I think it was unfortunate for Paul Hamm to have to follow that situation, but the judging was to blame, not the crowd. IMHO it was obvious to everyone watching that Nemov's display was far ahead of anything that had gone before and to be put into 3rd place was a shocking decision. I thought Hamm's display was excellent given the circumstances and was deserving of a medal. Although I'd have had the result 1) Casina 2) Nemov and 3) Hamm
I do think Gymnastics needs to look at it's scoring system, because it's being used by athletes so that an inferior routine earns higher marks than a better routine. Cases in point were the men's highbar, the men's parallel bars (where a Ukranian won with what I thought was 6th or 7th best routine) and the Women's Asymetric bars. It was the women's Asymetric bars that best demonstrates my point. The French girl who won gold, did a couple of difficult moves to get the required difficulty marks, then basically moved straight into her dismount. By minimising the amount of time on the bars she cuts down her chance of getting marks deducted for not being in a "perfect line". Humprey and Kupets (both of USA) did longer and more difficult routines, but because they stayed on the apparatus longer they gave the judges more chance to deduct .1 or .05 here and there. At the moment it seems the top marks are going to the people who make the least errors, not those that complete the best routines. IMHO that's just can't be right.
I would favour a system similar to diving where a routine has a "degree of difficulty" and the "style marks" are multiplied by the degree of difficulty. That way a gymnast who performs a much longer and more difficult routine, but takes a step on landing, could/should score higher than someone who performs a much quicker and easier routine and lands perfectly. Currently it seems the medals go to the person who lands best, in a one minute program to decide the medal on the last .1 of a second of that routine seems disproportionate.
Oops, the Korean, who *deserved* the Gold Medal for the all around royally SCREWED up his high bar routine
Even the American gymnastic association agrees he deserved the gold medal, why put ** round it? Paul Hamm did outstandingly well to come back from a low score on his first piece and again I thought deserved
A medal, but if it had been scored correctly he would have got the silver and the Korean would have got the gold he was screwed out of.
In a way I feel most sorry for Hamm, although he has the gold medal, he will always know he only won it because of a judges error robbed someone else of that medal. In the years to come, that medal will always be a little tarnished to him, and an Olympic gold should never be that. Maybe it's just me, but I'd rather have a genuinely deserved silver, than a gold won by an judging error.