A guide to ‘breaking’ aka ‘breakdancing’, the new sport at the 2024 Paris Olympics

A guide to ‘breaking’ aka ‘breakdancing’, the new sport at the 2024 Paris Olympics

Click here to view this content.

The Olympics gets a brand new sport this summer in the form of breakdancing – or breaking, as it will be known at the Olympics.

Originating in the Bronx borough of New York in the late 1970s, and considered part of the four elements of hip-hop, alongside rapping, graffiti and DJing, it comprises crews aiming to out-do each other with acrobatic dance moves set to music.

Its popularity, with international competitions first held in the 1990s, has been noted by the International Olympic Committee, which is keen to reach new and younger audiences.

Despite the wrath of Games traditionalists, breakings inclusion on the programme for the 2018 Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires was met with widespread acclaim, and now the sport makes its main bow in Paris.

The breaking competitions take place at the Place de la Concorde, Paris, site for the newer, urban Olympic sports.

Both mens and womens events will see 16 b-boys and 16 b-girls competing against each other to be crowned individual champions.

One-on-one competitive dance matchups are known as battles, with each battle divided into best of three rounds, called throwdowns.

Each throwdown begins when a breaker (individual) starts their performance, which can last up to 60 seconds, with the opposing breaker then responding with their own throwdown. Each competitor performs to music of the live DJs choosing, with each round judged.

Each set of 16 breakers will be divided into four groups of four participants, competing in an initial round-robin stage, with the two group winners advancing to straight knock-outs in the form of quarter-finals, semi-finals and then bronze and gold medal battles.

Click here to view this content.

A five-strong judging panel score each battle based on technique, vocabulary, execution, musicality and originality, with each category accounting for 20 per cent of the final score.

The winner is the competitor who wins the majority of the three-round battle, with judges using a digital, real-time slider to score the battles.

Judges also have three misbehavior buttons they may use to penalise a breaker when they act or gesture inappropriately.

There will be no British involvement for breakings Olympics debut with no b-boys or b-girls qualifying for the Games.

For the women, keep an eye out for Lithuanias Dominika Banevič, (nickname Nicka), and Japans Ayumi Fukushima (nickname Ayumi) after the two battled it out in last years World Breaking Championship final. Banevič, who also claimed European gold earlier in the year, took the title, while bronze went to Frances Sya Dembélé (nickname Syssy).

For the men, American Victor Montalvo (nickname Victor) is the current world champion, beating Canadas Philip Kim (Phil Wizard) into silver, while Shigeyuki Nakarai (nickname Shigekix) took bronze.

16 b-girls

Dominika Banevič (Lithuania) – nickname: Nicka

Sunny Choi (US) – nickname: Sunny

Fatima Zahra El-Mamouny (Morocco) – nickname: Elmamouny

India Sardjoe (Netherlands) – nickname: India

Liu Qingyi (China) – nickname: 671

Rachael Gunn (Australia) – nickname: Raygun

Ami Yuasa (Japan) – nickname: Ami

Ayumi Fukushima, (Japan) – nickname: Ayumi

Sya Dembélé (France) – nickname: Syssy

Logan Elanna Edra (US) – nickname: Logistx

Zeng Yingying (China) – nickname: Yingzi

Kateryna Pavlenko (Ukraine) – nickname: Kate

Antilai Sandrini (Italy) – nickname: Anti

Vanessa Cartaxo (Portugal) – nickname: Vanessa

Anna Ponomarenko (Ukraine) – nickname: Stefani

Manizha Talash (Refugee Olympic Team) – nickname: Talash

Carlota Dudek (France)* – nickname: Senorita Carlota*reserve

16 b-boys

Victor Montalvo, (US) – nickname: Victor

Bilal Mallakh, (Morocco) – nickname: Billy

Danis Civil, (France) – nickname: Dany Dann

Jeffrey Dan Arpie Dunne (Australia) – nickname: J Attack

Philip Kim, (Canada) – nickname: Phil Wizard

Shigeyuki Nakarai, (Japan) – nickname: Shigekix

Lee-Lou Demierre, (Netherlands) – nickname: Lee

Kim Hongyul, (South Korea) – nickname: Hongten

Hiroto Ono, (Japan) – nickname: Hiro10

Qi Xiangyu, (China) – nickname: Lithe-ing

Jeffrey Louis, (US) – nickname: Jeffro

Amir Zakirov, (Kazakhstan) – nickname: Amir

Menno Van Gorp, (Netherlands) – nickname: Menno

Sun Chen, (Chinese Taipei) – nickname: Quake

Oleg Kuznietsov, (Ukraine) – nickname: Kuzya

Gaëtan Alin, (France)* – nickname: Lagaet*reserve

Click here to view this content.

Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 3 months with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *