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The 2025 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships is an upcoming event to be held in Jakarta, Indonesia from October 19–25, 2025. The competition will take place at the Indonesia Arena. [1] It will be the first time that Indonesia, as well as any Southeast Asian country, will host the event. [2] [3]
FIG World Cup [8] April 25–28: Cairo: FIG World Cup [9] May 5–11: Varna: FIG World Challenge Cup [10] May 15–18: Koper: FIG World Challenge Cup [11] May 26–31: Leipzig: European Championships [12] June 5–8: Jecheon: Asian Championships — June 12–15: Jecheon: Asian Championships — June 12–15: Panama City: Pan American ...
FIG World Cup 2025: C III – Apparatus March 6–9: Baku [2] FIG World Cup 2025: C III – Apparatus March 20–23: Antalya [3] FIG World Cup 2025: C III – Apparatus April 10–13: Osijek [4] FIG World Cup 2025: C III – Apparatus April 16–19: Doha [5] FIG World Cup 2025: C III – Apparatus April 25–28: Cairo [6] FIG World Cup 2025: C ...
Perhaps the first African delegation was the Egyptian one which offered forth a full male team at the 1950 World Championships in Basel. By the time of these World Championships, a total of 60 male athletes from 6 countries and 53 female athletes from 7 countries comprised the competitive field. [11]
Heron started doing gymnastics at 4 years old after watching the 2008 Beijing Olympics and “instantly falling in love” with the sport, she told International Gymnast in January.
Gymnastics World Championships refers to a number of different world championships for each of the disciplines in competitive gymnastics.The International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) organizes World Championships for six disciplines: acrobatic gymnastics, aerobic gymnastics, artistic gymnastics, parkour, rhythmic gymnastics, as well as trampoline and tumbling.
The Texas native started taking gymnastics classes at age 6 and and earned an invite to the junior national team camp by 14. She had several world championship gold medals before she made her ...
Since 1997, the Artistic Gymnastics World Cup has been contested as a series of stages in different cities around the world. From 2003 to 2010, events at the Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series were divided into Category A and Category B; Category A events were reserved for invited athletes only, while Category B events were open to all athletes. [13]