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 Elite athletes aren’t supposed to get better the older they get. Certainly not in gymnastics, where the flexibility of youth makes it easier to do gravity defying skills.

Yet here Simone Biles is at 27 at the U.S. gymnastics Olympic trials, better now than she was in 2016, when she won four Olympic gold medals. Better than she was in 2018, when she won a medal on every event at the world championships. Better than anyone, ever, has ever been in her sport.

“I use the phrase, ‘Aging like fine wine,’” she joked earlier this month, after she’d extended her own record with her ninth U.S. championship.

Biles is poised to make her third Olympic team this weekend, and will be a heavy favorite to win multiple gold medals in Paris. Although her longevity alone is a marvel, it’s her level of excellence that is astounding. Just when you think there’s no way she can improve, no way she can top what she’s already done, she … does.

She cracked the 60-point mark on the first night of U.S. championships, something no other woman has done this Olympic cycle. She has mastered her Yurchenko double pike, a vault so difficult few men even try it, to the point coach Laurent Landi no longer feels the need to stand on the mat in case something goes awry.

She has added back her double twisting-double somersault dismount on uneven bars. Her difficulty score on floor exercise is a whopping 7.0, more than a full point higher than most other women.

“I don’t know if there will ever be another gymnast who will ever come close to touching her caliber of achievements, difficulty and just the impact she’s had on our sport. Icon? I don’t even know if that’s the right way to say it,” said Alicia Sacramone Quinn, who was a member of the team that won silver at the 2008 Olympics and is now the strategic lead for the U.S. women’s high-performance team.

“We joke all the time. I’m like, ‘Can you be not as good at gymnastics?’ and she just laughs at me.”

Although some of this is a credit to Biles’ natural ability, to put it all on that does a disservice to the work she puts in. Both in the gym and outside of it.

Biles works as hard as anyone, said Cecile Landi, who coaches Biles along with her husband. She does not skip workouts, and her ridiculously difficult routines appear easy because she has put in the numbers necessary to make them look that way. She also knows her body, and will tell the Landis when something isn’t feeling right or isn’t working.

Perhaps the biggest difference at this stage of her career is that Biles’ mind and body are in sync.

Biles missed most of the Tokyo Olympics after developing a case of “the twisties,” which caused her to lose her sense of where she was in the air and jeopardized her physical safety. Biles now knows this was a physical manifestation of mental health issues, exacerbated by the isolation of the COVID restrictions in Tokyo.

She continues to work with the therapist she began seeing after Tokyo, and says she knows she has to prioritize her mental health as much as her physical health. By doing so, she’s eliminated the one thing that could hold her back.

“I think we always knew she could be better,” Cecile Landi said. “She’s the most talented athlete I’ve ever worked with. And so we just knew if she could get her mental game as well as her physical game, she would be close to unstoppable.”

As crazy as it is to think — given all she’s already done and accomplished — Biles’ best is yet to come.

The 2024 Paris Olympics are getting closer and closer. We’re exactly one month away from the start of the Games, and we already know a lot of the main stars who will be in France for the event. But we don’t yet know if Simone Biles will be there.

USA Gymnastics will hold their trials starting on Thursday, with the men and women competing to see who will make it to Paris. Although Biles is the heavy favorite to earn the sole automatic berth, which goes to the highest scorer across the two days of competition, anything can happen.

Biles’ participation at the trials drew some intrigue due to her, and the other gymnasts, not getting paid to participate. Not only that, U.S. athletes don’t get paid to compete in the Olympics at all; although winning medals does earn them prize money.

How does Simone Biles earn money?

The athletes are allowed to get money from sponsorships, though, which is easily the biggest source of income for Biles. Biles has nine major sponsors and has worked with various other brands throughout the years. She also has side business ventures, including a couple of companies that sell leotards.

The 2024 Summer Olympics kick off on Friday, July 26 and run until Sunday, August 11. Artistic gymnastics events will be held at the Bercy Arena, which holds 15,000 spectators.

