Gymnastics: Diminutive Biles stands tall among greats
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[August 12, 2016]
By Pritha Sarkar
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - When Simone
Biles stood on her bare feet ready to mount the balance beam on
Thursday, it seemed like she would need to get on her tiptoes to
peer over the 1.25 meter (4.1 feet) apparatus.
But what the 1.45 meter Biles lacks in height, she more than makes
up in stature.
The American stood head and shoulders above all her rivals on
Thursday after she was crowned Olympic all-around champion.
For American team co-ordinator Marta Karolyi, who has enjoyed a
five-decade coaching career, there is only one other gymnast who can
be compared to Biles.
"She is right on the top," Karolyi, who along with her husband Bela
steered Romanian Nadia Comaneci to the first perfect 10 at the 1976
Olympics, told reporters.
"Along with Nadia ... both of them. For me, the first Olympic
champion and the last Olympic champion they are together. They are
special," added the 73-year-old, who will retire from coaching after
the Rio Games.
That puts Biles above many great gymnasts that Karolyi has worked
with in a long and distinguished career.
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She helped Mary Lou Retton to become the first American to win an
Olympic all-around gold in 1984, had a hand in Kerri Strug's heroic
vault at the 1996 Games and guided Olympic all-around champions
Nastia Liukin and Gabby Douglas among others.
"THREE-PEAT"
Since making her debut at the 2013 world championships, the
19-year-old Biles has become an unstoppable force. Last year she
became the first woman to win a "three-peat" of all-around golds at
the worlds.
In Antwerp, Nanning and Glasgow she flew through the air faster and
higher than her rivals, completing her acrobatic tumbles with solid
landings.
Those skills also helped the gymnast nicknamed '$imoney' to become
the most successful female athlete at the worlds -- with a record
haul of 10 gold medals.
"She flies higher than anyone, has bigger difficulty value than we
have ever seen, but what is even more impressive is that she
delivers in the big meets," 2004 Olympic men's floor champion Kyle
Shewfelt told Reuters.
"She is the most powerful, dynamic gymnast I have ever seen.
"She is breaking records left, right and center. At these Games she
now has two medals and she could win another three so her bags are
going to be a lot heavier on the way home."
Biles, though, wants no part of the debate.
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Simone Biles of USA celebrates winning gold in the women's
gymnastics individual all-around final. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
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"Someone could say I'm the best but then there is a whole different
side of people saying I am not. So, I just stay out of it. It is
what it is. I just do my gymnastics," she said after collecting her
second Olympic gold in three days.
EXCLUSIVE CLUB
On Thursday, Biles completed a feat that no woman has pulled off for
20 years -- winning back-to-back world and Olympic all-around
titles.
Since the event was introduced to the Olympic program in 1952 only
Soviet Union duo Larisa Latynina (1960) and Ludmilla Tourischeva
(1972), Czech Vera Caslavska (1968) and Ukraine's Lilia Podkopayeva
(1996) have bagged the double. And now Biles.
"Just because you are at the top doesn't mean you can stop, you have
to keep going," said Biles.
The American was too young to compete at the 2012 Olympics, but she
was a senior at the start of the current Olympic cycle in 2013.
That meant sustaining her levels for four years, a stretch that is
beyond most elite gymnasts but not Biles.
"Some girls in generations before thought that by winning one world
championship or winning two, they think they arrived at the top,"
added Karolyi.
"My advice is ... you are just as good as you are today. So you
never can think I am done. Every single day you have to become
better and better and Simone responded very well to this advice and
I am so proud because of this.
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"The longevity at this level, three world championships and an
Olympic Games, I don’t think is precedented."
(Additional reporting by Andrew Downie. Editing by Patrick Johnston)
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