Current:Home > ContactHow Simone Biles separated herself from the competition with mastery of one skill -NextGenWealth
How Simone Biles separated herself from the competition with mastery of one skill
View
Date:2025-04-14 15:51:27
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Fifteen seconds.
That’s all the time Simone Biles needs to dazzle the world with a vault few humans are even willing to try. Put an effective end to a meet, too.
Already in a class by herself, Biles’ mastery of the Yurchenko double pike will distance her even further from the competition. No matter how high a score other gymnasts put up on uneven bars or balance beam, they will not come close to what Biles does on vault.
Especially when she makes it look as effortless as she did Friday night.
“No. No. No. It's not normal. She's not normal," Laurent Landi, Biles' co-coach, said. "She makes it in training, but she's one of the rare gymnasts that goes to the meet and does it even better under the pressure."
Ahead of the London Olympics, the U.S. women perfected the Amanar, another Yurchenko-style vault. Each of the Americans in the lineup for the team final had one while other countries were lucky if they had one gymnast who could do it. It provided such a big scoring advantage the Americans had the gold medal won after the first event.
The Yurchenko double pike gives Biles a similar advantage.
Biles is already the best in the world, a four-time Olympic champion who’s won more medals, and more gold medals, at the world championships than any other gymnast. In only her second competition in two years, her score of 59.3 on the first night of the U.S. championships was nearly 2½ points better than what Rebeca Andrade scored to win her first world title last year.
World silver medalist Shilese Jones was second Friday night, but the gap — 2.4 points — between her and Biles was larger than the gap between Jones and Jordan Chiles, who is in fifth place.
And that was with mistakes by Biles on both balance beam and floor exercise.
“I'm pretty happy with the overall meet today,” Biles told NBC after the meet. “My goal for the weekend is just to hit eight-for-eight and then hopefully come in on Sunday and hit a little bit of a smoother beam routine."
Biles has never been driven by the competition, however. It’s about testing herself, pushing both her own boundaries and those of the sport, and there’s no bigger test right now than the Yurchenko double pike.
The line between success and serious injury is incredibly fine with the Yurchenko double pike. It has no bailout, meaning a gymnast is likely to land on his or her head or neck if they’re even the slightest bit off. It’s why Biles is the only woman to even try it in competition — Friday night was the third time she’s done it, after the U.S. Classic earlier this month and in 2021 — and why few men do it.
Watching her do the Yurchenko double pike, it’s obvious how much strength is required for Biles to pull her body around twice in a piked position. Her hands grip her thighs as she rotates, and her torso is taut. Only after she lands do she and Landi break into smiles.
But for as difficult as it is, as hard as Biles has to work to pull it off, she also makes it look deceptively easy. She took just a slight hop to the side on her landing, and judges rewarded her with a 9.8 for execution.
That’s about as close to perfection as you can get in gymnastics, and the score wasn’t inflated in the slightest.
It’s like watching Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Michael Phelps or Serena Williams in their primes. Fans know they’re witnessing greatness even if they can’t quite fathom how she’s doing it. Her competitors know that unless something catastrophic happens, like when anxiety manifested itself in a case of the twisties and forced her to withdraw from most of the Tokyo Olympics, she is further out of reach than she’s ever been.
The scary thing is Biles is only at the beginning of her comeback. The Yurchenko double pike will only get better in the coming months, as will her other skills.
“I just have personal goals that I want to meet and keep pushing for, so that's what I'm aiming for," Biles said.
It often takes greatness years to unfold. Biles needs only those 15 seconds or so.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Oregon officials report bubonic plague in local resident. They say there’s little risk to community
- Finland extends Russia border closure until April 14 saying Moscow hasn’t stopped sending migrants
- Hiker stranded on boulder hoisted to safety by helicopter in California: Watch the video
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Beyoncé finally releasing 'Act II' of 'Renaissance': Everything we know so far
- Snowmobiler, skier killed in separate Rocky Mountain avalanches in Colorado, Wyoming
- Daytona Speedweeks: What to know about the races and events leading up to 2024 Daytona 500
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- With Western military aid increasingly uncertain, Ukraine builds its own weapons
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Blake Lively Responds to Ryan Reynolds Trolling Her About Super Bowl 2024 BFF Outing
- Spin the Wheel to See Ryan Seacrest and Aubrey Paige's Twinning Moment at NYFW
- Dozens of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes in Rafah
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Can AI steal the 2024 election? Not if America uses this weapon to combat misinformation.
- Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Kim Kardashian and more celebrities spotted at the Super Bowl
- Pain, sweat and sandworms: In ‘Dune 2’ Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya and the cast rise to the challenge
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Mark Ruffalo shed the Hulk suit and had 'a blast' making 'Poor Things'
Sports betting around Super Bowl 58 appears to have broken several records
Lab-grown diamonds come with sparkling price tags, but many have cloudy sustainability claims
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Royal Caribbean Passenger Dies Aboard 9-Month Ultimate World Cruise
Love is in the air! Chiefs to celebrate Super Bowl 58 title with parade on Valentine's Day
16 Things To Help You Adult If Life Has Been Giving You Too Many Lemons To Handle Lately