Age is just a number and Simone Biles is living proof of the adage. At the age of 27, Simone Biles is still defying the odds of gymnastics, having achieved unmatched success and aging like fine wine. At the U.S. championships in Fort Worth, Texas, earlier in the month, Biles won her ninth US all-around victory after dominating on all four apparatus. Her recent success shows that she is at her best ever ahead of the Paris Olympics. As she gets better and bigger with each impending victory, she caught the jocular fancy of a certain gymnast and the interaction was funny and quite unusual, to say the least.

In the sport, Biles’ extraordinary talent has created a new benchmark. Although most young athletes reach their prime, Biles seems to have quenched her starlet thirst by receiving a funny request. Former Olympic gymnast Alicia Sacramone Quinn, who currently serves as the U.S. women’s high-performance squad’s strategic lead, noted Biles’ remarkable influence. Quinn remarked, “I don’t know if there will ever be another gymnast who will ever come close to touching her caliber of achievements, difficulty, and just the impact she’s had on our sport.”

Beyond only her technical skills, Quinn is a huge fan of Biles, through and through. Gymnastics has been greatly impacted by Biles, who has inspired a great number of upcoming athletes and shaped the sport’s future. An “icon?” Quinn continued, highlighting how extraordinary Biles’ efforts are. “I don’t even know if that’s the right way to say it,” Quinn noted.

Simone Biles is yet personable and modest despite her enormous accomplishments. “We joke all the time,” Quinn said, describing a funny exchange with Biles. “I’m like, ‘Can you be not as good at gymnastics?’ and she just laughs at me.”?” and she simply smiles. Despite her towering accomplishments, Biles is incredibly grounded, as this playful discussion highlights. However, there’s more on Simone Biles’s way to Paris.

Simone Biles’ road at the Paris Olympics

The focus now turns to Minneapolis, where the gymnastics U.S. Olympic Team Trials are taking place. The Target Center is abuzz with talent and excitement and Biles will be one of the firebrand gymnasts out there so you know who to root for and bet your money on now. Promising a stellar comeback, it remains to be seen how her journey to yonder, ie Paris, will look like provided the trials are the ultimate litmus test for many.

Mom, come pick me up. I’m scared,” said Simone Biles on the phone call. “Are you okay?,” asked her mom in apprehension. Her family was worried, and her fans were disheartened, when the 7x Olympic medalist walked out of the Ariake Gymnastics Centre during the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Citing the issue of “twisties,” when she was exiting the arena, critics called her “Quitter of the year.” She was cladded in Swarovski crystals embroidered red and white leotard when she walked to her coach, with just one thought in mind, “I was going to be banned from America.

Amidst the noise of the disregards around, Simone was searching for comfort. Her next reaction – she called the home phone, to talk to her family. Her sister, Adria Biles, picked the phone before passing it to their mother, Nellie Biles. Astounded, Adria asked the gymnast, “You’re crying. Are you okay?” To this, Simone confirmed, “I’m out. I’m done.”

Simone Biles defined her parents’ sentiments about her Tokyo Olympics withdrawal on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast aired on April 17, 2024. “My dad is always so calm and collected, it seems. So he was probably like, Oh, is she okay?,” stated Biles while giving details about her father, Ronald Biles’ reaction. She further added, “My mom was like, a mess. I could hear her crying and breaking down, and that’s what broke me, too.”

More so, when her then-boyfriend Jonathan Owens saw Biles walk off a failed Amanar vault in the team final, he felt sick to his stomach. “I was sick for her, just because I can see her facial expressions, I can kind of read her lips and kind of know what was going on and kind of what she was telling her coach,” stated Owens in an interview with ESPN back in 2021.

When ‘Call Her Daddy’ host Alex Cooper further asked about her rough first vault finish, Biles went on to explain how she lost her bearings in the air while performing the Amanar vault. Its simulation consists of two-and-a-half twisting flips, but Biles was only able to complete one-and-a-half twists, before stumbling out of her landing. “The world is going to hate me,” her intrinsic fears surfaced when she touched the ground.

