Deccan Chronicle

Gymnastics team wears unitards

The German team wore unitards that stretched to their ankles during the Tokyo Olympics, intending to push back against sexualizat­ion of women in gymnastics.

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The team’s outfits looked similar to the others in the room as the arena lights gleamed off crystals crisscross­ing their chests and down their crimson and white sleeves. But the German gymnastics team's new Olympic suits didn’t stop at their hips. For decades, female gymnasts have worn bikini-cut leotards. In qualifying on Sunday, however, the German team instead wore unitards that stretched to their ankles, intending to push back against sexualizat­ion of women in gymnastics.

The Tokyo Olympics are the first Summer Games since Larry Nassar, a former USA Gymnastics national team doctor, was sent to prison for

176 years for sexually abusing hundreds of gymnasts, including some of the sport's greatest stars. At his sentencing, athletes — some of them Olympians — described how the sport's culture allowed for abuse and objectific­ation of young women and girls. Male gymnasts wear comparativ­ely body-covering clothes: singlets, with loose shorts for their floor exercise and vault, and long pants on bar and pommel horse routines.

The German team first wore unitards at the European Artistic Gymnastics Championsh­ips in April. Sarah Voss, a

21-year-old German, said they weren’t sure they would decide to wear them again during Olympic competitio­n until they got together before the meet. “We sat together today and said, OK, we want to have a big competitio­n,” Voss said. “We want to feel amazing, we want to show everyone that we look amazing.”

Their wardrobe revolution, while widely championed, has not so far started a trend. Leotards that leave the legs bare were worn by every other female gymnast during qualifying at the Tokyo Games. American superstar Simone Biles said in June that she prefers leotards because they lengthen the leg and make her appear taller. “But I stand with their decision to wear whatever they please and whatever makes them feel comfortabl­e,” Biles said.

“So if anyone out there wants to wear a unitard or leotard, it's totally up to you.”

Their outfits comply with the wardrobe rules of the Internatio­nal Gymnastics Federation. But that doesn't mean female athletes are generally free to cover their bodies as they choose. Just days before the Games began, the Norwegian women’s beach volleyball team refused to play in bikini bottoms during European tournament­s, opting instead for skin-tight shorts. For that, they received a fine for violating a wardrobe requiremen­t.

But at gymnastics qualifying Sunda, the announcer over the loudspeake­r called the outfits “very nice indeed.” The German team did not qualify for finals, but the announcer pondered if their team debut on the Olympic stage might increase unitards’ popularity.

The

German team first wore unitards at the European Artistic Gymnastics Championsh­ips in April. But their wardrobe revolution, while widely championed, has not so

far started a trend.

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