Yang Bo (gymnast)

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FullnameYang Bo
Born (1973-07-08) July 8, 1973 (age 52)
Country
represented
 China
Yang Bo
Yang Bo at the World Championships in Paris-Bercy, 1992
Personal information
Full nameYang Bo
Born (1973-07-08) July 8, 1973 (age 52)
Gymnastics career
DisciplineWomen's artistic gymnastics
Country
represented
 China
Eponymous skills"Yang Bo" (balance beam)
Retired1993
Medal record
Representing  China
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place1989 StuttgartTeam
World Cup Final
Gold medal – first place1990 BrusselsBalance Beam
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place1990 BeijingTeam
Gold medal – first place1990 BeijingFloor Exercise
Bronze medal – third place1990 BeijingBalance Beam

Yang Bo (simplified Chinese: 杨波; traditional Chinese: 楊波; pinyin: Yáng Bō; born July 8, 1973, in Ningbo, Zhejiang) is a Chinese gymnast. She is widely regarded as one of the greatest gymnasts ever on the balance beam, for which she created a move known as the "Yang Bo", which is rated as a D element in the Code of Points. Although widely renowned for her work on beam, Yang often had difficulty with consistency which prevented her from medalling at several major competitions. She competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics, placing 25th in the all-around and 7th on the beam. She won the 1990 World Cup Final on Balance Beam and won the bronze medal with her team at the 1989 World Championship.

At the 1989 World Championships in Stuttgart, Yang performed an innovative beam routine during the team and individual all-round competitions, where she placed 5th. In the event finals, she under-rotated her dismount and placed 7th with a score of 9.800.

In 1990, she competed at the Asian Games in Beijing, finishing 6th in the All-Around, 3rd on beam, and won the team all-around gold. Later that year, she won the beam title at the World Cup Final in Brussels. At the 1991 World Championships, she placed 5th in the balance beam with a score of 9.887 after taking multiple steps on her dismount.

Yang was on the Chinese 1992 Summer Olympic team. The Chinese team placed 4th. Individually, she placed 13th in the all-around after a fall on bars. She also qualified in 6th place to the balance beam finals, where she fell during her layout series, though was able to stick the landing of her dismount. She placed 7th in that event with a score of 9.300. Her teammate, Lu Li and American gymnast Shannon Miller tied with a 9.912 to win a silver medal while Tatiana Lysenko won gold with a 9.975.[1]

Yang retired from gymnastics in 1993 and pursued her university studies in journalism. She went on to enter show business and has been seen in TV shows with singing and acting performances in the 2000s.

Competition history

References

Sources

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