Following this, the gymnast’s siblings shared their concerns about her exit on their respective Twitter handles. While Ron Biles penned, “everyone please pray for my sister @Simone_Biles. She really needs them at this time, and is having a hard time,” Adria Biles called out to the critics with a stern message. “y’all are all about mental health until it no longer benefits you” she added.

Hence, given the extreme pressure and criticism, as Simone Biles was navigating through the rough waters, the gymnast’s clan made sure to support her every step of the way.

Simone Biles Rising – with friends, family, and fans

While Jonathan Owens promised, “Imma ride with you through whatever baby,” Biles’ parents, friends, and family helped her immensely in her comeback journey. Next, we know – Simone Biles made a staunch comeback to finish her “unfinished business.”

It was in August 2023, when the 4x Olympic gold medalist donned her GK Elite leotard and marked her resurgence with the All-Around title at the 2023 US Core Hydration Classic. She then aced the most difficult vault, Yurchenko Double Pike, at the 2023 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, and became the first woman in history to pull off the routine at an international competition. This earned her the 6th All-Around World title. A dramatic comeback indeed!

Simone Biles will continue to redefine the limits of gymnastics,” predicts one commentator, as the US Olympic Gymnastics Trials approach. The 2024 Olympics gymnastics qualification season will start on June 27 at the trials in Minneapolis. Gymnasts from around the nation will gather to prove who has what it takes to represent the USA. The highly anticipated event will showcase Simone Biles’ unparalleled skill and poise, as well as Shilese Jones’ impressive talent and determination.

Both gymnasts are set to deliver stunning performances as they embody the spirit of competition and excellence that defines the Olympic Games. The event, headlined by gymnasts like Simone Biles, Shilese Jones, Fred Richards, and Brody Malone, promises to be as thrilling as the Summer Games in Paris itself. Here is everything you need to know to witness the trials’ magic.

Simone Biles to take on Shilese Jones: Who has the upper hand? 

Gymnastics in the USA have become synonymous with Simone Biles. During the Core Hydration Classics earlier this year, Biles swept the all-around title with a score of 59.500. This kept her in a two-point lead from the first runner-up, Shilese Jones. Biles participated in all four events, with her highest being 15.600 on the vaults and 14.800 on floor exercise.

At the Xfinity games, she won the gold medal at all events and became the first gymnast to win nine all-around titles. Her improved Yurchenko double-like vault, and the triple twisting double back tuck make her one of the most technically skilled gymnasts on the mat this year. However, Shilese Jones, the 2023 AA bronze medallist, faced some hiccups.

After a successful Classics where she won the uneven bars, Jones was forced to withdraw from the Xfinity games due to a shoulder injury. It was so bad, that Jones reported it was hard to move her arm at all. Shilese Jones stated, Unfortunately, I won’t be participating in the Xfinity Championships this year. With Paris as my ultimate focus, it’s best for me to prioritize recovery and resting my shoulder this weekend.

She also mentioned, Both the medical team and I are confident this is the right decision to ensure I’m at full strength for Trials“. She further added that she was excited to support her fellow athletes and teammates that weekend, mentioning that she had petitioned to compete in the trials and had been approved. Though Biles is the natural favorite to make the first spot on the Olympic team, Jones is expected to be a close second.

How to witness the trials?

To catch the highly anticipated showdown between Simone Biles and Shilese Jones, mark your calendars for June 27, 2024. The 2024 US Olympic team trials for gymnastics is scheduled between 27th and 30th June. It will be held at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The event is expected to be one of the marquee events of this year before the Olympics itself. The competition will start every day from 6:30 pm ET.

US Olympic Gymnastics Trials: Know where to get the ticket 

The tickets for the US Olympic team trials for gymnastics are already available. Viewers can purchase tickets for each session online at the official US Gymnastics website or directly at the Target Center box office. They can be bought together for all days or separately for each. For each day, the prices are $375. The cheapest are the men’s finals at $40 and women’s finals at $325. Those only interested in the finals may purchase tickets for just the 3rd and 4th days, which are the 29th and 30th of June.

