Olympics gymnastics latest: Simone Biles wins gold at all-around finals

Simone Biles held off Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade for all-around Olympics gymnastics gold

ByThe Associated Press
August 1, 2024, 11:58 AM

PARIS -- Simone Biles held off Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade for all-around Olympics gymnastics gold. At 27, she’s the oldest Olympic women’s gymnastics champ since 1952.

Biles is wearing a silver goat necklace, holding it up for cameras to see.

American fans are on the verge of apoplexy.

Bercy Arena exploded into cheers and applause when the results of the all-around flashed on the big screens, with Biles’s name at the top.

As Biles rushed to the center of the mat with Sunisa Lee to celebrate with an American flag, phones are all out — including Kevin Durant and several of his Team USA teammates — nobody wants to miss a single moment of that historic scene.

Some numbers on Simone Biles’ Olympic dominance ...

    1. 6: Her new total of Olympic golds, third-most in women’s gymnastics history. Larisa Latynina of the Soviet Union won nine and Czechoslovakia’s Vera Caslavska won seven.

    2. 9: Her new total of Olympic medals, the seventh woman with at least that many.

    3. 34: The number of consecutive all-around competitions at the national and international level she has won, a streak that goes back to 2013.

    4. $75,000: The number of dollars in bonus money she’s won from the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee so far in these Paris Games. The Americans pay $37,500 for gold medals.

The U.S. was the first nation to win five straight women’s all-around Olympic gold medals when Sunisa Lee prevailed at the Tokyo Games three years ago.

Make it six.

Simone Biles is now the third woman to win two Olympic all-around titles. Lee won in Tokyo, Biles at Rio de Janeiro in 2016, Gabby Douglas at London in 2012, Nastia Liukin at Beijing in 2008 and Carly Patterson at Athens in 2004.

The earliest another nation could pass the U.S. for this run of consecutive all-around dominance: 2052, and that’s if one country wins the next seven Olympic titles in that event.

Here we go. Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade finished the all-around competition with a score of 57.932.

That means Simone Biles, the final competitor, needs a 13.867 on the floor for gold.

In a couple minutes, we’ll know the final answer.

Biles’ seven gold medals in Olympic and world championship all-around competitions have come by an average margin of victory of 1.446 points.

(That’s a lot in gymnastics.)

Her lead over Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade going into the fourth and final rotation of all-around at the Paris Games on Thursday night: 0.166 points.

To the floor we go, to decide gold.

A couple of tiny slip-ups didn’t seem to hurt Biles on the beam as she tries to close in on Andrade.

Biles’ score: 14.566. She entered the third rotation about a quarter-point behind Andrade.

Translation: it’s likely going to be very close going into the floor exercise, which will decide gold.

Andrade is in the lead midway through the all-around final.

Andrade’s uneven bars routine was a model of fluidity while Biles botched a transition that dropped her to third overall, 0.267 points behind Andrade.

Algerian specialist Kaylia Nemour, as expected, posted the best score on bars, a massive 15.533 that pushed her past Biles for all-around. She trails Andrade by just 0.200 points, but she’s unlikely to keep pace on the remaining apparatuses.

Simone Biles has a fight on her hands for the Olympic all-around title.

Biles trails Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade by 0.267 through two rotations. The duo next heads to the balance beam, where Biles was second during qualifying and Andrade third.

Biles will be the first gymnast up during the rotation, with Andrade going last.

The two will finish the night on floor exercise, where the difficulty of Biles’ routine gives her a significant advantage. If Biles can stay on the beam, she would be well positioned to pass Andrade after floor.

Biles has made her first big mistake of the Olympics.

She botched a transition from the upper bar to the lower bar, a miscue that messed with her momentum and forced her to muscle her way back into her routine.

Biles was visibly annoyed as she made her way off the podium.

Her score of 13.733 dropped her behind Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade through two rotations.

Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, Devin Booker and other members of the U.S. Olympic men’s basketball team are in Paris to watch Simone Biles in the women’s all-around competition.

