With the spotlight focused on teammates Wieber and Douglas, Aly Raisman had room to breathe. Apparently she took a very deep breath. The 18-year old from Needham, Mass. tumbled past her fellow Americans to qualify second behind Komova. Her mouth dropped when she saw the scoreboard. If Komova wavers and Raisman brings her famed consistency, she could leave with gold. She also leapt into the event finals on beam and floor exercise. Her floor routine to the Hebrew folk song “Hava Nagila” posted the highest difficulty score in qualifications, and is one of the few numbers that could tempt the judges to dance along. Israeli newspaper Haaretz wrote that “American Jews were collectively kvelling” as Raisman’s entertaining—and gravity-defying—routine unfolded during the preliminaries.
Twenty Gymnasts to Watch in the Women’s All-Around and Event Finals
The Americans won the team competition, but there are still 15 individual medals up for grabs. Meet the favorites.
Aly Raisman (USA)
Full List
Gymnasts
- Viktoria Komova (Russia)
- Aly Raisman (USA)
- Gabrielle Douglas (USA)
- Aliya Mustafina (Russia)
- Deng Linlin (China)
- Vanessa Ferrari (Italy)
- Larisa Iordache (Romania)
- Huang Qiushuang (China)
- Sandra Izbasa (Romania)
- Catalina Ponor (Romania)
- Sui Lu (China)
- Beth Tweddle (Britain)
- He Kexin (China)
- Yao Jinnan (China)
- McKayla Maroney (USA)
- Oksana Chusovitina (Germany)
- Yamilet Peña Abreu (Dominican Republic)
- Jordyn Wieber (USA)
- Ksenia Afanasyeva (Russia)
- Lauren Mitchell (Australia)