MINNEAPOLIS — For most gymnasts, a slip off the balance beam, a foot outside the line on the floor exercise and too many steps after landing a vault could be enough to spoil a chance at victory.

But this is Simone Biles we're talking about.

For Biles, at 27 already the most decorated gymnast in history, a somewhat shaky night at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials was still enough to finish ahead of her competitors by more than 5.5 points — and officially secure a place on the team that will compete at this summer's games in Paris.

And the crowd didn't mind the slip-ups. After her floor routine, her final event of the night, Biles walked off the podium to a standing ovation from the 16,000 people packed into the stands of the Target Center in downtown Minneapolis.

Olympic gold is the next capstone that awaits Biles's remarkable return to dominance after a two-year hiatus from competition. In 2021, she was forced to withdraw from several events in Tokyo after experiencing the "twisties," a psychological phenomenon in which a gymnast loses their ability to control their body in mid-air. The two-year break, she has said, was necessary to tend to her mental health.

Biles will enter the Olympics in Paris as a favorite to win gold medals in the individual all-around, vault and floor exercise.

In Paris, she will be joined by the Tokyo Games all-around gold medalist Suni Lee, the St. Paul native who shone Sunday night in front of the friendly hometown crowd.

Two other Olympic veterans, Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey, will return for their second Games. Rounding out the team is newcomer Hezly Rivera, who turned 16 earlier this month. Two alternates, Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong, will also travel with the team.

The women's team won gold in the team all-around in 2012 and 2016, then finished in second at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 after Biles withdrew from the event.

Injuries had loomed over the women's trials

A spate of injuries ahead of and on the first day of competition had cast a pall over the women's trials. First came an Achilles injury to Skye Blakely during pre-competition training on Wednesday; Blakely's second-place finish at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships had lifted her stock for a possible Olympic nod.

Then, on Friday, Shilese Jones, another favorite to make the Paris squad, tweaked her knee as she warmed up on the vault. Minutes later, a third gymnast, Kayla DiCello, was forced to leave the competition in a wheelchair after hurting her Achilles on the vault.

The back-to-back injuries Friday rattled the remaining competitors. Suni Lee, who was in line to vault immediately after DiCello, had to wipe tears before stepping onto the podium.

"There's fear in a lot of athletes when you see somebody get injured, and you don't want that to be you," check for first reference Chiles said Friday after the injuries to Jones and DiCello. "But I try to put that in the back of my brain because I don't want to think about that all the time."

The U.S. men's gymnastics team head to Paris hoping to win first team medal since 2008

The men's team was announced Saturday night. The five competitors, led by Olympic veteran Brody Malone and newcomer (and social media star) Fred Richard, head to Paris with the goal of winning the first U.S. team medal in gymnastics since 2008.

"We shouldn't even be aiming for just a medal. We should be aiming for gold, and we're going to land on something," Richard said Saturday.

Richard, 20, scored the highest total at the U.S. team trials, while Malone, 24, finished in second place. They will be joined in Paris by Asher Hong, Paul Juda and Stephen Nedoroscik, along with alternates Shane Wiskus and Khoi Young.

A secondary goal for the team — besides a return to the team medal podium — is simply to raise the profile of men's gymnastics, a sport that has long been overshadowed by its women's counterpart.

"If we go into Paris and get a team medal like we've been training for, then it's going to set even more fuel on that fire," Hong said Saturday.

Copyright 2024 NPR

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