American women shut out at first Olympic breaking competition
PARIS - Breaking made its Olympics debut on Friday in a much anticipated high-energy competition that ended with the first medals ever awarded to breakdancers.
Japanese performer – or b-girl, as breaking performers are known – Ami Yuasa took the gold medal after three rounds, topping b-girl Nicka of Lithuania.
In all, 33 breakers representing 15 countries and the Refugee Olympic Team participated in the women’s event Friday. Both American b-girls, Logistx and Sunni, were eliminated in the first round.
Women's breaking results
- Gold medal: Ami (Ami Yuasa) – Japan
- Silver medal: Nicka (Dominika Banevič) – Lithuania
- Bronze medal: 671 (Liu Qingyi) – China
What they’re saying
"Breaking is my expression," Ami said. It's an "expression, an art, but I want to say that breaking also could be part of sports."
"Olympics needed breaking because it's like a breath of fresh air," said runner-up Nicka. "Such a big amount of people saw breaking for the first time, like it's huge. And I'm happy that I was able to represent at the highest level of the art form for breaking."
"I feel like I still shined and I feel like I still represented the dance and had some moments," offered American Logan Edra. who performs as Logistx. "It was such a big opportunity, it’s such a big platform, and I’m really happy that we’re here."
How is breaking judged?
A panel of nine judges, all b-boys and b-girls from around the world, scored the breakers based on technique, vocabulary, execution, musicality and originality. Each facet accounts for 20% of the final score.
Men’s breaking schedule
B-boys will take the stage on Saturday at Place de la Concorde stadium starting at 10 a.m. ET.