Simone Biles: Yurchenko| Antwerp 2023| Teammates| Drama

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Simone Biles: Yurchenko| Antwerp 2023| Teammates| Drama

Simone Biles won her 20th world title, continuing her comeback after a two-year break to give the United States its seventh consecutive women’s team gold medal at the World Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp on Wednesday. Today we will discuss about Simone Biles: Yurchenko| Antwerp 2023| Teammates| Drama.

Simone Biles: Yurchenko| Antwerp 2023| Teammates| Drama

Simone Biles Owens (born Simone Ariane Biles; March 14, 1997) is an American artistic gymnast. Her seven Olympic medals are tied with Shannon Miller for the most Olympic medals won by an American gymnast and tied for the ninth most medals overall. Having won 26 world championship medals, she is the most decorated gymnast in the history of the gymnastics world championships, and is considered by many to be the greatest gymnast of all time. In 2022, Biles was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Joe Biden. it was done.

Personal information
Full name Simone Arianne Biles Owens
Born March 14, 1997 (age 26)[1]
Columbus, Ohio, U.S.
Hometown Spring, Texas, U.S.
Residence Spring, Texas, U.S.
Spouse
Jonathan Owens
 
(m. 2023)
Height 4 ft 8 in (142 cm)[2]
Discipline Women’s artistic gymnastics
Level Senior international elite
Years on national team 2012–2016
2018–2021
2023–present (USA)
Gym World Champions Centre (current)[3]
Bannon’s Gymnastix Inc. (2003–2014)
Head coach(es) Laurent Landi
Cecile Canqueteau-Landi
Former coach(es) Aimee Boorman
Choreographer Sasha Farber
Eponymous skills Biles (6.0) (vault):
Yurchenko half on–straight front salto double twist off
Biles II (6.4) (vault): Yurchenko double pike
Biles (H) (balance beam): double-twisting double tucked salto dismount
Biles (G) (floor exercise): double layout salto half out
Biles II (J) (floor exercise): triple-twisting double tucked salto (aka “triple double”)

Yurchenko

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yurchenko, a four-time Olympic gold medalist, became the first woman to land a double pike vault at the international level at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Belgium. The video shows the 26-year-old running down the runway before doing a round-off on a springboard, then doing a back handspring onto a vaulting table and finishing with two double flips. As she rose to her feet, the crowd responded with thunderous applause.

It is considered the most challenging vault in women’s gymnastics, with a difficulty score of 6.4 – higher than any other type of vault, Reuters reports. According to Team USA, it will also be renamed Biles II because of the feat it accomplished in international competition, adding a total of five skills to its name. Biles had previously done this vault in the US in 2018 and before that only male gymnasts had done so in international competition.

Antwerp 2023

It took just a few seconds for Simone Biles to recover from her two-year absence from international gymnastics competition and make history.

Fans went wild as the 19-time world champion returned to the world stage and became the first woman to land the extremely complex vault at the international level at the 2023 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp, Belgium on Sunday.

The vault, the hardest jump in the women’s scoring code, was given a difficulty score of 6.4 points before Sunday’s championships, according to NBC Sports. The most challenging vault performed at last year’s World Championships had a score of 5.6.

Teammates

Simone Biles: Yurchenko| Antwerp 2023| Teammates| Drama

Let’s take a look at Simone Biles’ teammates on the 2016 Olympic women’s gymnastics team:

Gabby Douglas

Gabby Douglas is the first African-American to win the individual all-around championship at the Olympics. In addition to winning a gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics, Gabby also won a silver medal at the 2015 World All-Around and was a member of the U.S. gold-winning team at the 2011 and 2015 World Championships.

However, she left gymnastics after her successful stint at the 2016 Games. Since then he has limited his media presence and is not very active on social media. In 2020, Gabby Douglas competed on The Masked Dancer and won the season.

Laurie Hernandez

Laurie Hernandez started her senior year by winning a gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics. She also won a silver medal in balance beam singles.

With the win, Hernandez gained a lot of attention and returned to training in 2018. However, she missed the qualifying round for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. After a brief break, Lowry returned to the field in 2021, but due to a knee injury she was unable to qualify for the upcoming Olympic Trials.

In addition to gymnastics, Laurie competed on the celebrity dance show “Dancing with the Stars” in 2016 and won the season.

Madison kocian

Madison Kocian came into limelight in 2015 when her team won the World Championship. She later competed at the 2016 Rio Olympics and won a silver medal in the uneven bars event and a gold medal in the team event.

After the Olympics, the Texas native attended the University of California and graduated in 2020. As of now, she has retired from sports and works at Baylor College of Medicine, as stated in her LinkedIn profile.

Aly Raisman

Alexandra Rose Raisman, better known as Aly Raisman, is one of the members of ‘The Final Five’. The Massachusetts native made her Olympic debut at the London Olympics in 2012 and won a gold medal in the floor final, a bronze in the balance beam and a gold medal in the floor final.

Drama

American gymnastics superstar Simone Biles has opened up about her troubled journey to the Tokyo Olympics earlier this year and revealed how much being the face of the sport has cost her.

Biles withdrew from most of her gymnastics events very early in the day after losing ‘aerial awareness’ in a preliminary event.

He felt that it would be unsafe to continue attempting the complex aerial maneuvers with which he had made his name, while facing a barrage of criticism for his decision.

In a recent interview with The Cut, Biles said that if she had her time again, she would have withdrawn from the Olympics long before her clash in Tokyo.

Not because there was any way to predict the loss of air awareness, but because over the past seven years USA Gymnastics had been held accountable for the abuse of myself and dozens of other gymnasts at the hands of disgraced former team doctor Larry Nassar.

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