Current:Home > InvestShow them the medals! US women could rake in hardware at world gymnastics championships -FutureProof Finance
Show them the medals! US women could rake in hardware at world gymnastics championships
View
Date:2025-04-24 12:10:46
ANTWERP, Belgium — Hope the Americans left room in their luggage.
The Americans were atop the standings in everything but uneven bars when two days of qualifying wrapped up Monday at the world gymnastics championships. The team competition. All-around. Vault, balance beam and floor exercise.
Not only that, they’ll have two gymnasts in every individual final. Could have had more, too, if not for the International Gymnastics Federation’s stupid two-per-country rule.
“On the whole, for the team, very very good,” Laurent Landi, who coaches Simone Biles and Joscelyn Roberson, said after the U.S. women’s qualifying session Sunday.
Hard to be much better.
The U.S. women’s score of 171.395 was more than five points ahead of Britain, last year’s silver medalists. Scoring starts from scratch in the team finals and there’s no dropping the lowest score, as there is in qualifying. But it’s unlikely anyone is going to get close to the Americans, let alone deny them what would be a record seventh consecutive team title in Wednesday’s final.
The U.S. women, who’ve won every team title at worlds going back to 2011, currently share that record with China’s men.
This is only the fourth competition for Biles since the Tokyo Olympics, where she was forced to withdraw from all but one final because a case of “the twisties” caused her to lose her sense of where she was in the air. Yet she looks as good as she ever has.
She's almost 2 points ahead of fellow American Shilese Jones in the all-around, and also had the top scores on vault, balance beam and floor exercise. She was fifth on uneven bars, her “weakest” event.
Should Biles win a medal in the team and all-around competition, she’d have 34 at the world championships and Olympics, making her the most-decorated gymnast of all time, male or female.
And that’s not the only history she can make.
By qualifying for every event final, Biles can duplicate her feat from the 2018 world championships, where she won six medals. It was the first time since Romania’s Daniela Silivas at the 1988 Olympics that a woman had medaled on every single event at a major international competition.
Biles won four golds, a silver and a bronze at those world championships.
In addition to the all-around, Jones made the bars, beam and floor finals. She had the highest score on bars until the very last subdivision, when China’s Qiu Qiyuan edged her by a mere 0.067 points.
“I feel like we’ve been here for so long now, training routine after routine. To get out there and hit four more routines just felt great,” Jones said Sunday night. “There’s good with the bad, but I’m excited to move onto the all-around and then, hopefully, some finals.”
Roberson, who is making her worlds debut here, made the vault final with the sixth-highest score.
“I feel like it went as good as it could have,” Roberson said Sunday night.
The only way it could have gone better for the Americans is if the FIG dropped the rule limiting countries to two gymnasts in each individual final. If that rule wasn’t in place, Leanne Wong would have made the all-around final and Skye Blakely would have made the bars final.
It’s not nice to be greedy, however. Especially since the Americans will still be coming home with plenty of hardware.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (2688)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Matthew Perry’s Ex-Fiancée Molly Hurwitz Speaks Out on His Death
- Gwyneth Paltrow reflects on the magical summer she spent with Matthew Perry in touching tribute
- 5 Things podcast: Americans are obsessed with true crime. Is that a good thing?
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Colombian police comb through cloud forest searching for soccer star’s abducted father
- Electronic wolves with glowing red eyes watch over Japanese landscapes
- Judge dismisses Brett Favre defamation suit, saying Shannon Sharpe used hyperbole over welfare money
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Sports Equinox is today! MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL all in action for only time in 2023
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Vonage customers to get nearly $100 million in refunds over junk fees
- Visitors will be allowed in Florence chapel’s secret room to ponder if drawings are Michelangelo’s
- Marine Corps commandant hospitalized after 'medical emergency,' officials say
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Matthew Perry’s Ex-Fiancée Molly Hurwitz Speaks Out on His Death
- UN peacekeepers have departed a rebel stronghold in northern Mali early as violence increases
- Pharmacists prescribe another round of US protests to highlight working conditions
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Heavily armed man with explosives found dead at Colorado amusement park prompting weekend search
Sports Equinox is today! MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL all in action for only time in 2023
Massachusetts governor says state is working with feds to help migrants in shelters find work
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Kylie and Kendall Jenner Are a Sugar and Spice Duo in Risqué Halloween Costumes
Americans are still putting way too much food into landfills. Local officials seek EPA’s help
Democratic U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer from Oregon says he won’t run for reelection next year