Where to watch the US Olympic Gymnastics Trials?

The US Olympic Gymnastics Trials promise to showcase electrifying talent. The thrilling match between Simone Biles and Shilese Jones can be seen across wide networks of interest. On Thursday, the 27th, Men’s Day 1 can be watched on USA Network and Peacock between 6:30 pm-9 pm. Women’s Day 1 can be viewed on Peacock from 7: 30 to 8 PM ET on Friday the 28 and on NBC from 8 to 10 PM ET.

For Men’s Day 2, scheduled for June 29th, the streaming will continue through NBC and Peacock TV from 3 to 6 PM Eastern Time. Women’s Day 2 events are scheduled for June 30th, airing from 8 to 8:30 PM ET on Peacock, and from 8:30 to 11 PM ET on both NBC and Peacock. You can stream these matches live on Peacock, NBC.com, NBCOlympics.com, NBC Sports, and the NBC app.

USA gymnast icon Simone Biles has opened up about her comeback and is ready to return to the spotlight at the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

In the trailer of Simone Biles Rising, a new documentary by Netflix in association with Olympic Channel, the four-time Olympic champion discusses her journey and her anticipation to return.

Biles competed at Tokyo 2020 held in 2021 but withdrew from most events, openly citing mental health concerns. But now, after a three-year journey which included time away from the sport, she is preparing for the upcoming USA Olympic Gymnastics Team Trials (27-30 June) as she aims to compete at her third Olympic Games at Paris*.

Biles said, “I wanted to quit like 500,000 times and I would have if it weren’t for my people. I knew it would be a long journey, but to me, it wasn’t done. I’m going for another Olympic run, I never thought I’d be at this phase still doing it and I feel very grateful; I get to write my own ending.”

The two-part docuseries will premiere on Wednesday 17 July.

To some, he’s the “face of boxing.”

To others, not so much.

Regardless, there’s little debate that Gervonta Davis is a big deal.

The WBA’s champion at 135 pounds added another log to his pay-per-view fire on Saturday night with an eighth-round knockout of previously unbeaten contender Frank Martin in his first appearance atop an Amazon Prime Video show from the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas.

It was the 30th victory in as many fights for the 29-year-old Davis, who defended for the fifth time in a lightweight reign stretching back to 2019.

He’s won titles at 126, 130 and 140 pounds at one point or another, too, which keeps several options open going forward when it comes to possible options for his next appearance. The B/R combat team seized on that narrative to compile a list of possibilities for the “Tank” going forward and we invite you to take a look at what we came up with and drop a comment.

The first fight was nice, so why not do it twice?

That’d be a welcome result for the future if it means another fight between Davis and Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz, who became the first man to go 12 full rounds with the “Tank” as a late substitute for Rolando Romero atop a Showtime pay-per-view show in December 2021.

Davis won seven rounds on two scorecards and eight on another to capture a narrow unanimous decision in the bout, which prompted calls—particularly from Cruz’s team—for a rematch, a prospect that’s gained traction now that Cruz has picked up a belt of his own (the WBA’s title at 140 pounds) with a KO of Romero three months ago in Las Vegas.

Davis fought Saturday. Cruz has a defense set for August.

Then, if Cruz gets his way, the holiday season becomes fight season.

“December is perfect,” his manager, Sean Gibbons, told Boxing Scene. “We’re not chasing Tank now that we have the belt, but everywhere we go, everyone wants to know when we’re fighting Gervonta Davis. He’ll fight. Then Pitbull will fight. And we’ll be ready.”

Who We Wish It Would Be: Shakur Stevenson

Davis and Shakur Stevenson share space atop the lightweight mountain with their respective claims to the WBA and WBC title belts, and they’re also frequently within a spot or two of one another on most respected pound-for-pound lists, including B/R’s rundown for June.

They’re both unbeaten and in their 20s, too, which makes it a super fight in the making.

