Russia suspended European champions Maxim Devyatovsky and Yulia Lozhechko - Russian head coach Andrei Rodionenko said they are suspended from the national team through the end of the year, and then their status will be re-evaluated - suspended for their attitude, not rankings.
Maxim for not finishing his routine and events after a fall:
[quote]Deyvatovsky was suspended for his behavior during Friday's all-around competition, when he left the arena before the sixth rotation. It is a violation of FIG rules for a non-injured gymnast to leave the competition area before the end of the tournament.
In the all-around final, Devyatovsky had been second in the rankings before he fell on the parallel bars in the fifth rotation. He did not finish his routine and he received a score of 3.725. Rodionenko said the team doctor examined Devyatovsky and, finding no injury, cleared him to compete on the high bar.
Devyatovsky, however, having lost all chance of a medal, shrugged off the last event, saying, "I don't have any interest in finishing outside of the top three. There's no difference to me between seventh place or 24th."
Rodionenko said the national team coaches declared Devyatovsky's attitude "unworthy" of the Russian team. He singled out 2005 world champion Hiroyuki Tomita (Japan) as an example of a gymnast who performed with dignity in the men's all-around final. In the sixth rotation, Tomita fell heavily from the high bar, and yet finished his routine despite also having no hope for a medal.
"(Tomita) finished the way you'd expect from a world champion," Rodionenko said in an interview posted on the Russian Gymnastics Federations official Web site. "Maxim just doesn't have these same qualities. He could have finished an honorable 24th place, and now it is a shameful 24th place." [/quote]
Yulia's suspension because she changed her beam element for individual qualifiers, not for the team; team priority:
[quote]He said Lozhechko was disciplined for defying her coaches and altering her balance beam routine in qualifications. Lozhechko, the 2007 European champion on beam, fell on the dismount. He said her goal was to reach the individual final and that she instead ended up costing the team points.
Rodionenko, a senior trainer for the Soviets in the 1970s and 1980s, said the current generation of Russian gymnasts needs to understand that the team comes first.
"I have come to the conclusion: if athletes are unable to put aside their personal interests for the sake of the team, they need to leave," he said. "To keep up team moral is much more important than the whims of a single, even a very talented, individual." [/quote]
Article: "Devyatovsky, Lozhechko Suspended through 2007"
http://intlgymnast.com/news/2007/sept/091007_russia.html
The coaches always teach you to finish your routine after a fall, just to get back up and do the rest of your routine, and not think about your fall, just stay focused on what you are doing, and relax. Most of the competitiors say they wanted to finish their competition clean after a fall, even if they didn't think they could medal, to show what they can do. Plus, you never know, maybe you can still medal - like Paul Hamm at the 2004 Olympics.