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Simone Biles dominates vault, takes the lead at US Gymnastics Championships.

Simone Biles Soars to New Heights at U.S. Championships

SAN JOSE, Calif.—Laurent Landi stood on ​the mat, arms slightly​ outstretched. He‍ took one small step to his right. ‌Then another.

Above him, above everyone really, Simone Biles soared through the air. Her arms clasped behind her knees. Her legs at a perfect 90-degree angle from her body.

Landi’s decision to stand there was one of his conditions if⁢ Biles ​wanted to attempt a Yurchenko Double Pike, a vault‌ so daunting few men have attempted it and no woman has ever completed it in international competition.

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On⁤ Friday night at the U.S. Championships, all it did was ⁢give Landi, Biles’ longtime coach, a close-up view of an athlete that somehow at age 26 appears to ‌be as⁤ good ⁢as ever. Maybe better.

Biles rotated perfectly and landed with a small ⁢hop. The arms Landi had extended just in case instead led a cheer that sent a jolt through the SAP Center.

Those two ‌seconds of brilliance provided the signature moment during two hours that showcased ​that now, a full decade into her run atop her sport, there ‍is Biles and then there is everyone else.

Her all-around total ​of 59.300 was well ahead ‌of a brilliant Shilese Jones in second at 56.750 and put Biles‍ in position to win a record eighth national championship on Sunday night. Biles’ total included a 15.7 for her showstopping vault, a score that included a near-perfect 9.8 for execution and a half-point neutral deduction ‌for having Landi nearby.

Landi has no plans to ditch his post, though he could only shake his head when asked if a Yurchenko double pike is supposed to ‍look that easy.

“No, it’s‌ not normal,” he said. “She’s not normal.”

No. She’s ‍not.

Wearing a bedazzled purple leotard and with her family in the stands rocking matching T-shirts that read “Still I Rise,” Biles put the disappointment of the ‌2020 Olympics and her battles with the mental block known as “the ⁣twisties” further in her rearview mirror.

Three weeks after ‍a dazzling comeback meet in Chicago, Biles looked just as crisp while chasing history.⁣ There were ⁤mistakes here and there. She wobbled while mounting the balance beam and moments later nearly came off while trying ‍to complete ​a wolf turn. Her ⁣peerless floor routine included a deduction for ⁣stepping out⁤ of bounds.

Otherwise, it was hard to tell if it was 2023 or 2013, when she claimed her​ first national title. She was a ​16-year-old prodigy then, still trying to harness her considerable talents.

Simone ‍Biles competes in the floor exercise ​at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships, in San Jose, Calif., on Aug. 25, 2023. (Jed Jacobsohn/AP Photo)

Now she’s a⁢ 20-something newlywed not yet ready to leave a sport‌ she ⁣has redefined. The comeback she was sort of ‍iffy on until late spring only seems to be picking up speed. While she’s hardly getting ahead of herself—she made it a ⁣point not to say the words “Olympics” or “Paris” after her⁢ victory in the U.S.⁢ Classic—her performance is speaking louder than‌ any sequined-GOAT leotard ever could.

The YDP offered proof. She ‌toyed with it in 2021‍ but ‍never had‍ a chance to ‍attempt it in Tokyo, ⁢which would have added the vault to the ​sport’s Code of Points ​with her ‌name next to it. The one she completed⁤ on Friday may have ‍been better than any she’s⁣ done at her home gym back in Houston.

“She’s one of the rare gymnasts that go to ⁤meet and does it even ⁣better under pressure,” Landi said. “If she’s very ready, at meets you’re going to see her explode.”

Biles certainly appears ready to have her ⁢passport stamped for Belgium in the fall when the U.S.⁢ women head to Antwerp for⁤ the world⁢ championships.

There’s a good chance Jones and Skye Blakely will join her.

Jones, the runner-up at nationals last⁤ year⁣ and a⁢ three-time silver medalist at the 2022 world championships, put together ​a bar routine that‍ included a stunning​ 14.9 on⁤ uneven bars. At 5-foot—tall for a gymnast—Jones ‌is a study in fluidity and grace, with a dash of grit.

She’s endured a turbulent two years since narrowly missing the⁢ 2020 Olympic team. Her father Sylvester died in December 2021 following ​a battle with kidney​ disease. Her leotard includes the date of her father’s passing stitched in Roman numerals on one of the sleeves.



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