Celebs turn out to watch Biles dazzle on Games return
Simone Biles competes on the beam during qualification for women's team gymnastics. Photo: Getty
She’s back.
Cheered by a capacity and celebrity-laden crowd at the Bercy Arena in Paris, Simone Biles sparkled on her Olympic return, soaring to the top of the all-around qualifying standings in a leotard featuring 10,000 Swarovski crystals.
It is 1090 days since Biles won a bronze medal on the balance beam in Tokyo, a redemptive footnote to a tumultuous Games in which she had withdrawn from her three other individual finals citing a mental block known in her sport as the ‘twisties’.
Tom Cruise, Snoop Dogg, Ariana Grande and Anna Wintour were among those present to witness the latest chapter in the 27-year-old’s already extraordinary career that has already yielded 37 world and Olympic medals, making her the most decorated gymnast of all time.
Her return was not without drama — during a floor return she appeared to injure her left foot, resorting to crawling back down the runway from her first practice vault on her hands and knees.
Moments later, she responded to concerns by delivering a Yurchenko Double Pike vault, otherwise known as the Biles II.
She was full of smiles following her closing routine on the uneven bars, the only one of the four individual finals on which she is almost certain — as expected — to miss out.
Biles could hardly have asked for more from her long-awaited return — the result of a journey she kick-started back into life in spectacular fashion after a year out post-Tokyo, when she won four gold medals and one silver at the World Championships in Antwerp in 2023.
The US team’s technical lead, Chellsie Memmel, had described Paris as a “redemption tour”, not just for Biles but for four of the five team members who had fallen just short in the team event in Tokyo, beaten by the now-absent athletes representing the Russian Olympic Committee.
It was wholly fitting then that Biles should return to the Olympic arena on the apparatus that had provided her solace in Tokyo, when in an extraordinary act of courage she grasped her last chance of an individual medal despite being gripped by an affliction of which she spoke eloquently and honestly.
Her beam score of 14.733 was an improvement on her score in Tokyo by almost three quarters of a point, and would place her second after two rotations, behind China’s Yaqin Zhou.
Biles then delivered her floor routine in the wake of a fall for her team-mate and the defending Olympic champion Jade Carey, which put her out of contention to retain the crown and could have impacted the US qualifying score if Biles had not delivered.
Some chance. She did so on on both floor and vault, despite the colossal weight of expectation and the evident injury concerns.
Then, with a wave to all four corners of the arena Biles finally departed, swiftly followed by the celebrity-sprinkled hordes.
She and they will be back for the women’s team final in two days’ time, where Biles’ already record-breaking medal tally is expected to grow.