But, because boxing is well, boxing…it’s not such a guarantee.

Davis is aligned with Al Haymon and the Premier Boxing Champions apparatus while Stevenson is promoted by Bob Arum and Top Rank, which makes the prospect of them meeting any time soon about as likely as a snowstorm on South Beach.

That doesn’t stop media types from clamoring for it. Nor does it keep either fighter from suggesting the other is at or near the top of his hit list.

“Trust me, Shakur is going to get that work,” Leonard Ellerbe, who serves as an advisor to Davis, told Boxing Scene. “He’s asking for it, and he’s going to get it. It ain’t what he thinks it is. I can’t wait for it to happen.”

Who It Could Be: Gary Antuanne Russell

 

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So, like we said, boxing is boxing.

Which in this case means the most likely occurrence now that Davis has beaten Martin, who’s also a PBC-aligned fighter, is that he once again stays in the family and moves forward against another previously unbeaten PBC teammate, Gary Antuanne Russell, in his next time around.

Russell, the youngest of a family of boxing brothers, chased his 18th straight win on Saturday’s undercard but dropped a split decision to Alberto Puello that cost him the WBC’s dubious “interim” title belt one weight class up from Davis at 140 pounds.

Previously, his biggest victories came against ex-champions Viktor Postol (TKO 10) and Rances Barthelemy (TKO 6) in February and July of 2022.

He’s spent all of his seven-year career between 136.5 and 139.5 pounds while scoring KOs in all of his wins, but insists he could get to 135 if offered a Davis fight.

“It’d be Tank. Who wouldn’t want to see that,” Russell told The Boxing Voice.

“Me and Tank, that’s fireworks. That’s fireworks. I’m not laying down for nobody. My determination is just different from everybody else.”

What Would Break the Internet: Floyd Mayweather Jr.

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This is why we have the internet anyway, right?

So fans and fighters and writer types can engage in device-to-device beefs and make wild suggestions about fantastical fights that could never exist without digital context.

Ladies and gentlemen, we give you Davis and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

The two men began with a father/son or mentor/mentee relationship, to the point where Davis was the prime property in Mayweather’s business portfolio as he made the full-time transition from fighting to promoting after retiring from the ring in 2015.

Their union ended in 2021 and soon devolved into a flurry of insults and other snipes, moving to social media during the Martin fight week when Davis warned prospective clients against signing with Mayweather’s company.

“If you sign with this fraud..he will fu** up ya career,” Davis posted on Instagram. “He’s not a good businessman at all.”

That led Mayweather to post a Davis-Martin fight poster with a suggestion the event was canceled, and Davis smiled while including Mayweather on a list of possible foes during an interview with Marca.com, saying “September, November” and indicating that Mayweather, now 47 years old, would be the toughest opponent of the group.

“He feels I’m at this point where I’ll pass him,” Davis said. “And I’m doing it at a young age.”

It’s June, and that means I cannot so much as walk at a leisurely pace to the mailbox without doing irreparable damage to any makeup I’m wearing. Even on a just-mascara-and-some-concealer kind of day, the slightest physical exertion means the mascara migrates and some concealer becomes none concealer. So after seeing Simone Biles kick an outrageous amount of ass at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships over the weekend with a glamorous makeup look that was as flawless on the podium as it was before she did her first flip, I need to know what kind of witchcraft her makeup artist is using.

FORT WORTH, Texas — The best thing Simone Biles did on her way to her ninth U.S. title won’t show up in the scoresheet.

Biles hasn’t lost an all-around gymnastics meet in more than a decade, and that streak was never in jeopardy at U.S. nationals. She had a commanding lead after the first night, and after breezing through her routine on a balance beam that tripped up many other competitors, it was clear it was going to be more of the same Sunday night.

But at 27, Biles has a perspective she wouldn’t have — couldn’t have — had as a younger gymnast. So when she noticed Suni Lee, whose career was nearly derailed last year by a kidney ailment, have a scary turn on vault, Biles did something not often seen in the sport.

