The Oklahoman

Qualifying had better be a wake-up call

- Nancy Armour Columnist

TOKYO — Simone Biles and the U.S. women can still win the gold medal that has come to be expected as their birthright, or they could wind up on the wrong end of one of the most epic upsets in Olympic history.

That there’s no telling which way it’s going to go is almost as big a shock as the possibilit­y itself.

For the first time in more than a decade – the 2010 world championsh­ips, to be exact – the American women on Sunday failed to finish anywhere but first, in either qualifying or the finals, at the Olympics or world championsh­ips.

This wasn’t a matter of one or two routines gone wrong, or some fluky result that will be impossible to duplicate. The Americans finished qualifying more than a point behind Russia, and that kind of gap should set off screeching alarms for everyone associated with the program.

“This was not the finals. This was getting into the finals,” national team coordinato­r Tom Forster said. “This might be a great awakening for us, and we’ll take advantage of it.”

Only if they realize that this could happen again. That, even with Biles, they are beatable.

There is a difference between handling pressure and handling adversity, and this group has never had to do the latter. They have the talent and the training, but do they have the humility to recognize that Russia has narrowed the gap on them and respond accordingl­y?

The laughter and smiles of the women at the end of the session didn’t seem reflective of a team that had gotten a wakeup call, and it’s impossible to know what was really going through their minds.

USA Gymnastics said even before the meet ended that the women would not be stopping in the mixed zone, a move out of the norm at the Olympics for even the biggest-named U.S. athletes. Even after getting embarrasse­d by Sweden in their Olympic opener Wednesday night, members of the U.S. women’s soccer team stopped to talk.

Forster didn’t seem overly concerned, either, putting the poor performanc­e down on mental errors that are easily fixed. This is the first Olympics for Suni Lee, Grace McCallum and Jordan Chiles, he pointed out, and Chiles has never even been to a world championsh­ips before.

But Forster got testy when he was questioned about the decision to take McCallum for the team over MyKayla Skinner. Whatever the choice, he said after Olympic trials, it wouldn’t matter because the gold medal wasn’t “going to come down to tenths of a point.”

McCallum, up first on the Americans’ first event, floor exercise, bounced out of bounds on her opening tumbling pass. The Americans wound up counting her scores on all events, and Skinner’s would have been higher on everything but uneven bars.

“If anybody out there complained about USA Gymnastics only thought about medals, that was not the point. We did not make decisions over a couple of tenths for another medal,” Forster said. “We went on rank order because we thought it was a good order and I still feel good about it.”

To be fair, everyone had a hand in this debacle.

Lee’s floor routine wasn’t crisp, and she landed her vault low. Chiles, who hadn’t made a major mistake in her previous four meets this year, dragged her feet on the mat as she transition­ed from the high bar to low, and fell off balance beam.

Even Biles wasn’t immune. She bounced completely off the carpet on floor exercise, her feet nearly slipping out from beneath her, and also landed out of bounds on her first vault, both errors costing her three-tenths in deductions. She also overcooked her dismount on balance beam and stumbled three steps back.

“We’ll just focus on fixing the mistakes,” Forster said. “Staying in bounds would help.”

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