It wasn’t a surprise: When the team got together for training camp, it was basically unanimous that Biles was the athlete that they most wanted to see at the Paris Games.

The basketball team will be in the arena where gymnastics is being held starting next week, when the quarterfinals of their Olympic tournament take place on Tuesday.

Lee faceplanted during her warmup on uneven bars. It’s the second time she’s done that this week, but it hasn’t really hampered her. She was as good as ever there in qualifying when it counted.

Biles submitted a unique skill on uneven bars to the International Gymnastics Federation last week.

It’s unlikely we’ll see it during the all-around final.

Biles is only expected to do the move, which requires her to do a 540-degree turn while holding a handstand on the lower bar, if she makes the uneven bars final. She is currently the first alternate after qualifying ninth on the event.

Biles brought out the Yurchenko double pike vault after passing on doing one during the team final to protect her tender left calf.

Biles is the only woman to ever complete the vault in competition and it carries her name in the sport’s Code of Points. The move requires her to do a roundoff back handspring onto the vaulting table, followed by two back flips while clasping her legs.

She took a sizable step back on her dismount but otherwise kept it under control.

Biles is off and running in her quest for another Olympic all-around title. Her score on the vault: 15.766.

It’s a significant lead over Andrade’s 15.100 already, with three events left for both.

There was speculation Andrade could attempt a Yurchenko triple twist during the final.

The Brazilian gymnast submitted the vault to be named after her in the sport’s Code of Points. She has performed it at training but did not try it the all-around. She instead opted for a difficult Cheng that earned her 15.100 points. It was nearly flawless.

She will have another chance to perform the Yurchenko triple twist in the vault final next week. If she succeeds, the vault would be the first skill named after Andrade.

The defending Olympic all-around champion is behind her Tokyo pace at the start.

Sunisa Lee was the first athlete on the vault, and the 21-year-old American who won the title at the Tokyo Games three years ago took a bit of a hop on the landing. Her score was 13.933.

Her score on the vault in the Tokyo all-around: 14.600.

Biles and Lee aren’t the only American women in the all-around final.

Luisa Blanco, a Texas native and recent Alabama graduate, made the final while competing for Colombia. Blanco’s parents are Colombian and she obtained dual citizenship over the last year.

She began competing for Colombia last fall and her performance at the Pan American Games helped her earn a spot under the rings.

The 24 athletes have been introduced at the women’s all-around competition, with Simone Biles coming out last and to the biggest ovation, of course.

Biles and U.S. teammate Sunisa Lee — the reigning all-around Olympic champion — will open on vault for their first rotation.

Simone Biles, Sunisa Lee and the rest of the all-around finalists are on the floor.

There are two components to Olympics gymnastics scoring: The difficulty or D-score is what a gymnast does. The execution or E-score is how well they do it.

Technically, there’s no limit on how high the D-score can go, but most elite routines top out between 5.4 and 6.0. Some exceptional ones can go higher — for example, Biles’ floor routine at the team finals had a 6.8 D-score.

The E-table is based on a 10-point system, though no perfect 10 for execution has ever been awarded anywhere since the new paradigm was introduced (Simone Biles has come close a couple of times on vault). Anything over 8 is good.

The two scores are added together. A total of 13.0 or better is solid. Anything in the 14s is excellent and puts you in medal contention. A 15 or better (typically reserved for vault and typically reserved for Biles) and you’re pretty much assured of a gold medal.

During the all-around finals, each gymnast is judged on vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor, and their scores are added together. Highest total wins.

Biles and Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade are rivals — and friends.

“It’s an honor to be able to compete alongside her,” Andrade said after leading Brazil to the bronze medal in the team’s competition won by the U.S. team in Paris. “She’s a reference and a role model for the whole world of gymnastics. And also for other athletes.”

Andrade and Biles made their Olympic debut together in Rio eight years ago.

