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Meet the U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Team

The women’s squad headed for Paris is the oldest and most decorated in history.

Photo: Jamie Squire/Getty Images

On Sunday, after two days of trials in Minneapolis, the U.S. women’s gymnastics team finalized its lineup for the 2024 Paris Olympics. The group will, of course, include Simone Biles, who dominated the trials three years after bowing out of several events at the Tokyo Olympics to focus on her mental health. She’ll be part of the oldest and most decorated U.S. Olympic women’s gymnastics team ever, a group that includes four athletes returning from the 2021 Tokyo games. Meanwhile, three top contenders were knocked out by injuries — Skye Blakely and Kayla DiCello were both forced to withdraw with ruptured Achilles tendons, and Shilese Jones also withdrew on Sunday with a knee injury — making way for an exciting young up-and-comer to join the team. Also, SZA stopped by?

At the end of the week, Biles and her teammates — Suni Lee, Jordan Chiles, Jade Carey, and Hezly Rivera, along with alternates Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong — were announced. Here’s what we know about the crew heading to Paris.

Simone Biles

Photo: Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Duh. Despite an uncharacteristic fall off the beam, Biles finished first all-around, giving her an automatic spot on the team for her third Olympics. At 27, she’ll be the oldest female U.S. gymnast to go to the Olympics in 72 years. Her floor routine, which was set partially to an instrumental version of Taylor Swift’s “… Ready for It?,” earned her a comment from Swift herself, who wrote on X, “Watched this so many times and still unready. She’s ready for it tho.” Biles seems to agree — after qualifying, she said she’s in a “good mental spot” heading into Paris.

Suni Lee

Photo: Nikolas Liepins/Anadolu via Getty Images

Lee is the reigning Olympic champion, having won the all-around event in Tokyo during her first Games after Biles bowed out. Last year, she revealed that she was struggling with two types of kidney disease and retired from competing at Auburn College. Since then, she’s resumed training with her sights on the Olympics — she told reporters in the spring that her condition is in remission. By this weekend’s trials, the 21-year-old had rallied enough to win the uneven bars with a new routine, though she struggled on the beam.

Jordan Chiles

Photo: Nikolas Liepins/Anadolu via Getty Images

Another returning member of the 2021 Tokyo team, Chiles moved to Texas when she was 18 to train with Biles at the World Champions Centre. The duo became super close, and the now 23-year-old Chiles thanked her teammate on Sunday, saying that Biles has “put me in a position to understand what it’s like to be an athlete … and also a person.” And, she did her floor routine to an instrumental Beyoncé medley:

Jade Carey

Photo: Nikolas Liepins/Anadolu via Getty Images

Like Lee, Carey won gold at the Tokyo Olympics, taking home the medal for floor exercise. She placed first on vault during this weekend’s trials and came in just behind Biles on the floor. Carey, who’s 24, is coached by her father, both on the elite circuit and also at Oregon State University, where she competes. Guess they’re about to take the father-daughter trip of a lifetime — for the second time.

Hezly Rivera

Photo: Elsa/Getty Images

Rivera is the only first-time Olympian on the team and also the only teenager — she just turned 16 in June. The 2023 junior national champion told reporters she thought these trials would be a “steppingstone” to competing in the 2028 games, but with Jones, Blakely, and DiCello injured, she surged to the top of the pool of fifth team member contenders — especially after tying Biles for the two-day average on the beam. She seems absolutely shocked to have qualified, and we are all — Biles included — pretty excited to have her on board.

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