Hamm Says He Won’t Support Second Gold
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Olympic all-around champion Paul Hamm said yesterday he would prefer not to share his gold medal with South Korea’s Yang Tae-young despite a judging mistake that ultimately cost Yang the gold.
In an interview on CBS’s “The Late Show with David Letterman,” Hamm was asked about having another gold medal issued for Yang.
“I personally feel in my heart I was the Olympic champion that night,” Hamm said. “I would be a little bit upset if another gold medal was awarded because I really felt I won the event.”
The studio audience agreed, applauding and chanting “U-S-A! U-S-A!”
After a disastrous fall on the vault, Hamm dropped from first place after three rotations to 12th after four. He followed with brilliant performances on the parallel bars and high bar, allowing him to edge Yang, who finished with the bronze, just 0.049 points behind.
But the judges failed to give Yang enough points for the level of difficulty on the parallel bars. That triggered an uproar, with South Korea lobbying for another gold medal.
Officials of the International Gymnastics Federation, or FIG, suspended three judges and acknowledged Yang should have been awarded more points for his routine based on the degree of difficulty. Had he been given the correct score, Yang would have won the gold and Hamm the silver.
The suspensions puzzled Hamm, who said a review of the tape also showed the judges missed a mistake in Yang’s routine.
“What’s unusual is these mistakes with the start scores are made all the time throughout these Olympics,” Hamm said. “It was strange they ended up sanctioning those judges when other judges made those mistakes as well.”
“So if you’re upset about any of this,” Letterman told the studio audience, “send your E-mails to FIG.”
Hamm said his first days as an Olympic champion have not been what he expected, given the constant questions and suggestions of how he handled the mess.