KANSAS CITY, Mo. When Simone Biles stepped up for the floor exercise Sunday night, she was prepared to attempt something the sport had never seen: a triple-double, meaning two flips and three twists. She slipped a tad when she attempted it Friday night, but this time, she landed it nearly perfectly.
Her legend grew in a matter of minutes.
Hours later, Biles returned to a more familiar place.
When she climbed onto the U.S. gymnastics national championships winners podium at Sprint Center, Biles was prepared to do something she had already done five times previously: accept the all-around gold medal.
Biles earned her sixth with a total all-around score of 118.500, tying her for the most national titles in the sports history.
Biles won gold in the floor exercise, balance beam and vault and bronze on uneven bars.
Biles has now risen to a level where only a few have gone. Even the gymnast she tied for national titles Sunday night, Clara Schroth Lomady, isnt in contention for the greatest-of-all-time status.
That honor belongs to Mary Lou Retton, a retired gymnast whose gold medal in the individual all-around competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics made her the first American woman to win such a thing.
But even she admits it: Biles is better.
I say it over and over, Retton told People magazine in 2016. She is the greatest gymnast ever. I really do think that.
That much was evident in the final standings Sunday night. Sunisa Lee earned the all-around silver, winning gold on the uneven bars and scoring a 113.550, while Grace McCallum brought home the all-around bronze, totaling a score of 111.850.
GAGE Center, in Blue Springs, was represented well. Overland Park, Kansas native Leanne Wong finished fifth, scoring a total all-around figure of 111.250, and she also won bronze on the balance beam. Grain Valleys Kara Eaker placed 10th overall and secured the silver on the balance beam.
Lees Summit native Aleah Finnegan, also a GAGE gymnast, finished 13th overall.
Biles reality is such that she acknowledges it herself. On Wednesday, she warmed up for this championship meet in a leotard bedazzled with a goat.
Its an acronym: Greatest Of All Time.
Biles list of accolades is well-known, but it bears repeating: She was the 2016 Olympic individual all-around, vault and floor gold medalist, and the bronze medalist on the balance beam. Shes also a four-time world all-around champion, four-time world floor exercise champion, two-time world balance beam champion and 2018 world vault champion.





