Tuesday morning marks the last time we get to watch our favorite gymnasts compete at the Tokyo Olympic. The final day of gymnastics event finals promised to be special as Simone Biles made her return to the competition floor — and it didn’t disappoint.
The 24-year-old, who withdrew from the women’s team final and other individual events to focus on her mental health upon experiencing the “twisties”, earned a bronze medal on the balance beam with a strong performance and a score of 14.000.
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Biles also earned a bronze medal in beam at the 2016 Rio Games. With the newest addition to her hardware collection, she ties Shannon Miller as the most decorated Olympian in American gymnastics history. While each gymnast has seven medals to her name, Biles has more golds (4) than Miller (2).
All-around gold medalist Suni Lee also competed on beam, finishing in fifth place with a score of 13.866.
If you’ve been following gymnastics at the Games thus far, you already know the action got underway incredibly early. You also know we have you covered with live updates as we move onto our final apparatus of Tokyo, men’s high bar:
Biles earns bronze, seventh career Olympic medal
Simone Biles is a bronze medalist again, after matching her result in the balance beam final from Rio. With this, her seventh Olympic medal, Biles becomes the most accomplished American Olympic gymnast in history. She ties Magnificent Seven gymnast Shannon Miller with seven medals – the most by any American – but Biles’ four golds is unmatched.
The story of the night, though, was not what color medal Biles earned, but the fact that, after a week no one could have predicted, she returned to competition under the greatest of pressure and scrutiny and showed why she is the sport’s greatest star.
Biles last competed in Tokyo one week ago. She withdrew from last Tuesday’s team final after one rotation and then scratched from the all-around, vault, floor and uneven bar finals to focus on her mental and physical health. She continued to train at a nearby gym and shared her struggles to overcome “the twisties,” a dangerous disconnect between the mind and body that causes gymnasts to become disoriented in the air during twisting skills. Unlike the other three events, beam features minimal twisting and Biles downgraded her dismount from the “Biles” – a double-twisting double tuck – to a double pike.
Biles performed third in the event and took a deep breath before mounting the beam and performed with confidence. When she landed her dismount, she took a big hop backward, a massive smile on her face and then grabbed her heart in relief. She hugged her coach, waved to the photographers and toward the crowd and hugged her teammate. Her 14.00 – just .066 lower than her qualifying score — moved her into second place.
Biles remained in second until the final gymnast of the night, Guan Chenchen of China, mounted the beam. The 16-year-old topped qualifying and performed a routine with the highest difficulty in the meet. Aside from a few small form breaks, she was elegant and masterful and nailed her double pike landing. She earned a 14.633 for gold. China’s Tang Xijing took bronze.
New all-around champion Suni Lee had a clean routine going until she lost her footing on the final landing of her difficult acro sequence. She fought to hold on and somehow stayed on the beam. With that mistake, though, she took herself out of medal contention and finished the meet in fifth. — Alyssa Roenigk
Final results:
Guan Chenchen, China – 14.633
Tang Xijing, China – 14.233
Simone Biles, USA – 14.000
Elsabeth Black, Canada – 13.866
Sunisa Lee, USA – 13.866
Urara Ashikawa, Japan – 13.733
Flavia Saraiva, Brazil – 13.133
Vladislava Urazova, ROC – 12.733
Biles is back
Insert GOAT emoji here. Simone Biles made her return to the competition floor with a strong performance on beam. Her score of 14.00 put her in second place behind Tang Xijing (14.233) with five gymnasts still to go.
After her dismount, Biles smiled and put her hand over her heart before running to embrace her coach.
Men’s parallel bars: Zou wins easily, with the top score of the Olympics
Zou Jingyuan of China earned Tuesday’s first gold medal on parallel bars after earning an enormous 16.233 — the highest score so far on any event in gymnastics. The 2017 and 2018 world champion on the event took a tiny step on his double front-half dismount but otherwise was nearly perfect, winning by more than five tenths of a point.
Lukas Dauser of Germany competed last and slipped into the silver-medal spot with a 15.700, and Ferhat Arıcan of Turkey took the bronze with a 15.633. It was the first gymnastics medal for Turkey at the Olympic Games, and Arıcan was greeted by huge cheers from his country’s contingent in the stands when the final results were posted.
