Tag

Gymnastics

Browsing

Biles and Cruise were part of the LA2028 portion of the 2024 Paris Closing Ceremony

Simone Biles, the record-breaking gymnast, recently shared an unexpected confession during her appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.

After dominating the Paris Olympics with multiple gold medals, Biles admitted that her most nerve-wracking moment wasn’t during her performance-it was when she had to hand the Olympic flag to actor Tom Cruise at the closing ceremony.

Biles feared handing over the Olympic Flag to Tom Cruise

Simone Biles 

While discussing her experiences at the Games, Fallon asked Biles what had made her the most nervous.

Surprisingly, it wasn’t performing her signature Yurchenko double pike or her routines on the balance beam.

Instead, Biles revealed, “I was like, ‘Okay, I have to hand the flag off, don’t mess it up, don’t mess it up.’ I was terrified.”

The confession came as a surprise to many, considering Biles’ usual composure in high-stakes situations.

She humorously added, “I’m always tripping, falling down stairs… that’s what I was really worried about.”

Biles, now 27, also briefly touched on her potential participation in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, joking about how she feels “old” for the sport.

Nevertheless, she once again proved her prowess in Paris, bringing home three golds and a silver, cementing her status as the most decorated American gymnast of all time.

Simone Biles 

Upcoming plans for Biles & Cruise

In addition to her Olympic success, Biles is set to headline the Gold Over America Tour this fall, a 30-city gymnastics showcase featuring her teammates Jade Carey and Jordan Chiles, along with a star-studded lineup of other athletes.

Even with her packed schedule, Biles remains committed to supporting her husband, NFL player Jonathan Owens, as he gears up for the season with the Chicago Bears.

As for Tom Cruise, the Mission: Impossible star is reportedly looking beyond the Earth for his next stunt-literally.

Cruise has expressed a fascination with space exploration and UFOs, fueling his ambitions to film a stunt in space.

According to sources, the actor’s deep-rooted interests in extraterrestrial life and his religious beliefs are major driving forces behind this passion.

Despite their different worlds, both Biles and Cruise have continued to push boundaries in their respective fields-Biles through her athletic prowess and Cruise through his groundbreaking film endeavors.

Simone Biles and her husband Jonathan Owens are offering a peek into their “dream home” in Texas, which is currently under construction.

Biles, 27, and Owens, 29, posed together in a sweet mirror selfie shared via the Olympic gymnast’s Instagram Story on Saturday, August 31. In the snap, the pair looked up at a seemingly mirrored ceiling in the new home.

Another photo showed the Chicago Bears safety holding Biles’ hand in front of a large black marble fireplace. “Building our dream home,” Biles captioned the snap. “So lucky to do this thing called life with you.”

Simone Biles

Biles shared progress on the couples’ home build earlier this month via Instagram on August 22. “House meetings all day,” she wrote over a selfie taken during her busy schedule, which included overseeing landscaping, pool plans, audio and security systems and more.

She also shared a glimpse at her new kitchen, which features a sleek black-and-white backsplash and matching countertops. “So excited to make this house a HOME,” she enthused, adding, “A couple more months.”

The gold medalist first started sharing her home construction journey in September 2023. At the time, Biles’s only photo of the house was simply the base wooden framework and concrete foundation.

Simone Biles

Biles is fresh off of a successful 2024 Paris Olympics run, where she won three gold medals and one silver in gymnastics. She finished second place in floor behind Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, but snagged gold for the individual all-around and vault finals, respectively. She won her third gold medal of the Paris Games as part of Team USA’s artistic gymnastics squad, which also consisted of Jordan Chiles, Suni Lee, Jade Carey and Hezly Rivera.

The Paris Olympics brought Biles’ Olympic medal count to 11. Whether or not she plans to add to that tally in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics has yet to be decided.

Biles’ sister, Adria, explains her reasoning.

Given her high-profile nature from being a global gymnastics star, anything Simone Biles does is prone to become a trending topic. So it’s no surprise that her love life is constantly under a microscope. Thankfully for boyfriend Jonathan Owens, he’s a professional NFL player and knows what it means to be in the spotlight.

