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Simone Biles is on five-gold Tokyo mission

Both have already achieved enough to be considered the greatest gymnasts of all time, but they approach the delayed 2020 Games as hungry as ever to enhance reputations that already stand as tall as nearby Mount Fuji.

AFP
Tokyo, Japan
Fri, July 23, 2021

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 Simone Biles is on five-gold Tokyo mission There she goes: American Simone Biles competes in the women's floor qualification round on day three of the 2018 FIG Artistic Gymnastics Championships at Aspire Dome in Doha on Saturday. (AFP/Karim Jaafar)

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merican gymnastic goddess Simone Biles and Japan's national sporting deity Kohei Uchimura begin their quests for Olympic immortality in Tokyo this weekend.

Both have already achieved enough to be considered the greatest gymnasts of all time, but they approach the delayed 2020 Games as hungry as ever to enhance reputations that already stand as tall as nearby Mount Fuji.

Sunday's women's qualification sees Biles set out on the road she hopes will be paved with five gold medals.

She went close to pulling off the unparalleled feat at the last Olympics in Rio.

Her four golds in 2016 matched the record for a woman gymnast, a bronze in the beam the one that got away.

The 24-year-old Ohio-born superstar will be hot favourite with Suni Lee, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum to win the US a third consecutive team title next Tuesday.

Two days later Biles will seek to become the first back-to-back winner of the all-around title in over half a century.

Few will bet against that outcome in a discipline where she is undefeated since 2013 -- an era of domination that has delivered 19 world championship golds to go with her Brazilian quartet.

The vault is next, and if the Ariake Gymnastics Centre, empty due to Tokyo's coronavirus restrictions, was full with fans they would all have their hearts in their mouths as she started her run-up.

That's because the millions watching on their televisions and tablets around the world could be treated to a Yurchenko double pike -- a move so devilishly complex and gravity-defying it had never been attempted by a woman in competition until Biles pulled it off this year.

Then she will again be out to rule the floor and conclude unfinished business on the beam.

Read also: US female gymnast tests positive for COVID-19 ahead of Olympics

Asked after an impressive team training run-out on Wednesday when she'd be heading home she replied: "After we finish the job."

The Biles that is set to dazzle and amaze again at these pandemic-postponed Games is a more confident version of her 2016 self.

Since Rio she has often led criticism of USA Gymnastics (USAG) and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee over their handling of the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal. In 2018 she revealed she was among the hundreds of gymnasts who was sexually abused by Nassar.

She also took a long sabbatical, but initial thoughts of retirement after Tokyo may have to be put on ice as her two French coaches are trying to cajole her into one last dance on the Olympic stage in Paris in 2024.

 

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