Current:Home > StocksWatching Simone Biles compete is a gift. Appreciate it at Paris Olympics while you can -Elevate Profit Vision
Watching Simone Biles compete is a gift. Appreciate it at Paris Olympics while you can
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-07 19:47:57
PARIS — Simone Biles is spoiling everyone.
Biles stuck a Yurchenko double pike, a vault so difficult few men even attempt it, during podium training Thursday. Great height, tight rotation and not a wiggle or wobble after her feet slammed into the mat. As perfect as it gets.
The reaction from coach Cecile Landi and Jess Graba, Suni Lee’s coach? You should have seen the ones she did in the training gym beforehand.
“I feel bad because it kind of feels normal now. It's not right, because it's not normal,” Graba said. “Someday you’ll back and go, 'I stood there for that.’”
GET OLYMPICS UPDATES IN YOUR TEXTS: Join USA TODAY Sports' WhatsApp Channel
This is Biles’ third Olympics, and she is better now than she’s ever been. That’s quite the statement, given she won four gold medals at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, is a 23-time world champion and hasn’t lost an all-around competition in more than a decade.
It’s not even a question, however, and if you are a gymnastics fan, or just a fan of superior athletic performances, appreciate this moment now.
There are a few singular athletes, men and women whose dominance in their prime was both amazing and mind-boggling. Michael Jordan was one. Serena Williams another. Michael Phelps, of course, and Tiger Woods. You have to include Biles in that category, too.
What she’s doing is so insanely difficult, yet Biles makes it look like child’s play for the ease with which she does it. It isn’t normal, as Graba said. But she has everyone so conditioned to her level of excellence that it takes something like that vault Thursday — or watching her do it while so many others around her were flailing and falling — to remind us what a privilege it is to watch her.
“She’s getting more and more comfortable with it,” Landi said, referring to the vault, also known as the Biles II. “But I don’t see it like that every day.”
Making it even more special is that all of this is a bonus.
After Biles got “the twisties” at the Tokyo Olympics, she wasn’t sure if she’d do gymnastics again. She took 18 months off and, even when she came back, refused to look beyond her next competition. Of course the Olympics were the ultimate goal, but the expectations and hype were part of what sent her sideways in Tokyo and she wasn’t going down that road again.
Though Biles is in a good place now — she is open about prioritizing both her weekly therapy sessions and her boundaries — there’s always the worry something could trigger a setback. The Olympics, and the team competition specifically, are potential landmines, given Biles had to withdraw one event into the team final in Tokyo.
But she’s having as much fun now as we all are watching her.
Rather than looking drawn and burdened, as she did three years ago, Biles was smiling and laughing with her teammates Thursday. She exchanged enthusiastic high-fives with Laurent Landi, Cecile Landi’s husband and coach, after both the Yurchenko double pike and her uneven bars routine.
“We’re all breathing a little bit better right now, I’m not going to lie,” Cecile Landi said.
Biles isn’t being made to feel as if she has to carry this team, either. With the exception of Hezly Rivera, who is only 16, every member of the U.S. women's gymnastics team is a gold medalist at either the world championships or Olympics. Yes, Biles’ scores give the Americans a heck of a cushion. But Suni Lee, Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey can hold their own, too, taking a massive burden off Biles’ shoulders.
“It’s just peace of mind that they all have done this before,” Landi said.
No matter how many times Biles does this, it never gets old for the people who are watching. Or it shouldn't. You're seeing greatness in real time. Appreciate it.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (31712)
Related
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Early retirement was a symptom of the pandemic. Why many aren't going back to work
- The UK says it has paid Rwanda $300 million for a blocked asylum deal. No flights have taken off
- Donald Glover, Maya Erskine are 'Mr. & Mrs. Smith'. What to know about the reboot series
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Unique ways Americans celebrate the holidays, from skiing Santas to Festivus feats
- Allies of Russian opposition leader Navalny post billboards asking citizens to vote against Putin
- Advocates say a Mexican startup is illegally selling a health drink from an endangered fish
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Judge allows emergency abortion in Texas in first case of its kind since before Roe v. Wade
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Ford recalling more than 18K trucks over issue with parking lights: Check the list
- Emma Stone comes alive in the imaginative 'Poor Things'
- The wheel's many reinventions
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Recording Academy, ex CEO Mike Greene sued for sexual assault of former employee Terri McIntyre
- Youngkin calls for increased state spending on child care programs
- Charlie Sheen Reveals He's Nearly 6 Years Sober
Recommendation
McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
Shots fired outside Jewish temple in upstate New York as Hanukkah begins, shooter’s motive unknown
Nvidia CEO suggests Malaysia could be AI ‘manufacturing’ hub as Southeast Asia expands data centers
Last of 3 Palestinian college students shot in Vermont leaves hospital
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Deployed soldier sends messages of son's favorite stuffed dinosaur traveling world
Live updates | Palestinians live in dire human conditions in Gaza despite Israel’s safe zone
Rebels in Congo take key outpost in the east as peacekeepers withdraw and fighting intensifies