Simone Biles

The two met on a dating app in March of 2020, right before the COVID pandemic began, and they then started dating shortly after, leading to their engagement in February of 2022. Biles and Owens were seemingly in love from the get-go, but not everyone was super excited about their relationship.

Simone Biles has a very clear and heartfelt message for all her followers after the Olympic Games

Olympic athlete Simone Biles made Olympic Games history with her gold medals in the tournament. She became the Olympic gimnast with the most gold medals in history. Her being considered one of the all-time greats needs to come with some other unwritten responsibilties. And Simone Biles takes that evry seriously. We are talking about a proper human rights activist who does a lot of charity work for social justice causes. Simone Biles had a very clear message to all the fans who enjoyed her Olympic Games participations after nearly a month of the games being over. But this time both her human rights activism spirit combined with her unwavering support for Team USA in all competitions.

Simone Biles

SImone Biles’ message for Team USA

To people who may not be aware, the Olympic Games are always followed by the Paralimpics that will also take place in the city of Paris. She reminded everyone of her followers on social media that the Team USA Paralimpians just started competing on August 28 and urged all her followers to cheer on his compatriots for all competitions. THe tournament will keep pushing through until September 8. This is what Simone Biles wrote on her social media: “Don’t forget the Paralympics are on! Let’s support & watch these incredible athletes. GO USA!!!”

 

Simone Biles
In this year’s Paralimpics in the city of Paris, there will be 22 featured sports that include track & field, swimming, wheelchair basketball, and sitting volleyball. This is a competition just like the Olympic Games but for people with disabilities. For this year’s Paralimpics, Team USA actually sent an impressive 225 athletes to compete in all different disciplines. The large contingent includes stars like swimmer Jessica Long, cyclist Oksana Masters, and sprinter Hunter Woodhall. Back in the 2020 Paralimpics in Tokyo, China defeated Team USA in the medal count for the fifth consecutive time. Can Team USA win this time?

How many GOATs can watch an Indiana Fever game at one time?

Gymnastics all-timer Simone Biles was in the Gainbridge Fieldhouse crowd Wednesday night as the Fever knocked off the Connecticut Sun 84-80.

Simone Biles

Just off the baseline was TV talk-show all-timer David Letterman, near retired Iowa women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder. Olympic gold medalist sprinter Gabby Thomas and Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson also took in the exciting matchup.

And there was the familiar big crowd, listed at 17,274.

Thrilling victory: With so much energy in the building, Fever avoid season sweep, beat Sun

Simone Biles is making her return to Olympic competition on Sunday even more hotly anticipated with the possibility she may perform another new move.

The American, the most decorated gymnast in history with 37 world and Olympic medals, will get the first chance to try to get an uneven bars skill named after her in the women’s qualifying event at Paris 2024.

The 27-year-old already has five other eponymous skills but this would be the first one on bars and would make her the only active female gymnast to have one on all four apparatus.

READ MORE:The first glimpse of Simone Biles in Paris proved her brilliance is back

She submitted the original skill to the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) technical committee last week and so if she performs it cleanly here in Paris, it will bear her name.

How to watch Simone Biles go for Olympic gold -- again

Biles is back on the Olympic stage three years after pulling out of several events at the last Games in Tokyo with the ‘twisties’ – a disorientating mental block.

She already announced her arrival as a huge favourite to add to her seven Olympic medals when she nailed her Biles II vault in podium training on Thursday – the most recent of the skills named after her.

She and her American team have been keen to keep the pressure off her at these Games, with her coach fulfilling media commitments on her behalf and the gymnast herself being reassured that she does not need to compete in all events.

Bars would be the most likely one she would opt out of – with it being her ‘weakest’, if you can call an apparatus on which she has a world silver medal. Perhaps you can if ‘just’ one out of 30 world medals has come on bars.

However, with this new skill in the mix, that now seems unlikely.