Biles went to find Lee, who had gone backstage to try and compose herself, and ask if she was OK. She asked if Lee had gotten lost in the air, as Biles had at the Tokyo Olympics. When Lee said no, Biles told her to take a deep breath and trust in her gymnastics. Everything, Biles said, was going to be all right.

“She just helped boost me up and get my confidence back up because, at that point, I was kind of like thinking that this was over,” Lee said. “It was really nice having her in my corner. It just felt so good because I knew I was having a hard time, and she was just there.”

As collective fans of gymnastics can attest, we are all familiar with Simone Biles’ torrid time at the Tokyo Olympics because of the ‘twisties,’ a peculiar phenomenon in gymnastics where athletes suddenly lose their sense of spatial orientation mid-air during a routine. The same thing happened to Biles when she went for her vault in 2021, planning a 2½ twist but only managing 1½ before losing her bearings. She described it as scary, saying, ‘I had no idea where I was in the air. I could have hurt myself.’ This ‘twisties’ trouble led her to withdraw from the team final.

But initially, Biles was really scared about how people would react, “the world is going to hate me. That was my first thought … I thought I was going to be banned from America” for not winning gold. But instead, she got tons of support from fellow gymnasts and athletes from different sports. Michael Phelps, Michael McCahey, and Aly Raisman, as well as figures from outside the sport, such as Hoda Kotb, supported her. Even athletes from different countries rallied behind her, including an Irish athlete who is set to represent Ireland in the upcoming Paris Olympics, supported her.

Rising above mental challenges with power – Irish champ comes in clutch

Rhys McClenaghan, a 24-year-old gymnast who secured automatic qualification by retaining the pommel horse title at the World Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp in October 2023, supported Biles at that time when she faced twisties. McClenaghan first made his Olympic debut in 2021, finishing seventh in the pommel horse event in Tokyo. However, during the Tokyo Olympics, when he learned of Simone Biles’ exit, he spoke up in support of her. “Mental blocks ain’t no joke, I’ve experienced this firsthand throughout my career and they are still the most challenging times I’ve faced,” he tweeted on X. He further added, “Only people who have experienced this can fully understand the stress that comes with it.”

Since then, three years have passed, and McClenaghan himself has been diligently working on his mental approach. Last year, he faced a significant challenge when he suffered a panic attack for the first time just weeks before his gold medal triumph at the World Gymnastics Championships in 2023. However, he acknowledges the importance of his collaboration with his coach, Luke Carson, and sports psychologist Jessie Barr, especially after a difficult time at the Paris World Cup last year.

Reflecting on his experience, McClenaghan shared, “My body was completely healthy, I was physically ready, but my mind wasn’t quite happy, if I’m honest. Even in the warm-up before my routine in Paris, I was more nervous than I had ever been before – and, quite honestly, had a bit of a panic attack before I competed. It was a very strange feeling – a feeling that I had never experienced before.” Despite this challenge, McClenaghan persevered, conquered it, and is now vying for Paris, much like Biles is envisaging after the Tokyo 2020 farrago.

Simone Biles rises akin to a phoenix from the ashes

Simone Biles dazzled the world with her comeback at the 2023 World Championships in Belgium, snagging an impressive four gold medals and reaffirming her unmatched talent in gymnastics. Starting off this season with a bang, she cruised to victory at the Core Hydration Classics, leaving no doubt about her readiness for the upcoming Olympics. With Paris on the horizon, Biles is pouring her heart and soul into training, determined to leave the ghosts of Tokyo behind.

She shared her newfound focus on self-care and balancing life’s priorities. As she continues to dominate events like the U.S Classics and Xfinity Championship this year. As she recently puts it after winning the Xfinity Championship, “Just making sure I’m healthy mentally and physically, and I think at this point, mentally is just as important as I physically feel. So just making sure I go to my therapy sessions weekly.” The world eagerly awaits her moment of glory, anticipating another unforgettable performance from the incomparable Simone Biles.