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Who Qualified to Paris 2024?


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Aleah Finnegan

Over the past week, the qualification and apparatus competitions at world championships served to qualify a number of teams and individuals to next year’s Olympic Games, with the majority of the athletes we’ll see next year having gotten through via the process in Antwerp.

Below, you can see all of the new qualifiers to Paris 2024!

The Teams | WAG

The top nine NOCs qualified full five-member teams based on their finish in team qualifications, with these teams joining the United States, Great Britain, and Canada, all of which qualified last year.

– China
– Brazil
– Italy
– Netherlands
– France
– Japan
– Australia
– Romania
– South Korea

The Individuals | WAG

A total of 15 individual athletes qualified nominative spots based on their finish in all-around qualifications (one per NOC, with the 15th spot reallocated from the host country place), while four individuals qualified nominative spots based on their apparatus ranking.

Additionally, the top three NOCs that didn’t qualify full teams each earned one non-nominative spot, which they’ll be able to award to an athlete at their discretion at a later date.

– Kaylia Nemour (Algeria)
– Pauline Schäfer (Germany)
– Alexa Moreno (Mexico)
– Filipa Martins (Portugal)
– Aleah Finnegan (Philippines)
– Lili Czifra (Hungary)
– Alba Petisco (Spain)
– Anna Lashchevska (Ukraine)
– Lena Bickel (Switzerland)
– Hillary Heron (Panama)
– Caitlin Rooskrantz (South Africa)
– Sona Artamonova (Czechia)
– Lihie Raz (Israel)
– Lucija Hribar (Slovenia)
– Rifda Irfanaluthfi (Indonesia)
– Csenge Bacskay (Hungary)
– Ahtziri Sandoval (Mexico)
– Ana Perez (Spain)
– Sarah Voss (Germany)
– Germany (TBD)
– Mexico (TBD)
– Hungary (TBD)

The Teams | MAG

The top nine NOCs qualified full five-member teams based on their finish in team qualifications, with these teams joining China, Japan, and Great Britain, all of which qualified last year.

– United States
– Canada
– Germany
– Italy
– Switzerland
– Spain
– Türkiye
– Netherlands
– Ukraine

The Individuals | MAG

A total of eight individual athletes qualified nominative spots based on their finish in all-around qualifications (one per NOC), while six individuals qualified nominative spots based on their apparatus ranking.

Additionally, the top three NOCs that didn’t qualify full teams each earned one non-nominative spot, which they’ll be able to award to an athlete at their discretion at a later date.

– Milad Karimi (Kazakhstan)
– Artem Dolgopyat (Israel)
– Artur Davtyan (Armenia)
– Krisztofer Meszaros (Hungary)
– Lee Junho (South Korea)
– Diogo Soares (Brazil)
– Luka van den Keybus (Belgium)
– Andrei Muntean (Romania)
– Carlos Yulo (Philippines)
– Rhys McClenaghan (Ireland)
– Eleftherios Petrounias (Greece)
– Kevin Penev (Bulgaria)
– Noah Kuavita (Belgium)
– Tin Srbic (Croatia)
– Brazil (TBD)
– South Korea (TBD)
– Belgium (TBD)

What’s Next?

Next year, an additional eight WAG and 12 MAG athletes will be added to the Paris 2024 roster through the apparatus world cup series, while another five WAG and five MAG athletes will join via the continental championships.

There will also be one universality or tripartite place available for both WAG and MAG, which will be named at the end of the qualification process.

In terms of the host country place, the WAG spot has already been reallocated to the all-around pool since France qualified a full team to the Games, but if the French MAG program doesn’t qualify any individuals through the world cups or European Championships next year, they will be able to use that spot. If they do qualify in their own right, that spot will be returned to the worlds all-around pool, with Khabibullo Ergashev (Uzbekistan) next in line.

Article by Lauren Hopkins

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By: Lauren
Title: Who Qualified to Paris 2024?
Sourced From: thegymter.net/2023/10/09/who-qualified-to-paris-2024/
Published Date: Mon, 09 Oct 2023 16:37:22 +0000

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