She is scheduled to begin her qualification round at 10:40 BST on Sunday, the session after Great Britain’s women begin their Olympic campaign (08:30 BST)

RELATED:Jonathan Owens Reacts to LeBron James’ Comment About His Wife Simone Biles Ahead of 2024 Paris Olympics

FIG describes the uneven bars skill as “a clear hip circle forward with one-and-a-half turns to handstand”.

In other words, when she starts in a handstand on the upper bar, the American would dip her body to travel around the bar and then rise back into a handstand before doing one and a half pirouettes (540 degrees) and then stop to hold a handstand position.

The governing body says if she attempts the skill it is likely to be at the beginning of her routine where she performs a Weiler. The new skill is a variation of the one first done by Canadian gymnast Wilhem Weiler.

“In order for the move to be named for her, Biles will have to perform it without a major fault at some phase of the competition in Paris,” said FIG, which has given it a difficulty value of 0.5 points., external

What skills does Biles have named after her?

Biles already has five elements named after her – two vaults, two floor tumbling skills and a beam dismount.

Only Soviet five-time Olympic champion Nellie Kim has more, with seven.

Simone Biles' Olympics timeline: Medals, records and more to know about  U.S. star gymnast | Sporting News

Biles’ most recent eponymous skill – the Biles II vault – was on show in podium training at the Bercy Arena in Paris on Thursday, where she landed it perfectly.

She only added this skill – a Yurchenko double pike – last year and so if she performs it at these Games that would also be an Olympic first.

The five skills she has named after her are:

Biles on floor: double layout with half-twist ie a double somersault in stretched position with a half twist (named after her in 2013)

UPDATE:Simone Biles Receiving Yet Another Gift From Jonathan Owens Would Melt Gymnastics Community’s Heart

Biles II on floor: triple-twisting double somersault (named after her in 2019)

Biles on vault: round-off on to springboard, back handspring with half-turn on to vault, followed by double-twisting somersault in stretched position (named after her in 2018)

Biles II on vault: Round-off on to board, back handspring on to vault, then double somersault in piked position (named after her in 2023)

Biles on beam: double-double dismount ie a double-twisting, double

 

The last time Simone Biles attempted to vault in a competition arena at the Olympic Games, all hell broke loose. As Biles launched herself into her extremely difficult Amanar vault, she completely lost track of herself in the air, only managing one and a half twists instead of the planned two and a half. After withdrawing from the team final, Biles would spend most of her Olympic experience in the stands.

Three years on, Biles returned to the Olympic competition floor on Thursday morning as the women’s gymnastics teams worked their way through podium training, the one chance that gymnasts will have to train inside the Bercy Arena before the gymnastics competitions begin with the men’s qualifications on Saturday.

READ MORE:Simone Biles Husband Embraces Important Role For His Wife Ahead Of Olympics

In her third rotation of the day, Biles flitted down the vault runway before launching herself on to the springboard with a back handspring. The 27-year-old increased her upward momentum by rebounding off the top of the vault table and wrapping in two piked backwards somersaults. She landed with her chest upright, her feet completely still: “Perfect! We’ll take this one in a heartbeat. It was really good,” said a smiling Cécile Canqueteau-Landi, one of Biles’s coaches, afterwards.

Simone Biles Wears Cowboy Hat, Tiny Yellow Bikini on Vacation: Photos

Days before the gymnastics competition begins, Biles has already produced one of the greatest pieces of gymnastics the Olympics has ever seen. Her Yurchenko Double Pike vault, which has been officially known as the Biles II since she unveiled it internationally at the world championships last year, is one of the hardest skills in the sport. No other female gymnast in the world vaults with enough power, strong technique or repulsion off the table to even think about attempting the vault. It is also one of the most difficult vaults in the men’s code of points.

Difficult skills are often produced at the detriment of form and technique, with gymnasts often having to force their hardest skills around, leading to issues like crossed legs or low chests on their landing which receive significant judging deductions. Not only has Biles shown that she can consistently perform the vault, she does so with near impeccable form, her legs squeezed tightly together and completely straight at the knee.

