French gymnast breaks leg during vault landing - CNN

    French gymnast breaks leg during vault landing

    French gymnast breaks leg during vault in Rio
    French gymnast breaks leg during vault in Rio

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      French gymnast breaks leg during vault in Rio

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    French gymnast breaks leg during vault in Rio 00:54

    Story highlights

    • Samir Ait Said tells fans he will be back to win gold in four years' time
    • Said missed the 2012 Olympics because he broke the other leg

    (CNN)The Olympics for French gymnast Samir Ait Said ended in brutal fashion Saturday when he suffered a broken left leg while vaulting during the men's team qualifications.

    It was the kind of injury that made spectators hurriedly look away and caused teammates to bury their heads.
      French gymnastics officials tweeted that he fractured his tibia and fibula and would have surgery as soon as possible.
        They said he thanked fans for their support and would be back to win gold at the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.
        Said landed awkwardly after doing two backward flips off the vault.
        According to USA Today, the leg breaking made a sharp crack that could be heard throughout the venue.
          Samir Ait Said receives medical attention after breaking his leg while competing on the vault.
          As Said grabbed around his knee and looked up at his lower left leg, he saw it flop unnaturally to the side. The 26-year-old covered his face with his right hand and was silent, perhaps too in shock to scream.
          He was taken off on a stretcher, giving a wave to the crowd as he was carried away.
          "It is very difficult for the team. He was one of the friendliest on the team which is very difficult -- he came to win a medal and gave everything 200 percent," team leader Corrine Moustard-Callon told reporters.
            It is not Said's first major injury after a vault.
            He missed the 2012 Olympics because he fractured his right leg in three places at the European Championships, according to the NBC Olympics website.