Albany Times Union

Simone Biles in command after Olympic Trials opener. Lee, Chiles eye spots.

World and Olympic champ leads way at U.S. Trials after opening day of meet

- By Will Graves

Simone Biles is primed for Tokyo. The world and Olympic gymnastics champion put on a dazzling display during the U.S. Olympic Trials on Friday night, pulling out all the stops — well, almost all of them — on her way to a commanding lead and a spot in Japan next month.

Her all-around total of 60.565 included a 15.133 on beam that featured the “double-double” dismount named for her, a maneuver she’s kept under wraps since the 2019 world championsh­ips. She opted to skip the Yurchenko double-pike vault she unveiled in competitio­n last month and still posted the top score on the event.

Her floor exercise — the one that includes not one but two eponymous elements in the sport’s Code of Points — was both spectacula­r and spectacula­rly controlled. Clearly frustrated after stepping out of bounds several times while winning her seventh national title earlier this month, Biles kept her toes well inside the white lines during her law-of-physics pushing tumbling passes.

The top two all-around finishers Sunday night after the finals automatica­lly qualify for the Olympic team. Biles is a lock no matter what happens Sunday.

Sunisa Lee and Jordan Chiles are nearing that territory, too.

The trio of Biles, Lee and Chiles came in 1-2-3 at nationals. They’re in the same positions heading into the finals after Lee put up a 57.666, followed by Chiles at 57.132, more than a half-point ahead of Mykayla Skinner.

While many of her competitor­s eased back into competitio­n following a long break due to the COVID -19 pandemic, Chiles sprinted to the title at Winter Cup in February and has been a fixture in the top three in events ever since. Perhaps just as importantl­y, she’s seemingly become immune to the pressure. She’s now completed 20 events over the last four months, without a fall on any of them.

Not even Biles, who came off uneven bars at the U.S. Classic in May, can say that.

The selection committee has set aside 30 minutes after the end of finals to put the team together. They might need every last second of it to see who earns the fourth spot.

Skinner, 24, is making a pretty compelling case. An alternate in 2016, Skinner went to college after the Rio Olympics before returning to the elite level in 2019. She spent part of the COVID -19 pandemic shutdown battling the novel coronaviru­s and pneumonia.

Health scares behind her, she is putting on some of the best gymnastics of her career. Feeding off the energy inside an electric Dome at America’s Center, Skinner finished in the top five in three events, imploring the crowd to roar at the end of every dismount.

Skinner, Grace Mccallum and Kayla Dicello are separated by just threetenth­s of a point, with Kara Eaker a little further back. Dicello bounced back from a sluggish performanc­e in which she fell on multiple events to finish in the top six in three events.

The race for the “plus-one” specialist spot appears to be Riley Mccusker’s to lose. Her bars routine is world-class, her 14.800 score would put her in the mix for a medal in Tokyo if she were able to replicate it.

 ?? Jeff Roberson / Associated Press ?? Simone Biles looks back at the balance beam Friday. Biles had the top score on the apparatus in the U.S. Olympic Trials.
Jeff Roberson / Associated Press Simone Biles looks back at the balance beam Friday. Biles had the top score on the apparatus in the U.S. Olympic Trials.

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