Sam Mikulak, the lone American on the event, finished in sixth with a 15.000. The 28-year-old previously said this would be his final Olympics and he was given a standing ovation from his teammates and members of the women’s team in the stands. He smiled and gave an enthusiastic thumbs up to the camera after his score was announced. — D’Arcy Maine
Final results:
Zou Jingyuan, China – 16.233
Lukas Dauser, Germany – 15.700
Ferhat Arican, Turkey – 15.633
You Hao, China – 15.466
David Belyavskiy, ROC – 15.200
Sam Mikulak, USA – 15.000
Petro Pakhniuk, Ukraine – 14.533
Joe Fraser, Great Britain – 14.500
Lee’s fam shows support
Meanwhile, back home in St. Paul, Minnesota, Suni Lee’s family is staying up late to watch the American on her final apparatus of the Games.
Biles looks good in warm-ups
All eyes were on Simone Biles during warm-ups ahead of Tuesday’s beam finals. She stretched on the floor before doing several run-throughs of her routine on beam.
Her first turn appeared mainly to get comfortable on the beam, and she spent much of the time visualizing and pantomiming various skills and moves. Her second turn, just moments later, was a full routine and there were no outward signs of struggle. She finished with a nearly stuck double-pike dismount.
Biles looked largely at ease, talking and laughing with Suni Lee while not on the beam. The two even watched highlights of other Olympic events on the video board after they had finished warming up on the apparatus. Biles will be the third competitor on the event tonight, and Lee will be immediately after. — D’Arcy Maine
One more time
And just like that, we’re on to the last day of apparatus finals. All-around champions Hashimoto Daiki (Japan) and Suni Lee (USA) are back in action as titles will be decided on parallel bars, balance beam, and horizontal bar. Not to take away from American men’s gymnasts Sam Mikulak (parallel bars) and Brody Malone (horizontal bar), but all eyes will be on the last event of the women’s individual finals, because Simone Biles is back. The GOAT joins newly minted gold medalist Suni Lee in representing for Team USA on the beam.
Beam is the lone apparatus where past results haunt Biles. Despite being the reigning world champion on beam, it was the only event of Rio 2016 in which the four-time Olympic gold medalist made a real mistake (she still won the bronze).
As for Lee, she was third in qualification behind specialist Guan Chenchen (China) and Tang Xijing (China), who represent a country still searching for its first women’s individual medal of these Games. China’s only gold on balance beam to date was won by Deng Linlin at London 2012.
The schedule:
4 a.m. ET: Men’s parallel bars
4:50 a.m. ET: Women’s beam
5:39 a.m. ET: Men’s high bar
Men’s vault: Shin ekes out gold
The competition was full of mind-boggling vaults, but in the end, South Korea’s Shin Jeahwan edged ROC team’s Denis Abliazin for the gold medal. Though the two tied in average score, Shin won the tiebreak because he had the highest single score on a vault (a 14.833 for his front handspring 2½ twist vs. Abliazin’s 14.800 for his Tsukahara double pike).
Armenia’s Artur Davtyan won the first Olympic medal in gymnastics for his country with a bronze and a 14.733 average. Turkey’s Adem Asil threw a jaw-dropping front handspring double pike half to earn a 15.266, the highest score of any vault in any round of the Olympics. But he put his hands down on his second vault, a Tsukahara double pike, and ended up sixth. — Amy Van Deusen
Final results:
Shin Jeahwan, Korea – 14.783
Denis Abliazin, ROC – 14.783
Artur Davtyan, Armenia – 14.733
Carlos Edriel Yulo, Philippines – 14.716
Nikita Nagornyy, ROC – 14.716
Adem Asil, Turkey – 14.449
Ahmet Onder, Turkey – 14.066
Caio Souza, Brazil – 13.683
Women’s floor: Carey gets her redemption
American Jade Carey entered the floor final as a gold-medal favorite and she delivered, competing a beautiful laid out double-double first pass, then rocking her tucked double-double and full-twisting double layout as well. With the highest difficulty of the day (four-tenths of a point higher than any other competitor) she competed second and her score held for the rest of the meet.
Thirty-year-old Italian Vanessa Ferrari stuck her first two passes — a tucked double-double and a whip to immediate full-in — absolutely cold, and drew everyone in with her expressive dance. The 2006 world all-around champion earned a 14.200 for the silver.
Japan’s Mai Murakami and the ROC team’s Angelina Melnikova tied for bronze, both with powerful double layouts as their second pass. Melnikova mounted with a gorgeous full-twisting double layout, while Murakami threw a nice tucked double-double. Their matching difficulty and execution scores earned them both the bronze with no tiebreak. — Amy Van Deusen
1. Jade Carey, USA – 14.366
2. Vanessa Ferrari, Italy – 14.200
3. Mai Murakami, Japan – 14.166 | Angelina Melnikova, ROC – 14.166
5. Rebeca Andrade, Brazil – 14.033
6. Jessica Gadirova, Great Britain – 14.000
7. Jennifer Gadirova, Great Britain – 13.233
8. Viktoriia Listunova, ROC – 12.400
Breaking news: Biles on beam!
