Site icon The News Guy

US Olympic gymnastics trials live results: Simone Biles updates

US Olympic gymnastics trials live results: Simone Biles updates

play

Five Paris Olympics storylines to know from security to Simone Biles

The Paris Olympics are fast approaching. Here’s what you need to know about the first post-pandemic Games.

The U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials conclude tonight when Simone Biles learns who else will join her on the team for the 2024 Paris Olympics. Biles led Jordan Chiles and Sunisa Lee after Friday’s competition. But Shilese Jones (knee), Kayla DiCello (Achilles) and Skye Blakely (Achilles) all suffered injuries, throwing into chaos who will fill out the five-women team. 

USA TODAY Sports’ Nancy Armour and Tom Schad will provide live updates, results, highlights and analysis throughout the gymnastics trials. Follow along. 

Simone Biles somehow overcooked a Yurchenko double pike on vault, stumbling backward before catching herself. She still scored a 15.500.

Get Olympics updates in your texts! Join USA TODAY Sports’ WhatsApp Channel

Sunisa Lee, the reigning all-around Olympic gold medalist, opened the night on bars and dazzled to score a 14.875. The crowd was shrieking in delight with every one of her releases. She nailed that routine and the crowd gave her a standing ovation. If there were any doubts about whether she was on this team (there weren’t), there aren’t anymore.

Read Nancy Armour’s full story on Suni Lee’s health journey after dealing with a kidney disease and how it changed her gymnastics mindset.

Jordan Childs clapped on the runway as she awaited her second vault. The crowd joined along. And then Childs turned in a 14.500.

VAULT: Simone Biles (15.500), Jade Carey (14.675), Jordan Childs: 14.500, Joscelyn Roberson: 14.500, Tiana Sumanasekera (14.350), Dulcy Caylor (13.900), Zoey Molomo: 13.850, Evey Lowe (13.675).BARS: Sunisa Lee (14.875), Hezly Rivera (14.300), Leanne Wong (13.900), Kaliya Lincoln (13.450), Simone Rose (13.200).

Simone Biles entered Sunday night leading the competition. The crowd showed her love when she was introduced.

Simone Biles’ presence in Paris is all but a lock, but it will be formalized after the final session of Olympic trials competition tonight. Widely considered to be the greatest gymnast ever, Biles will be making her third appearance at the Summer Olympics. She won four golds and a bronze at the 2016 Rio Games, then a silver and bronze at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. 

NBC is airing tonight’s final session. The network will also show every minute of action on its streaming service, Peacock, where it will offer both a general stream and apparatus-specific streams for viewers who are hoping to monitor a specific athlete. 

Watch U.S. gymnastics Olympic trials FREE on Fubo

Here are the top five in the standings going into Day 2: Simone Biles (58.990), Jordan Chiles (56.400), Sunisa Lee (56.025), Jade Carey (55.825), Joscelyn Roberson (55.475). Full results are on MyUSAGym.com.

Shilese Jones injured her knee on vault in pre-meet warmups on Friday night, and scratched all but uneven bars. USA Gymnastics said the decision to not compete Sunday was made after she was re-evaluated Saturday.

Jones had established herself as almost as much of a lock for the Paris squad as Simone Biles, winning all-around medals at the last two world championships. She arrived at trials nursing a shoulder injury that kept her out of the national championships earlier this month, but coach Sarah Korngold said she was ready to compete.

In warmups on Friday, however, Jones landed her vault and fell to the mat, clutching her right leg. Biles ran over to check on her, and Jones sat on the podium for several minutes before being helped backstage by Korngold and a medical staffer.

Suni Lee is in good shape to make the five-person U.S. team for the Paris Olympics. She was fourth at the national championships in early June and has upgraded her routines on uneven bars and floor since then. But a health crisis 15 months ago — she developed a kidney disease that caused her to retain so much fluid she couldn’t even put on her grips — has upended her life. There were days she couldn’t even get out of bed. 

