Gymnastics-Many 'twisties' and turns, but Biles exits Games a champion
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[August 04, 2021]
By Steve Keating
TOKYO (Reuters) - Simone Biles was always expected to make headlines
at the Tokyo Olympics. The U.S. gymnast did just that, and more -
but not in a way anyone would have ever expected.
While Biles did not rewrite the Olympic record book as planned, she
did leave an indelible mark on the Tokyo Games, changing the
narrative from winning medals to championing athlete mental health
and well-being.
Suddenly everyday conversation revolved around the "the twisties", a
type of mental block where gymnasts are disoriented during their
gravity-defying skills and something few outside the sport had heard
of prior to the Tokyo Olympics.
The 24-year-old had come to Japan eyeing a record haul of six golds,
which would have made her the most successful female Olympian of
all-time across any sport. But instead she suffered a crisis of
confidence dropping out of the opening event, the team competition,
after just one vault.
For the next week Biles' story would overshadow everything else that
happened at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre, and much of the Games, as
she withdrew from event after event.
Not even the coronation of Japan's Daiki Hashimoto, the winner of
the men's all-around and high bar gold, plus a silver in the men's
team, as successor to his country's gymnastics great 'King' Kohei
Uchimura, could nudge Biles out of the Olympic spotlight.
The winner of four gold medals at the 2016 Olympics, Biles could
only look on from the sidelines as first the team title she led the
United States to in Rio went to the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC),
then her individual all-around crown was claimed by team mate Sunisa
Lee.
Another U.S. team mate, Jade Carey, would replace her as gold
medallist on the floor and Brazil's Rebeca Andrade would claim her
vault title.
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Bronze medallist Simone Biles of the
United States poses in front of the Olympic rings REUTERS/Mike Blake
But in one last dramatic twist, Biles
would return to action on the balance beam for the final event of
the women's gymnastics competition on Tuesday, hoping to end a
tumultuous Games on a golden high.
There would be no storybook ending. The final gold would go to
China's Guan Chenchen, but a courageous Biles would be hailed as a
champion nonetheless after taking the bronze, the same as she did
five years earlier in Rio.
A team silver and the beam bronze bring Biles' career Olympic haul
to seven medals, but that falls far below the target many had set
for the powerhouse American.
It was that pressure and expectation that appeared to derail Biles'
Olympics, and she spoke with remarkable candour about her decision
to prioritise her mental and physical well-being.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) acknowledged that more
needs to be done for athlete well-being, particularly those who have
spoken about the crushing weight that comes with competing in the
Olympic pressure cooker.
"More could be done," said IOC spokesman Mark Adams, adding that it
was a matter that the organisation had been working on for some
time.
As Biles exited the Olympic stage, she used it to issue a defiant
reminder that athletes are human after all.
"Mentally I still have a lot of things that I have to work on but to
bring the topic of conversation on mental health to light means the
world to me," said Biles.
"People have to realise that at the end of the day we're humans,
we're not just entertainment."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Tokyo; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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