Pommel horse
The pommel horse, also known as vaulting horse, or "hobble horse" is an artistic gymnastics apparatus. Traditionally, it is used by only male gymnasts. Originally made of a metal frame with a wooden body and a leather cover, the modern pommel horse has a metal body covered with foam rubber and leather, with plastic pommels. A similar apparatus designed for physical education lessons is called a vaulting buck.
Apparatus
History
The apparatus originates from the Romans, who used wooden horses to teach mounting and dismounting. They later added it to the ancient Olympic Games. The basic modern exercises were developed in the early 19th century by Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, founder of the German Turnverein.Dimensions
Measurements of the apparatus are published by the Fédération internationale de gymnastique in the Apparatus Norms brochure.- Height from top surface to floor: ±
- Length at top: ±
- Length at bottom: ±
- Width at top: ±
- Width at bottom: ±
- Height of the pommels: ±
- Distance between the pommels: –
Routines
Pommel horse is considered one of the more difficult men's events. While it is well noted that all events require a particular build of muscle and technique, pommel horse tends to favor technique over muscle. This is because horse routines are done from the shoulders in a leaning motion, and no moves need to be held, unlike other events. Therefore, stress induced in one's arms is reduced, meaning less muscle is required for this event than in events like still rings or parallel bars.
International level routines
A pommel horse routine should contain at least one element from all element groups:- Single leg swings and scissors
- Circles and flairs, with or without spindles and handstands
- Side and cross-support travels
- Dismounts
Scoring and rules
Olympic pommel horse medalists
The most decorated and successful Olympic pommel worker in history is Great Britain's Max Whitlock, with three medals, including two gold medals. Two other gymnasts have three pommel horse Olympic medals across three Games: Romania's Marius Urzică with one gold and two silver medals, and Whitlock's compatriot and teammate Louis Smith with two silvers, and a bronze—under historic rules Smith would have shared gold in 2012, but was awarded silver behind Kristian Berki after a tie was broken on execution score.Three other pommel workers have two Olympic gold medals, each considered a legend of the sport: the Soviet Union gymnast Boris Shakhlin, the Yugoslav Miroslav Cerar, and the Hungarian master, Zoltán Magyar.
Pommel horse medalists at the world championships
The pommel horse has been contested at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships since their inauguration. The record for most world victories is held by several workers at three. Three of the four double Olympic champions, Miroslav Cerar, Zoltan Magyar, and Max Whitlock have each won the world title three times, to set the record for combined global titles at five. The most decorated workers at the World Championships are Whitlock and two one-time Olympic champions, Xiao Qin of China, and Hungary's Kristian Berki, all with three gold and two silver medals. Although Xiao and Berki each have won one Olympic gold, they are both considered to be among the major figures in the event's history along with the double Olympic champions.Overall, Whitlock is the most successful and decorated pommel worker in the event's history, with five global gold medals, two silvers, and a bronze.