“His mental state is still; he’ll never fully heal, so that’s why he really needs to calm down,” his coach said.
In case the four-letter word she dropped wasn’t clear, Simone Biles was “very, very angry” about her wobblier-than-usual performance on the balance beam during the US Olympic gymnastics trials. 2024, his coach said.
But he bounced back quickly on Friday, June 28, with first-place displays on court and vault.
“This is exactly how it should be,” Laurent Landi told reporters afterwards, calling it “a great comeback” for the 27-year-old reigning world champion who is now on the cusp of making her third Olympic team and heading to the Paris Games next month.
Landi, who coaches Biles with her wife, Cecile, said she was shaken by gymnast Kayla DiCello’s Achilles injury during her first event, on vault, and her withdrawal from the trials, which are being held in Minneapolis.
She also suggested that she is still dealing with what happened during the 2021 Tokyo Games, when Biles failed a vault routine and then withdrew from most of her events after being hit by a case of what are called “twisties.” “, in which he lost the ability to know where his body was in the air.
“His mental state is calm, he will never fully heal, that’s why he really needs to calm down,” Landi said.
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“She needs to trust her own practice… Everything goes well for her,” he continued. “And because of this, there is anxiety: ‘Oh, am I going to be the next one to get hurt? What is going to happen to me?’ You can’t control this, so control what you can control.”
He pointed to her “almost perfect floor and then her amazing vault” after the beam as proof, if any was needed, that “she’s really 100% now.”
Biles herself said the same to NBC on Friday: “I’m really upset about Beam. I’m really disappointed in myself because that’s not how I train. And in the future, I’m going to try to compete how I train on that event. Because I know I’m good at it.”
“I know I can do better. So that’s what I’m going to work on,” he said.