The Biles II requires no twisting and so last year, as she began her comeback after taking a break from the sport, Biles opted to re-introduce the vault in part because she still lacked confidence in her twisting following the mental block she suffered in Tokyo. It is reflective of Biles’s greatness that her idea of easing her way back into the sport was attempting one of the most difficult skills possible.

Such is the challenge this vault presents, Biles still had to mentally come to terms with executing it. Having debuted the vault in US competitions in 2019, last year Biles only attempted it with her other coach, Laurent Landi, standing beside her on the competition podium. Gymnasts receive an automatic neutral deduction of .5 points if their coach is on the competition floor during the routine.

After nailing the vault throughout last summer, Biles fell attempting it in the world championships vault final and she finished in second place behind Rebeca Andrade of Brazil. Even her errors are somehow impressive; she fell because she actually had too much power for the skill. The vault commands such a high start value (6.4) that without the automatic half-point deduction, Biles would have won the vault final with a fall. This year, with many more months of training behind her, she now attempts the skill without any coach nearby.

The objective of podium training is for gymnasts to adjust to the equipment on the field of play, which often feels significantly different on an elevated podium, and the dynamics of the arena as they finish their preparations. It was clear from Biles’s performance on Thursday that she was ready and relaxed on all pieces as she worked her way through the four apparatus with no issues.

RELATED:Simone Biles fires back at former USA teammate who accused 2024 Olympics roster of not having the work ethic ahead of Paris Games

While Biles was focused on the job at hand, she also laughed and chatted with her teammates Jordan Chiles, Suni Lee, Jade Carey and Hezly Rivera, the former three gymnasts all returning from Tokyo to form one of the most experienced teams the US has ever boasted.

After a strong day of training, the US team, led by Biles, marched through the weaving mixed zone without stopping, their coaches delegated to speak with the media. They have been here before and in the qualification round on Sunday morning they will attempt to re-establish their dominance at the Olympics.

Difficult vaulting was a common theme on Thursday as the Bercy Arena witnessed the return of the Amanar vault. The Amanar, also known as the Yurchenko two and a half, was one of the defining skills of women’s gymnastics around a decade ago, an essential element that separated the top contenders from the rest. In addition to its significant number of twists, the vault finishes with a forward landing, meaning the gymnast cannot see the ground before the landing.

Time Magazine Rewards Simone Athlete Of The Year Award For His Attitude At  The Tokyo Olympics

But in recent years it has faded from view. In Tokyo, few other than Biles and Andrade, arguably the two greatest ever vaulters, attempted an Amanar, and Andrade has not performed it outside of an Olympic Games in nearly a decade. The International Gymnastics Federation controversially chose to lower the difficulty of the vault, leading many to conclude that it was no longer worth attempting such a difficult and dangerous vault.

UPDATE:Simone Biles Receiving Yet Another Gift From Jonathan Owens Would Melt Gymnastics Community’s Heart

In Paris, the Amanar renaissance is actually coming from Great Britain, with British gymnasts continuing to perform such difficult gymnastics on the biggest stages. During their early morning podium training, the British gymnasts Alice Kinsella and Ruby Evans attempted the enormous vault and after some early difficulties they both landed the vault to their feet. “It’s pretty cool to bring back the Amanar,” said Kinsella, smiling.

Neither gymnast was sure about when they might attempt the vault in competition, but they were pleased with their progress. Kinsella actually prefers the Amanar vault to the very common Yurchenko double twist, an easier vault with only two twists, as she can unleash her full power when she attempts the more difficult version: “I think we just need to feel the block [vault table] and we’ll be fine,” said Evans. “We know what it feels like now so hopefully we can do it.”

 

For a beauty lover, planning your in-flight skin-care routine is taken almost as seriously as packing your suitcase for the rest of the trip. Packing essentials like cleansers, moisturizers, and serums can feel like a never-ending puzzle, with the challenge of deciding what goes in your carry-on for easy access and what goes in checked baggage. But for on-the-go pros like American gymnast Sunisa “Suni” Lee, in-flight lifesavers like lip balms, moisturizers, and eye masks are absolute must-haves.