“To be able to watch how she competes and see how happy she is to compete, the hard work she does, it’s fantastic to witness,” the 25-year-old Andrade said. “I don’t know what will happen when she’s not around any more. I don’t even know if I’m still around (by that time), either.”

Andrade won the gold medal in the vault at the Tokyo Olympics and was runner-up in the all-around to Sunisa Lee.

Simone Biles has had five skills named after her in the gymnastics’ Code of Points after completing them in competition.

There’s a chance Biles could add a sixth element at the Olympics, where she has submitted a new skill on uneven bars.

She did not attempt the skill during qualifying or the team finals but could try it during the all-around competition.

▶ Read about the skills named after Biles and the one she might add

If this was “Jeopardy!,” here’s your answer: Kyla Ross.

The question: “Who was the last gymnast to beat Simone Biles in a major all-around competition?”

It was March 30, 2013, at something called the Chemnitz Friendly in Germany, when Ross won the all-around gold and Biles finished second.

Biles has competed in 33 different all-around competitions since — Olympics, Olympic trials, world championships, U.S. championships and so on — and won the gold at every one of them. That obviously doesn’t include the Tokyo Games, where she withdrew and did not compete in the all-around.

Biles will try to run her streak to 34 straight all-around golds at the Paris Games later Thursday night.

Jordan Chiles posted the fourth best all-around score during qualifying Sunday, but she won’t compete for individual all-around gold.

The reason? Each country can only have two athletes in the all-around finals. Simone Biles was first and Sunisa Lee was third in qualifying, taking both of the spots open to U.S. gymnasts.

Chiles does have one more chance at a medal this weekend after qualifying for the finals on floor. She also had a good enough score to qualify on vault, but she didn’t make that final because she finished behind countrymates Biles and Jade Carey.

Simone Biles, Rebeca Andrade and Sunisa Lee — the top three finishers in all-around qualifying — will compete in the same rotation tonight, starting on vault. They’ll move to uneven bars, balance beam and then floor.

If the scores are tight heading into floor, Biles has the advantage of getting to see how the others fare before starting her final event. Biles’ floor routine will be the last event of the night.

Biles has an 11-year unbeaten streak in the all-around in meets she has started and finished into the finals. It’s a run that has included an Olympic gold in Rio de Janeiro and six world titles and nine U.S. Championships.

If she finishes atop the podium at 27 years, four months and 18 days, she will be the oldest all-around champion since then 30-year-old Maria Gorokhovskaya of the Soviet Union during the first women’s all-around competition in 1952.

Some more perspective on how long Biles has been on top: Olympic teammate Hezly Rivera had just turned 5 the year Biles won her first national and world titles.

The women’s final marks the first time since the Olympics began offering an individual gold medal in the all-around in 1952 that there have been multiple Olympic champions in the same final.

Biles triumphed in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, with Lee earning the gold in Tokyo three years ago.

If either of them win, they will be the first woman to claim multiple Olympic all-around golds since Vera Caslavska of Czechoslovakia went back-to-back in 1964 and 1968.

Larisa Latynina of the Soviet Union also won consecutive golds in 1952 and 1956.

Interest in adult gymnastics across the United States is rising in lockstep with the careers of Olympians like Simone Biles.

There are now hundreds of meets a year that offer opportunities for adults to compete. Many of the adults are former gymnasts who stepped away from the sport because they felt opportunities had dried up.

Those opportunities are returning, allowing the athletes to reconnect with the sport on their terms.

▶ Read more about the rise of adult gymnastics

The 27-year-old has kept quiet about her future plans, saying her focus after leaving Paris will be on the post-Olympic tour she headlines. Biles is also married and has talked openly about the fear of missing out on life milestones because of her time in the gym.

Still, Cecile Landi — who has coached Biles with her husband Laurent since late 2017 — perhaps offered a little bit of insight after the American women won team gold Tuesday.

“She wanted to rewrite her story, the end,” Landi said.

Landi then added a small asterisk.

