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Simone Biles wins 7th title

Free Press staff, wire reports | 6/10/2021, 6 p.m.
There’s no disputing that Simone Biles is a champion. After Sunday, she is now a champion seven times over.

FORT WORTH, Texas - There’s no disputing that Simone Biles is a champion. After Sunday, she is now a champion seven times over.

The 24-year-old gymnastics superstar claimed her record seventh U.S. Gymnastics title Sunday night, delivering another stunning — and stunningly easy — performance.

Her crowd-pleasing routine served little doubt that the pressure surrounding her bid to become the first woman to win back-to-back Olympic championships in more than 50 years is only pushing her to even greater heights.

Shaking off a somewhat sloppy start last Friday, at least by her impeccable standards, Biles put on a four-rotation showcase that highlighted why a GOAT emblem — a nod to her status as the Greatest Of All Time — has become a fixture on her competition leotard.

Her two-day total of 119.650 was nearly five points better than runner-up Sunisa Lee and good friend and teammate Jordan Chiles. Biles’ all-around score on Sunday of 60.100 was her highest since 2018 and served notice she is only getting better with the Olympic Games in Tokyo less than seven weeks away.

It helped that Biles managed to stay inbounds during her floor routine after stepping out three times last Friday. Blame it on the rush she gets when the lights are on and a crowd is in the palm of her hands. She was far more precise in finals save for one tumbling pass where one of her feet stepped over the white border.

Oh, well, something to work on for the Olympic trials later this month in St. Louis.

“It’s so crazy because, in training, I never go out of bounds and I never have this much power,” Biles said. “But with the adrenaline, that’s where it comes.”

While Biles’ victory was never in doubt — it rarely has been during her nearly eight-year reign atop the sport — she remains in no mood to coast.

And to think she didn’t even bother with her latest innovation, a Yurchenko double-pike vault she drilled twice at the U.S. Classic last month that caught the attention of everyone from LeBron James to Michelle Obama.

Instead, she opted for two vaults with slightly lower difficulty that she completed so casually that it was hard to tell if she was in front of an arena that screamed for her at every turn or just fooling around at practice back home in Houston.

Not that it mattered. Biles still posted the top score on vault anyway. Just like she did on beam. Just like she did on floor. Just like she has done everywhere she has saluted the judges since the 2013 U.S. Championships.

The Yurchenko double-pike will return at trials and likely in Tokyo, where, if she completes it during com- petition, yet another element in the sport’s Code of Points will be named for her. Just add it to the list of what they call “#SimoneThings.”

Biles has been a lock for Tokyo from the moment she returned to training in late 2017. Chiles and Lee may also be nearing that territory. The top two all-around finishers at trials will earn an automatic spot on the Olympic team, though U.S. national team coordinator Tom Forster allowed Biles, Chiles and Lee have separated themselves from the pack.

“You can look at the scores and if the scores are anything, it looks like that,” Forster said.

Yes it does.