The Guardian (USA)

‘I’m not a little girl anymore’: Simone Biles on world domination, pandemic ennui and staying on for Paris 2024

- Bryan Armen Graham

So much has changed in the five years since Simone Biles lit up the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, affirming her presumptiv­e status as the greatest gymnast ever with four gold medals in seven days.

The 24-year-old from suburban Houston moved out of her parents’ house into her own digs, adopted two French Bulldog puppies (Lilo and Rambo) and went public with boyfriend Jonathan Owens, a safety for the NFL’s Houston Texans. She enlisted the husband-and-wife coaching team of Laurent Landi and Cecile Canqueteau-Landi following an amicable split with longtime personal coach Aimee Boorman. The sport she’s come to define was rocked by the worst sexual abuse scandal in American sports history. And her bid for a historic second straight Olympic all-around title was waylaid by a global pandemic that turned the sports world on its ear.

But as America’s greatest athlete enters the final stages of preparatio­ns for the reschedule­d Tokyo Games this summer, one familiar constant endures: her only competitio­n is herself.

“I’m not a little girl anymore,” Biles said this week. “I feel like I’ve really found my voice and kind of used that for good in the world and on social media platforms, so that’s been a big plus. I live on my own now, I have a house, I have a dog. I feel like I’ve just grown so much these past few years into the young woman I am today. I’m really excited about life and what’s to come and how I’ve changed and evolved as a person.”

The 4ft 8in, 105lb dynamo, who was born three months short of the age cutoff for the 2012 London Games, was already hailed as the best gymnast in history before she’d even competed at an Olympics. Now she’s the runaway favorite to become the oldest woman in more than five decades to win the Olympic all-around title, the sport’s most coveted prize, and the first repeat champion since Vera Caslavska did it for the former Czechoslov­akia in 1968.

“We’re four months out. I’m feeling pretty good, pretty confident. All of our training has geared us for this moment, so I’m just super excited for the journey,” Biles said. “It’s been tough, but during our time off, we still did Zoom workouts with our coaches, so we were still engaged. And as soon as we got back in the gym, it was kind of just like full speed again, to try to get ready and gear up for this year’s Games. It’s been tough, but it’s definitely been worth it.”

For Biles, who has won every major team and individual all-around competitio­n she’s entered since her senior debut in 2013, Tokyo was long expected to be the capstone of an incandesce­nt career. But she threw the sport a curveball this week by leaving the door open for a third Olympic appearance at the Paris Games in 2024, when she would be 28.

“Honestly, right now my main focus is the Olympic Games, and then after I have the tour that we’ve put together,” Biles said. “Then afterwards I’m not so sure, because Cecile and Laurent are from Paris and they’ve kind of guilted me into at least being a specialist and coming back [for 2024]. But the main goal is 2021 Olympics, tour, and then we’ll have to see.”

After her star-making coronation in Rio, Biles returned home to the whirlwind, peripateti­c existence of a mainstream celebrity, slingshott­ing around the US for red-carpet walks, glossy photo shoots and Dancing With the Stars. Then came a hard-earned series of vacations with the family and friends she’d sacrificed so much of her teenage years for.

It seemed there was no room to go but down. But when she returned to competitio­n after a year-and-a-half hiatus, Biles continued to rewrite the record books while somehow raising her level on the biggest stages, eclipsing Vitaly Scherbo’s record as the most decorated gymnast in world championsh­ips history with 25 career medals. To the resignatio­n of her rivals, she’s proven untouchabl­e even when below her best: Her margin of victory at 2018 worlds was the largest ever despite two falls and a kidney stone that sent her to a Doha emergency room less than 24 hours before she was scheduled to compete.

Then came the pandemic, followed by the inevitable postponeme­nt of her much-anticipate­d Olympic encore.

“The main thing was just like trying to stay healthy another year, trying to have your mental game up another year,” Biles said. “It’s another year on the body. It’s just a lot to think about, but then at the end of the day, it’s like we worked so hard. We’re not going to give up. We’re going to keep striving for this goal that all the athletes have kind of put in their head is the 2020 Olympics. And once it was postponed, it’s like I’ve gone too far to give up now. So, we’re going to take a little bit of a break.

“And we did. We quarantine­d for seven weeks before we got to ease back into the gym. And once we did that, we still were doing one workout a day before we could go back to two workouts and that honesty kind of helped keep my spirit up and think that it was going to be OK. Now, obviously, I’m still a year older, but it’s been my goal for a while and I wasn’t ready to hang that up just because of the quarantine and the postponeme­nt.”

Biles found silver linings in the disappoint­ment, including the opportunit­y to take leave from her grueling six-hour-a-day, six-day-a-week training sessions and spent more time with her loved ones.

“I was able just to kind of gather my thoughts and protect and take care of my body, my mind, my spirit,” Biles said. “But what’s been really exciting is being able to experience life with my family, my friends, getting to go to my boyfriend’s games. I told him I’ve never been so many games in a season in my life because usually I’m just so busy all over the place.

 ??  ?? Simone Biles has only built on her reputation as the best gymnast in history since propelling to mainstream celebrity at Rio 2016. Photograph: Dylan Coulter/The Guardian
Simone Biles has only built on her reputation as the best gymnast in history since propelling to mainstream celebrity at Rio 2016. Photograph: Dylan Coulter/The Guardian
 ??  ?? Simone Biles vaulted to crossover stardom after winning four golds and a bronze at the 2016 Olympics. Photograph: Tim Warner
Simone Biles vaulted to crossover stardom after winning four golds and a bronze at the 2016 Olympics. Photograph: Tim Warner

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States