships 7
1995 Sabae World Championships 2nd 6 2 1st
Chunichi Cup 3rd
1996 Atlanta Olympic Games 4 5 2nd 6
1997 Lausanne World Championships 3rd

Floor Music[]

1994-1995 - "The Typewriter" by Leroy Anderson

1996 - Yellow River Piano Concerto

1998 - "Dragnet Theme" and "Blues Brothers Theme"

References[]

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