Olympian Hezly Rivera edges Leanne
Wong for victory at the US gymnastics championships
[August 11, 2025]
By WILL GRAVES
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Hezly Rivera was the fresh face a year ago. The
newcomer. The teenager on a team of 20-something Olympic gymnasts,
doing her best to absorb what she could from Simone Biles, Sunisa
Lee, Jade Carey and Jordan Chiles.
The one thing that stood out, even more than the sometimes
otherworldly gymnastics, is the way her fellow gold-medal-winning
teammates went about their business.
“They looked so confident,” Rivera said. “They're like, ‘I’m going
to go out and I'm going to hit.' It gave me that confidence as
well.”
Looks like it.
The now 17-year-old who says she's paying no attention to the idea
that she's the leader of the women's program in the early stages of
the run-up to the 2028 Olympics certainly looks the part.
Buoyed by a polished steadiness — and a beam routine that finally
looked the way it does back home at her home gym in Texas — Rivera
captured her first national title Sunday night at the U.S.
Championships. Her two-day total of 112.000 was good enough to fend
off a challenge from Leanne Wong and put her in excellent position
to lead the four-woman American delegation at the world
championships in Jakarta, Indonesia, in October.
Rivera, by far the youngest member of the five-woman team that
finished atop the podium in Paris a year ago, bounced back from a
shaky performance at the U.S. Classic last month with the kind of
measured, refined gymnastics that she attributed to simply “letting
go” of whatever pressure she might feel as the lone Olympic gold
medalist in a remarkably young field.

“No matter how rough the competition is, I still can get back into
the gym and work hard because all those months previously that I’ve
been working hard, I know it’s going to show up eventually,” she
said. “So it kind of just took a weight off my shoulders.”
Rivera, at the very least, locked up a spot in the world
championship selection camp next month. So did Wong, a four-time
world championship medalist, budding entrepreneur and pre-med
student who shows no signs of slowing down despite years of
competing collegiately and at the elite level simultaneously.
Asked how she juggles it all, the 21-year-old who insists she
doesn't keep a planner said she lives by the motto “there's time for
everything.”
Joscelyn Roberson, an Olympic alternate last summer, shook off an
ankle injury suffered at the end of her floor routine to finish
third as the three most internationally experienced athletes in the
field looked ready to lead after spending most of the last Olympic
quad learning from Biles and company.
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Overall gold medalist Hezly Rivera of WOGA, center, silver medalist
Leanne Wong, of the University of Florida, left, and bronze medalist
Joscelyn Roberson, of World Champions Centre, right, pose after the
senior women's finals of the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New
Orleans, Sunday, Aug. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

“You go from, ‘Oh you’re so young, you’re so
young,’ to, ‘Oh, you are the older kid,’” the 19-year-old Roberson
said. “People say, ‘How are you feeling?’ Like, I honestly don’t
feel that different.”
Two summers ago, Roberson was Biles' bouncy sidekick. Now she's
among the leaders of the next wave.
“I felt like more responsible to let the little, smaller, less
experienced kids know it’s not the end of the day if you have a bad
day or if you had one fall,” Roberson said. “I want to help them
grow instead of think ‘I have to be perfect.’”
Roberson then walked the walk. Or maybe limped the limp. She
appeared ready to make it a three-woman race for first until she
turned an ankle on the final tumbling pass of her floor routine.
The rising sophomore at Arkansas gingerly continued on anyway. She
gritted her way through her vault dismount, though the five-tenths
(0.5) deduction for using an additional pad for her protection took
her out of contention for the all-around.
Still, the victory hardly came easy for Rivera. She was pushed
through four rotations by Wong, who started Sunday with a stuck
Cheng vault and didn't relent over the course of two hours.
Rivera responded each time — she posted the top scores on three of
the four events — but it wasn't until she walked off the podium
following her floor routine with victory in hand that she could
relax.
“Everything fell into place,” Rivera said. “I tried not to get too
overwhelmed because nerves obviously can be there, especially when
you know you’re in a spot to win a national title, but I just took
all pressure off myself.”
Skye Blakely, who was injured at the Olympic Trials in both 2021 and
2024, was sublime on both uneven bars and balance beam to put
herself in consideration to make the world team.
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