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SportSunday, June 21, 2026

Andrade secures vault gold in Rio comeback by thinnest of margins

Brazilian six-time Olympic medallist edged Canada's Lia Monica Fontaine by 0.017 points, securing a world championship place for Brazil.

In a tense vault final at the Rio Olympic Arena, Rebeca Andrade completed her competitive comeback by winning gold with a combined score of 14.266, just 0.017 ahead of Canada’s Lia Monica Fontaine. The Brazilian, performing only on vault, opened with a nearly flawless double-twisting Yurchenko for 14.433—the highest single vault of the championship—but her simpler Lopez second effort drew a deduction for stepping out, scoring 13.700. The narrow margin drew gasps from the home crowd, yet the title was hers, edging Fontaine’s 14.249, with American Claire Pease taking bronze.

The 27-year-old, Brazil’s most decorated Olympian with six medals, had not competed for 20 months, protecting knees that have undergone three surgeries since 2015. Limiting herself to vault, she helped Brazil to team silver earlier in the week, then produced the meet’s standout individual moment. “It’s something that makes me very proud,” Andrade told reporters after qualifying, describing the nervous energy of performing again before an adoring home crowd. Her Instagram post later called the return “about rediscovering a part of who I am.” Brazilian observers view the performance as a careful reappearance of a national icon, mindful of the physical cost that has forced her to abandon floor exercise entirely.

The Pan American Championships, a qualifier for October’s World Championships in Rotterdam, showcased depth beyond Andrade. Canada’s men won team gold for the first time, while the women took bronze behind the United States and Brazil. Ontario’s Aurélie Tran added parallel bars gold, and Quebec’s William Émard claimed rings gold. Colombia celebrated Camilo Vera’s floor title and Ángel Barajas’s high bar gold, though domestic reports lamented insufficient state support for their elite programme. Brazil’s Vitaliy Guimarães, competing for his newly adopted country, won bronze on men’s floor to emotional home applause.

Andrade’s vault victory, her first Pan American title in the discipline, fills a rare gap in a career that includes two world vault golds and Olympic gold and silver on the apparatus. With Brazil’s team world berth secured, attention turns to Rotterdam as the first Olympic qualifier for Los Angeles 2028. For Andrade, success will be measured in carefully managed bursts: no more floor, fewer all-around appearances, but a continuing role as Brazil’s most potent weapon on vault.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

0%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressLatin American press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismDetachment

Rebeca Andrade marked her return with a gold on vault, while Canadian gymnasts celebrated six medals, including team gold. The Pan American Championships were framed as an early step in Olympic qualification for Los Angeles 2028, focusing on results and future prospects.

Latin American press
TriumphUrgency

Rebeca Andrade's triumphant return delivered a historic gold on vault, edging out her rivals in a tense final. Brazil's greatest Olympian electrified the home crowd, proving she is ready for the Olympic cycle and reclaiming her place at the pinnacle of gymnastics.

Related articles

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Upd. 06:36 PM3 languages · 3 outlets
3 outlets|3 languages|2 min read
Sunday, June 21, 2026

Andrade secures vault gold in Rio comeback by thinnest of margins

Brazilian six-time Olympic medallist edged Canada's Lia Monica Fontaine by 0.017 points, securing a world championship place for Brazil.

In a tense vault final at the Rio Olympic Arena, Rebeca Andrade completed her competitive comeback by winning gold with a combined score of 14.266, just 0.017 ahead of Canada’s Lia Monica Fontaine. The Brazilian, performing only on vault, opened with a nearly flawless double-twisting Yurchenko for 14.433—the highest single vault of the championship—but her simpler Lopez second effort drew a deduction for stepping out, scoring 13.700. The narrow margin drew gasps from the home crowd, yet the title was hers, edging Fontaine’s 14.249, with American Claire Pease taking bronze.

The 27-year-old, Brazil’s most decorated Olympian with six medals, had not competed for 20 months, protecting knees that have undergone three surgeries since 2015. Limiting herself to vault, she helped Brazil to team silver earlier in the week, then produced the meet’s standout individual moment. “It’s something that makes me very proud,” Andrade told reporters after qualifying, describing the nervous energy of performing again before an adoring home crowd. Her Instagram post later called the return “about rediscovering a part of who I am.” Brazilian observers view the performance as a careful reappearance of a national icon, mindful of the physical cost that has forced her to abandon floor exercise entirely.

The Pan American Championships, a qualifier for October’s World Championships in Rotterdam, showcased depth beyond Andrade. Canada’s men won team gold for the first time, while the women took bronze behind the United States and Brazil. Ontario’s Aurélie Tran added parallel bars gold, and Quebec’s William Émard claimed rings gold. Colombia celebrated Camilo Vera’s floor title and Ángel Barajas’s high bar gold, though domestic reports lamented insufficient state support for their elite programme. Brazil’s Vitaliy Guimarães, competing for his newly adopted country, won bronze on men’s floor to emotional home applause.

Andrade’s vault victory, her first Pan American title in the discipline, fills a rare gap in a career that includes two world vault golds and Olympic gold and silver on the apparatus. With Brazil’s team world berth secured, attention turns to Rotterdam as the first Olympic qualifier for Los Angeles 2028. For Andrade, success will be measured in carefully managed bursts: no more floor, fewer all-around appearances, but a continuing role as Brazil’s most potent weapon on vault.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 3 languages

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressLatin American press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismDetachment

Rebeca Andrade marked her return with a gold on vault, while Canadian gymnasts celebrated six medals, including team gold. The Pan American Championships were framed as an early step in Olympic qualification for Los Angeles 2028, focusing on results and future prospects.

Latin American press
TriumphUrgency

Rebeca Andrade's triumphant return delivered a historic gold on vault, edging out her rivals in a tense final. Brazil's greatest Olympian electrified the home crowd, proving she is ready for the Olympic cycle and reclaiming her place at the pinnacle of gymnastics.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 3 languages

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