ALL HAIL THE QUUEN: Simone Biles Has been crowned the Greatest Queen of gymnastics and $876million dollar contract from…

Simone Biles Has been crowned the Greatest Queen of gymnastics and $876million dollar contract from…

Simone Biles: American gymnast wins Laureus World Comeback of the Year award after memorable 2023

Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast in history, picked up yet another prize on Monday as she was awarded the Laureus World Comeback of the Year award. Biles took a a two-year break from the sport after the Tokyo 2020 Olympics to prioritise her mental health, but emphatically returned in 2023 with four gold medals at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp, Belgium.

How to win on your own terms: Simone Biles claims her eighth Olympic gold  on her Paris 2024 'redemption tour'

Four-time Olympic champion Simone Biles has been awarded the Laureus World Comeback of the Year prize following a two-year hiatus from the sport.
The American gymnast had a 2023 to remember as she returned to the sport after taking a break for mental health reasons following the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
Biles won four gold medals in her first global event since the Olympics at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, last year
Biles also won her eighth U.S. Gymnastics title to break the 90-year-old US gymnastics title record previously held by Alfred Jochim.
The 27-year-old is a three-time winner of Sportswoman of the Year award (2017, 2019, 2020) and adds another statuette to her collection with the Comeback of the Year Award.
She is expected to try to add to her Olympic medal collection at this summer’s Paris Olympic Games.
Meanwhile, Arisa Trew became the first female skateboarder to win Laureus Action Sportsperson of the Year.
Trew, the 13-year-old Australian skateboarding star, made history in 2023 when she became the first female skater to land a 720 (two full rotations) in vert skateboarding.

Trew successfully pulled off the trick at the Tony Hawk Vert Alert in Utah.
One of the event’s hosts, Tony Hawk, who is a member of the Laureus World Sports Academy, was the first skateboarder to land the trick in 1985.
Olympics 2024: Simone Biles wins stunning gold in women's all-around  gymnastics final | Olympics News | Sky Sports
ATP world No. 1 Novak Djokovic has won the Laureus World Sportsman of the Year award for a record-equalling fifth time.
Meanwhile, Barcelona midfielder Aitana Bonmati has been named the Laureus World Sportswoman of the Year and Real Madrid’s Jude Bellingham has won the Laureus World Breakthrough of the Year award.
The 69 sporting legends whose votes decide the award winners presented the prizes in Madrid.
Usain Bolt, the greatest sprinter of all time, presented the Sportswoman of the Year Award to Bonmati.
Last year’s winner of the Breakthrough of the Year Award, Carlos Alcaraz – a Real Madrid fan – handed the Laureus for that category to Bellingham.
Team USA's Simone Biles wins gold in Olympic all-around final

Laureus 2024 award winners

Sportsman of the Year: Novak Djokovic
Sportswoman of the Year: Aitana Bonmati
Team of the Year Award: Spain Women’s Football Team
Breakthrough of the Year: Jude Bellingham
Comeback of the Year: Simone Biles
Sport for Good: Fundacion Rafa Nadal
Sportsperson of the Year with a Disability: Diede de Groot
Action Sportsperson of the Year: Arisa Trew

How to win on your own terms: Simone Biles claims her eighth Olympic gold on her Paris 2024 ‘redemption tour’

Simone Biles is the most decorated gymnast, male or female, in history. She won her first world championship all-around gold medal in 2013 and has not lost an all-around competition since.

She arrived in Paris with 37 medals from World Championships and Olympics, including 27 golds.

She has since added to this total, winning team gold – her eighth Olympic medal – and she looks set to increase her tally when she competes in the finals for all-around, beam, floor and vault.

Biles returns to the Olympics after a difficult experience at Tokyo 2020. The athlete we have seen perform so far at Paris is more relaxed, more mature and still giving us the performances of the best gymnast in the world.

A difficult second Olympics

At her first Olympics, Rio 2016, Biles won gold in the team all-around, vault and floor competitions, and bronze on beam.

She was expected to repeat the feat in Tokyo in 2021, but she was forced to withdraw from most events because of mental health concerns and the “twisties” – the name gymnasts give to the phenomenon of losing sense of where they are in the air, making performing complicated moves dangerous.

In the end, she contributed one vault to the team final, where the women from the United States took silver, and she received a bronze medal on beam – far from the multiple golds she was expected to take home

Many elite gymnasts get the twisties. They just didn’t talk about them so openly. Since Biles first spoke about it, other elite gymnasts such as Joscelyn Roberson and Laurie Hernandez have spoken about sharing the experience.

Biles has said the twisties were caused by a combination of trauma related to abuse by a former USA team doctor, isolation during the COVID affected games and the weight of high expectations of success.

Changing the discussion around mental health

Biles’ decision to prioritise her mental health and not compete has changed perceptions of elite gymnasts and their mental health.

Simone Biles Re-Wears Naked Sandals With Ruffled Crop Top & Sleek Bikini  for Girls' Trip Final Days in Cancun

Many former elite gymnasts have spoken about how they did not have agency over their bodies and decision-making while training and competing, and were forced to compete while injured.

Biles speaking about her mental health, alongside athletes like basketballer Kevin Love and tennis player Naomi Osaka, has reduced stigma, and increased the number of athletes talking about their mental health.

This year, inspired by this discussion, the US Olympic and Paralympic committee has made sure athletes have access to more mental health resources while they compete in Paris.

Changing the sport

Biles is also a trailblazer in competition.

She has five unique moves named after her across floor, balance beam and vault.

Only one of these moves has ever been performed by another gymnast in an international competition, when Hillary Heron of Panama performed a double layout with a half-twist in the second flip on floor this week in Paris.

She is a role model for many young African American girls, who are increasingly enrolling in gymnastics clubs.

Women’s gymnastics has long been dominated by younger athletes. There has not been an Olympic all-around women’s champion in her 20s for over 50 years.

The 2024 US team is one of the oldest in the country’s history, with an average age of 22. By way of contrast, in 2012, the oldest member of the team was 18-year-old Aly Raisman. Other medal contenders such as Brazil, have teams even older.

Simone Biles Rising'Review: Biles Breaks New Ground in Gymnastics Mental  Health » SportStars Magazine

At 27, Biles could become the oldest woman to win Olympic all-around gold since 1952

More experienced gymnasts competing at Olympic level reflects a change in recent years. Athletes have been able to maintain their elite abilities longer due to advances in sports medicine and training.

Her success as an older athlete also reflects her improved mental health and maturity.

Coming close to walking away from gymnastics after Tokyo, Biles was in and out of the gym for over a year and a half as she built from occasional gentle trampoline and mat exercises to more complex skills and routines.

When she returned to competition in 2023, she won her sixth all-around world championship and ninth all-around US championship.

As she details in her recent Netflix documentary, she now has much more balance in her life, with new priorities outside the gym. She still wants to win, but not winning isn’t the end of the world.

Paris 2024

Biles has called Paris her “redemption tour”. Again, she arrived at the Olympics with the pressure of being the favourite. But this time she is noticeably more relaxed, regularly seen chatting and laughing with teammates.

So far in Paris, her physical health has been more of a concern. She has a heavily strapped lower leg and has been seen limping. Her coach has said the injury is minor, and she will still be able to compete in the rest of the competition.

In her documentary, Biles talks about the importance of ending her career on her terms.

She has already changed the sport, both inside and outside the gym. If she can complete her remarkable comeback with individual all-around gold in Paris this will truly cement her legacy as the greatest gymnast of all time.

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