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Giarnni Regini-Moran 'lost for words' after stunning floor gold at World Gymnastics Championships

BySportsbeat

Updated 06/11/2022 at 13:42 GMT

Giarnni Regini-Moran made history be becoming the first British man to win floor gold at the World Gymnastics Championships. He edged out Olympic all-round champion Daiki Hashimoto by 0.033 to win with a score of 14.533. It’s the first senior medal of Regini-Moran’s career, with the 24-year-old was “lost for words” after the dramatic competition in Liverpool.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - November 5: Giarnni Regini-Moran of Great Britain on the podium with his gold medal after winning the Men's Artistic Gymnastics Floor Final at the World Gymnastics Championships-Liverpool 2022 at the M&S Bank Arena on November 5th 202

Image credit: Getty Images

Giarnni Regini-Moran defied years of injury hell to win a gold at the Gymnastics World Championships on the floor, beating Olympic all-round champion Daiki Hashimoto by 0.033 with a score of 14.533.
Aged 17 he spent six hours in an operating theatre - snapping his posterior cruciate ligament, damaging his MCL and straining his ACL all at once in a horrific training accident.
Pain is a fact of his life but some measure of sporting payback came in the form of a fairytale victory on floor at the World Championships in Liverpool.
"There were so many times when I almost gave up and threw in the towel," said Regini-Moran, who has an Irish father and Italian mother.
"To be able to jump, land, run with the power I need on that floor, I never thought I'd be able to do it.
"I didn't believe I would be strong enough to be with the world's best because of what I went through. My knee is never going to be 100% again but I've learned to live with it.
"I've had physios and doctors spend hours, days, months with me. I lost that self-belief - you can let this stuff get you down and be negative about it, but you have to believe in yourself."
Regini-Moran is the fourth British artistic gymnast after Beth Tweddle, Max Whitlock and Joe Fraser to be crowned world champion.
The door opened when Filipino pre-event favourite Carlos Yulo fell on his first pass and Japan's Ryosuke Doi stepped off the floor.
The Great Yarmouth-born star executed the joint-most difficult routine attempted by any gymnast in the final, sticking all of his landings to score a superb 14.533.
He beat Hashimoto, crowned the best male gymnast in the world last night with all-around gold, by the smallest of margins.
"That's only the third time I've ever hit that routine," continued Regini-Moran. "I didn't make any in training.
"In training I was trying to push the difficulty and upgrade but it never clicked until I sat down with my coaches and made some changes.
"Anything can happen in a final, you've got to land on your feet and land well. I really don't know how I feel, I'm lost for words."
Regini-Moran helped Britain battle back from the brink to team bronze on Wednesday, punching Paris Olympic tickets at the first opportunity.
The 24-year-old will now be one of the key names to watch on Team GB in two years' time as he aims to pair his world title with an Olympic equivalent.
"It's really weird, but I had a dream last night that I became world champion," he sad.
"I really don't know what it was or why I had it, but I had a dream. I didn't tell anyone because I didn't want to talk it up or curse it, but now it's happened."
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