Stephen Nedoroscik Answers US Gymnastics Omission with Jaw-Dropping Comeback Performance

2 min read

At the Paris 2024 Olympic Arena, all eyes were locked on the pommel horse. The stakes were sky high as the Team USA — chasing redemption, legacy, and a medal — stood on the brink. Their last hope? An electrical engineer from Massachusetts. He mounted the pommel horse, launching into flawless circles and razor-sharp flairs. When his routine ended, silence turned to eruption. The score came in, and it was enough for bronze. Stephen Nedoroscik had done it, and now he is doing it again. What does that mean?

A story went over on Sam Merritt’s Instagram where the Paris Olympic bronze medalist could be seen doing a pommel routine. And not just any routine, this was the very same one that ended the drought of Olympic medals in men’s gymnastics – the routine of Paris 2024. Donning a gray bottom and a white vest, swinging like he did in Paris. Recreating what he did in Paris, the Olympian takes hold of the pommels and jumps atop the apparatus – the only thing missing here was him removing his glasses and being Superman.

Nedoroscik mentioned this back on his Instagram story and added yet another as well. This time, from the account of Jeremy Cohen, a freelance photographer. Here, the gymnast had his legs in a bucket, his arms taking the support of only the saddle, doing a 360. “the bucket @stephen_nedoroscik,” read the text on the story.

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