ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Sunday, June 30, 1996                  TAG: 9607010132
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C-10 EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: BOSTON 
SOURCE: Associated Press 


MEN'S TEAM FALLS INTO PLACE

MISHAPS AND MISTAKES mar the tryouts for the Olympic gymnastics team.

Spills, skids and face plants - not exactly a promising start for the men's Olympic gymnastics team.

John Roethlisberger scored a 9.375 in the vault, his final event, to seal first place and a spot on his second Olympic squad Saturday. The usually low-key Roethlisberger jumped into the arms of his father and coach, Fred Roethlisberger, and grinned as he ran off the platform.

Roethlisberger, who started the night with a 1.2-point lead, finished with 228.873 points. Blaine Wilson was second with 228.159.

The remaining five members of the Olympic team - Mihai Bagiu, Jair Lynch, John Macready, Kip Simons and Chainey Umphrey - fell into place - literally. There were 15 spills throughout the night, as well as countless bobbles and hops.

Peter Kormann, the Olympic coach, said he wouldn't make too much out of the mishaps. The men fared even worse in last year's World Championship trials, then finished third in the compulsories, he said.

``When I competed in the Olympic trials, I did horribly. And when I competed in the Olympics, I hit every routine,'' said Kormann, whose bronze in the floor exercise in 1976 was the first medal by an American man since 1932.

Bagiu, the first competitor, set the tone for the night when he stepped out of bounds on his first tumbling pass in the floor exercise, good for a .10 deduction. He also skidded on an aerial tumbling pass, and took a big hop on his dismount, earning an 8.725.

The worst came from Lynch, who finished sixth despite two face plants off the high bar within 30 seconds. Lynch, the youngest member of the 1992 squad at 20, lost his grip on a release move midway through his routine, dropping to his hands and knees.

He got back up, but as he sailed over the bar on his next release move, he missed and plummeted to the floor, falling flat on his chest. After finally finishing the routine, he ripped off his wrist guards in disgust. He scored an 8.1, the lowest mark of the night, and dropped from fourth to seventh.

``When I took off my grips after high bar, high bar was done,'' Lynch said. ``I had four more events to go and I put it behind me.''

Lynch said he'd injured his right hand on the parallel bars, his event before the high bar.

``I felt it pull and felt the blood moving. I felt it getting all squishy,'' he said. ``It probably affected me on high bar. It shouldn't have, but it did.''

Even Roethlisberger and Wilson had trouble. Roethlisberger, who usually makes few mistakes, put too much into his last tumbling pass on the floor exercise, pitched forward and had to throw in an extra somersault. That earned him a 9.125, his lowest score of the competition.

``I could taste the end of the meet and I could taste the spot on the Olympic team, and I guess I was a little anxious,'' Roethlisberger said.

Wilson had a clean performance until the floor exercise, his penultimate routine. He slipped on a tumbling pass and nearly fell, and also took a small hop on his final pass. He scored a 9.375, his lowest score of the night.

The bright spot of the night was the performance of Umphrey, the crowd's favorite throughout the competition. He was solid in every event, and the crowd booed when the judges awarded him a 9.35 for a high bar routine that included four back-to-back release moves. It booed again after a 9.25 on the floor.

When Umphrey completed his last routine of the night, the pommel horse, coach Art Shurlock screamed and grabbed him. Umphrey then stood in front of the stands, waving at the fans as they applauded.

``That was great,'' he said. ``I think they appreciate how much I love what I'm doing out there. It really helped my performance.''

The crowd wasn't Umphrey's only motivation. He finished eighth in the 1992 trials, just missing the team by 0.08 points.

``To get into the trials and miss it by so little, it was really a driving force,'' he said.


LENGTH: Medium:   80 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  AP. Jair Lynch of Stanford, Calif., works the parallel 

bars Saturday during the U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials in Boston.

Lynch suffered a hand injury that hampered him on the high bar.

by CNB