Heading to Paris for the 2024 Olympic Games, Lee has a simple yet effective four-step routine that’s perfect for any travel situation (and eczema-friendly, as the athlete has been open about her experience with the skin condition). In a TikTok video, the Olympic gold medalist is seen enjoying a meal fit for champions before diving into her travel skin-care regimen. She kicks things off by refreshing her face with Celimax’s Ji Woo Gae One-Step Mild Cleansing Pads. Following that, she uses cult-loved, go-to products from brands like Summer Fridays and Peter Thomas Roth.

As Gymnast Sunisa Lee Goes For Gold, Her Hometown Hmong Community Has Her  Back | WAMU

To get the full lowdown on this Olympics star’s flight beauty routine — and shop the products directly from her bag — keep reading.

Lee kicks off her in-flight routine with arguably the most important step: a cleanse. The star of the show are Celimax’s Ji Woo Gae One Step Mild Cleansing Pads ($17), which are the perfect travel tool to cleanse and refresh the skin in just one step. Each container holds 60 pads, pre-soaked in formula, so you can just wipe and go — no rinsing required.

Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens may not be competing in the 2024 Olympics, but he’ll play an important role for his wife, Simone Biles, when they go to Paris for the summer games.

Owens is embracing his “cheerleader” role for Biles heading to the Olympics, all while expressing his excitement to see his partner attempt to make more history in the quadrennial event.

The 28-year-old NFL vet shared as much in a recent interview with People, highlighting that it’s “super exciting” because he gets a “chance to see all the work that she puts in prior to.”

“I love watching [it] from an athlete’s perspective because that’s how you’d be great in any sport, is just being consistent and doing the same thing consistently good every day,” Owens further said on cheering for his wife and watching her train and compete.

“You know what I mean? I love to watch it and I love to be out there and be a cheerleader.”

For what it’s worth, during his years of watching Simone Biles train and compete, Jonathan Owens also took the time to learn about gymnastics in order to fully embrace his role as a “supportive” husband.

“I know the routines. I’m getting the score down. If I’m going to pay attention to it, I have to lock in. I’m going to go full in … So I had to make sure I did some research so I can talk gymnastics language,” Owens shared.

It’s certainly amazing to see how supportive Owens has been for Biles. Without a doubt, he’ll bring some extra motivation for his Olympian wife later this July when the Paris games officially commence.

Keep scrolling down to find out all about the release date, trailer, and more of the upcoming sports documentary Simone Biles Rising. The series showcases the inspiring story of the American gymnast and her magnificent return to the game after her shocking withdrawal from the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics four years ago, due to mental health issues.

Here’s everything you need to know.

Release date — when is Simone Biles Rising coming out?

Simone Biles Rising’ release date is July 17, 2024.

Tudum by Netflix has recently dropped the release date for the much-anticipated documentary. Part 1 of the four-episode series will be available for streaming as soon as it arrives on Netflix on the stipulated date.

Trailer — watch it now

You can watch the Simone Biles Rising trailer below:

The goosebump inducing two minute clip gives the viewers a sneak peek at what is to come. The series promises an unfiltered look into Simone Biles as she gears up to return to the spotlight after four years.

Cast — who is in Simone Biles Rising?

Simone Biles Rising’ cast includes:

  • Simone Biles as herself

Plot – what’s the story about?

The Netflix Sports series documents Simone Biles’ journey back to the Olympics and her rigorous preparations to claim back her spot at the top.

Directed by Katie Walsh, the series will focus on Biles’ struggle with mental health and how she chose to prioritize it before pushing herself to her limits. It showcases the 27 year old gymnast’s incredible resilience and focus as she gets ready to ace the upcoming Paris 2024 Olympic Games. The series will arrive on the screen just days before the Paris Olympics which will kick off on 26 July, 2024.

Verified by MonsterInsights