“Well, that’s what she says now.”

Here is an interesting stat about the might of the U.S women’s team:

Simone Biles, the 2016 Olympic champion, will be competing against teammate Sunisa Lee in the all-around final. Lee is the Tokyo gold medalist. It’s the first time in history that two Olympic all-around champions will compete in an all-around final at the Games.

Celebrity spotting was again part of the event at a raucous Bercy Arena when Simone Biles powered a dominant U.S. women’s gymnastics team to the Olympic title on Tuesday night.

A-listers Nicole Kidman, Natalie Portman and Serena Williams gathered at the Olympic venue to watch the most decorated athlete in the history of gymnastics during the team final. Spike Lee, Michael Phelps and former ace gymnast Nadia Comaneci were also in the crowd.

Lady Gaga, Tom Cruise and Jessica Chastain attended Biles’ return to the Olympics when she competed in qualifying Sunday.

Watching the celebrations after the Paris Olympics women’s gymnastics team final Tuesday, it was tough to tell who had won.

The Simone Biles -led U.S. team? Brazil star Rebeca Andrade and her teammates? Or the Italian team led by 17-year-old Manila Esposito?

The Americans’ total of 171.296 made Biles the most decorated Olympic gymnast in U.S. history with an eighth medal.

But it was a historic day for Italy and Brazil, too.

▶ Read more about the silver and bronze team medalists

Shinnosuke Oka won the men’s all-around gymnastics title at the Paris Olympics on Wednesday, upsetting the two main favorites to extend Japan’s dominance in a final that came down to the wire.

The former junior world champion whose career was put on hold by a serious knee injury two years ago edged Zhang Boheng and Xiao Ruoteng, both of China, to claim his second gold medal in three days at his first Olympics, by just 0.233 points.

“I did not make any mistake at these Olympic Games,” Oka said. “I was a challenger, but I wanted to win.”

▶ Read more about the men’s all-around finals

MyKayla Skinner isn’t on the U.S. gymnastics team in Paris, but the vault silver medalist in Tokyo has still been part of the discussion.

Skinner drew criticism last month for saying the U.S. Center for SafeSport is making it difficult for coaches to do their job. In a since-deleted YouTube video, she says that coaches “can’t get on athletes” out of fear of being reported to SafeSport. SafeSport is an independent entity that handles allegations of abuse from various governing bodies across the U.S. Olympic movement.

Skinner later walked back her comments in an Instagram post, saying she did not intend to disrespect Simone Biles and the five-woman U.S. gymnastics team.

Biles seems to be disrespected anyway. After winning the team gold Tuesday, Biles posted celebratory photos on Instagram with the caption “lack of talent, lazy, olympic champions” — an apparent jab at Skinner’s criticisms.

▶ Read about more about Skinner’s comments

Competition begins at 6:15 p.m. CEST (12:15 p.m. EDT) at Bercy Arena and will air live in the United States on NBC.

You can also stream the competition live or re-watch the action on the Peacock App.

▶ Read more about how to watch the 2024 Paris Olympics

Simone Biles, fresh off leading the U.S. women’s gymnastics team back to the gold medal in team competition, returns to the mat in Thursday action at the Paris Olympics.

Biles will attempt to become the oldest women’s all-around champion since 1952 when the 27-year-old American star takes on a field that includes Brazilian star Rebeca Andrade and defending Olympic champion Sunisa Lee.

Maria Gorokhovskaya was 30 when she won the gold at the 1952 Helsinki Games.

Biles and Lee will attempt to continue a streak of an American atop the medal stand for a sixth consecutive Olympic title. Carly Patterson won at the 2004 Athens Games, Nastia Liukin at the 2008 Beijing Games, Gabby Douglas at the 2012 London Games, Biles at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games and Lee at the Tokyo Games three years ago.

The event will mark the first all-around final that will include multiple Olympic champions in Lee and Biles.

▶ Read more about today’s Olympics schedule