Men’s rings: Chinese men dominate
It was a 1-2 finish for China in the first gymnastics final of the day Monday. Liu Yang took home the gold in rings and You Hao finished with the silver. The duo, who competed back to back, held up a Chinese flag and posed together for photos once the final scores were revealed.
It was the first gold medal for China in artistic gymnastics during the 2020 Games.
Yang, who was the 2014 world champion in the event, took a small hop on the landing of his double-twisting double-tuck dismount landing, but otherwise was nearly flawless and earned a 15.500. Hao finished 0.2 behind with a 15.300.
Greece’s Eleftherios Petrounias earned the bronze. — D’Arcy Maine
Final results:
Liu Yang, China – 15.500
You Hao, China – 15.300
Eleftherios Petrounias, Greece – 15.200
Samir Ait Said, France – 14.900
Ibrahim Colak, Turkey – 14.866
Denis Abliazin, ROC – 14.833
Adem Asil, Turkey – 14.600
Arthur Zanetti, Brazil – 14.133
🚨3⃣0⃣ minutes to go until @Tokyo2020 #ArtisticGymnastics Apparatus Finals! 🚨
Today’s Start List 👇#Tokyo2020 #Olympics #StrongerTogether pic.twitter.com/aSC7zNc7Yi
Next up: Vault, floor and rings
Monday was the second day of individual event finals, and it was a combination of men’s and women’s events again: men’s rings, women’s floor and men’s vault. The top eight highest-scoring gymnasts from qualifying advanced on each event, with a maximum of two from any one country. The scores didn’t carry over, however — the highest score Monday was crowned Olympic champ.
The schedule:
4 a.m. ET: Men’s rings
4:45 a.m. ET: Women’s floor
5:54 a.m. ET: Men’s vaultWomen’s uneven bars: Derwael wins gold; Lee hangs on for bronze
Two-time world champion Nina Derwael, the top qualifier entering the finals, performed her highly difficult, jam-packed routine well to win the event easily for Belgium. She earned a 15.200 score — and her country’s first Olympic gymnastics gold medal in history. The ROC team’s Anastasiia Iliankova hit her routine cleanly for the silver medal — and American Suni Lee held on for bronze.
Olympic all-around gold medalist Lee was first in the lineup and was a little off from the start, missing the connections on her release moves in more than one section of her routine. Though her quick thinking throughout helped her avoid disaster, it affected her difficulty score. Lee earned a 14.500, seven-tenths of a point lower than her qualifying score.
It appeared several of the gymnasts, Lee included, might have been affected by the reportedly cold arena and lack of a one-touch warm-up. All-around bronze medalist Angelina Melnikova (ROC) couldn’t get over on a pirouette and had to hop off, while China’s Fan Yilin — the 2015 and 2017 world champion on bars — fell on her dismount. — Amy Van Deusen
Former Olympians took to Twitter to express their concern over the temperature and lack of one-touch warm-up ahead of events:
Final results:
Nina Derwael, Belgium – 15.200
Anastasiia Iliankova, ROC – 14.833
Suni Lee, USA – 14.500
Lu Yufei, China – 14.400
Elisabeth Seitz, Germany – 14.400
Melanie de Jesus dos Santos, France – 14.033
Fan Yilin, China – 13.900
Angelina Melnikova, ROC – 13.066
Men’s pommel horse: Whitlock retains title
In the final men’s event of the day, Max Whitlock of Great Britain, a three-time Olympian, repeated as pommel horse champion.
Competing in the tough opening spot, Whitlock’s routine featured the highest start value in the meet, a 7.0, which was two-tenths higher than any of his competitors. And it was clean. He also earned the second-highest execution score of the night. His 15.583 set a tough bar for the next seven men to clear.
Lee Chih Kai of Chinese Taipei finished in the silver-medal spot and Japan’s Kazuma Kaya earned bronze.
American Alec Yoder, who competed second, was off from the start of his routine. He had a major form break immediately in his routine and seemed to lose focus afterward. His 14.666 was enough to hold him in medal contention until Lee competed. He finished sixth.
Rhys McClenaghan, who earned attention as the funniest gymnast in Tokyo after posting about the “anti-sex beds” in the athletes village, was the first Irish gymnast to make an Olympic final. Unfortunately, he had difficulty throughout his routine and fell from the apparatus. He finished seventh. — Alyssa Roenigk
Final results:
Max Whitlock, Great Britain – 15.583
Lee Chih-kai, Chinese Taipei – 15.400
Kazuma Kaya, Japan – 14.900
David Belyavskiy, ROC – 14.833
Kohei Kameyama, Japan – 14.600
Alec Yoder, USA – 14.566
Rhys McClenaghan, Ireland -13.100
Sun Wei, China – 13.066
Women’s vault: Andrade continues to wow, and Skinner’s unlikely Olympic medal
One week ago, MyKayla Skinner thought that her Olympic competition had ended in the qualification round. Sunday, she stood on an Olympic podium, a silver medalist on vault.