Lee said a phone call she got Jan. 4, the details she wants to keep private, was a turning point for her. “I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m going back into the gym tomorrow and I’m going to be better than I ever was.’ That was the day I was like, ‘Yep, this is what I want. And I’m gonna put my mind into it,’” she said. Read Nancy Armour’s full story on Suni Lee’s health journey. 

Pop superstar Taylor Swift responded to a post on social media about Simone Biles’ floor routine on Friday night, which features Swift’s “Ready For it.”  

Simone Biles vault: Watch her Yurchenko double pike

Simone Biles got a standing ovation from fans for her Yurchenko double pike on Friday. It doesn’t matter how many times she does it, it’s always jaw-dropping to see it in person. Biles gets great height on the vault, and the power that’s needed to do it practically ripples off her as she flips. She had to take a step to control the landing, but that’s just nitpicking. The judges clearly agreed, giving her a 15.975 that included a 9.75 for execution. 

How many Olympics has Simone Biles been to? 

Biles has competed in two editions of the Summer Olympics: The 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro, and the 2021 Games in Tokyo. However, she only competed in some of her scheduled events in 2021 after experiencing a case of the “twisties,” which caused her to lose track of where she was in the air, jeopardizing her physical safety. 

Simone Biles has won four Olympic gold medals, all of them at the 2016 Rio Games. She led the “Final Five” to team gold, claimed the individual all-around gold and won two of the four individual events: Floor exercise and vault. She has also won a silver medal (in the 2021 team competition) and two Olympic bronzes on balance beam in 2016 and 2021. 

Kayla DiCello injured her Achilles injury on the first vault on Friday. She left the floor in a wheelchair and USA Gymnastics announced she was scratched from the remainder of the night.

Jordan Chiles: What to know 

The Tokyo Olympian made a case for herself at the U.S. Classic with a solid performance on all four events. Chiles might not give the United States a massive score on any one event, but she doesn’t leave any holes, either.  

“I think realizing that I had the potential,” Chiles said of the difference between this season and last, when she struggled with the transition from NCAA to elite. 

“A lot of the time, you say you want to do something and you never know what’s going to happen, because there’s a lot of eyes on you and expectations,” Chiles added. “When you put that aside, you realize, ‘I’m going to just step forward into it and be the person I need to be and put every effort I need into each and every practice.'”

USA Gymnastics Olympic trials schedule 

Netflix released the trailer recently for “Simone Biles: Rising” and said the four-part docuseries will begin streaming July 17, nine days before the Opening Ceremony. “Rising” follows Biles’ return to competition after a case of “the twisties” forced her out of most of the Tokyo Games.

Here’s a look at her leotards over the years.

The 2024 Paris Olympics begins with the Opening Ceremony on July 26. Gymnastics competition begins July 27 with men’s qualification. Women’s qualification is July 28.

Simone Biles is married to NFL player Jonathan Owens, who is currently a safety for the Chicago Bears. They celebrated their one-year wedding anniversary earlier this year. 

Simone Biles is a lock for Olympics. But after injuries, who joins her? 

Call it carnage, chaos or just plain bad damn luck, the four women who join Simone Biles at the Paris Olympics might wind up being whoever’s healthy enough to make the trip. 

In a 30-minute span Friday night, Shilese  Jones suffered a knee injury that limited her to one event and Kayla DiCello was knocked out with an Achilles injury. Meanwhile Skye Blakely, a member of the U.S. teams that won gold at the last two world championships, was hobbling around the floor on crutches because of the ruptured Achilles that occurred during training two days earlier. 

What makes this so devastating, besides everything, is that the U.S. women’s team had seemed, if not set, taking very firm shape after the national championships four weeks ago. And now it’s all been thrown out of whack. 

Nancy Armour unpacks what all the injuries mean for Team USA. 

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Source link : https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2024/06/30/us-gymnastics-olympic-trials-live-results/74229521007/

Author :

Publish date : 2024-06-30 20:00:00

Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.

Exit mobile version