With defending Olympic vault champion Simone Biles — whose withdrawal placed Skinner into the event — loudly cheering her on from the stands, Skinner opened the meet with a clean Cheng. It was her best vault of the Games and earned a 15.033, a higher score than either of her vaults during qualifying. On her second vault, an Amanar, Skinner took a slight hop to the left on her landing but kept her feet in bounds, good enough for a 14.8 and an overall score of 14.916.
Brazilian Rebeca Andrade, coming off her silver-medal performance in the all-around, competed two gymnasts later with the same vaults and more amplitude, besting Skinner by a little over a 10th of a point and ultimately edging her for gold. Brazil had never won an Olympic medal in women’s gymnastics until earlier this week, and now Andrade has won two.
Unlike in qualifying and team competition, gymnasts are not provided with what is known as a “one-touch warm-up” or a last-minute opportunity to warm up on the competition apparatus immediately before they compete. That rule has been highly debated, as the conversation at these Games has centered around athlete health and safety, especially in gymnastics.
On American Jade Carey’s first vault, she misstepped on the runway as she approached the springboard and somehow had the wherewithal to throw just a tuck off the table. She saved her body from injury, but the mistake ended her night. Immediately, gymnastics fans took to Twitter to call for #onetouchfinals. Impressively, though, Carey regrouped, went back to the start of the runway and performed a beautiful Amanar. Her dad, Brian, who is also her coach, hugged her tightly and consoled her after her turn.
Korean gymnast Yeo Seo-jeong performed a vault named for her and — 25 years after her father took silver in the event at the 1996 Games — earned the bronze. — Alyssa Roenigk
Final results:
Rebeca Andrade, Brazil – 15.083
MyKayla Skinner, USA – 14.916
Yeo Seo-jeong, Korea – 14.733
Alexa Moreno, Mexico – 14.716
Angelina Melnikova, ROC – 14.683
Liliia Akhaimova, ROC – 14.666
Shallon Olsen, Canada – 13.066
Jade Carey, USA – 12.416
Men’s floor exercise: History for Israel
In the first of four gymnastics event finals on Sunday at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre, Artem Dolgopyat of Israel won the gold medal on floor.
It was the first medal ever for Israel in gymnastics and is the country’s lone gold medal of the 2020 Olympics thus far, and third medal overall.
Dolgopyat, the 2020 European Champion on the event, had the highest score in qualifying and continued his dominance on Sunday. His mark was tied with Spain’s Rayderley Zapata, but Dolgopyat won the second tiebreak because of a higher difficulty score.
Zapata earned the silver medal, and Ruoteng Xiao of China won the bronze.
Yul Moldauer, the only American in the competition, finished in sixth place out of eight. He stuck all but one of his tumbling passes, but he caught his foot during a flair sequence. — D’Arcy Maine
Final results:
Artem Dolgopyat, Israel – 14.933
Rayderley Zapata, Spain – 14.933
Ruoteng Xiao, China – 14.766
Sunghyun Ryu, South Korea – 14.233
Milad Karimi, Kazakhstan – 14.133
Yul Moldauer, USA – 13.533
Nikita Nagornyy, ROC – 13.066
Hansol Kim, South Korea – 13.066
Let the individual event finals begin
Sunday was the first day of individual event finals, and it was a combination of men’s and women’s events. The top eight highest-scoring gymnasts from qualifying advanced on each event, with a maximum of two per country. The preliminary scores were erased, however. The highest score on Sunday won.
The schedule — hope you had your coffee on hand for this one:
4 a.m. ET: men’s floor
4:45 a.m. ET: women’s vault
5:45 a.m. ET: men’s pommel horse
6:27 a.m. ET: women’s uneven barsCould you tell us more about the Americans?
Funny you should ask. By this point, you’ve probably heard of Suni Lee. But if you haven’t, you should definitely check out this story on her impressive all-around win. There is also a video of her and her dad doing backflips that we can’t recommend strongly enough.
Jade Carey and MyKayla Skinner both qualified to Tokyo as individual competitors, and both have had wild rides during this Olympics. Skinner thought her Olympic experience was over after the qualifying rounds, while Carey took Biles’ spot in the all-around when Biles withdrew.
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