Olympic champion Sunisa Lee adds bronze on uneven bars, Mykayla Skinner takes vault silver
Bronze #Bronze
Three days and a crush of fame later, she wasn’t quite right. Admitting she’d become distracted by the attention surrounding her triumph, connections that typically come so easily were labored during Sunday’s event finals, if they came at all. The result was a bronze-medal finish that left her disappointed.
Yes, the all-around title is great. She’ll carry it with her for the rest of her life. But the bars are her jam. Only her long-anticipated showdown with Belgium star Nina Derwael never materialized. Leading off while wearing a dazzling crystal-laden blue leotard in the eight-woman final, Lee knew in the middle of her routine it wasn’t going to be good enough to top the podium long before her 14.500 flashed across the scoreboard.
“Bars is something I really cherish,” Lee said while wearing shoes borrowed from American teammate Jade Carey because she forgot the ones that come with the US uniform back at the hotel. “So when I mess it up, it really sucks.”
Even if Lee’s definition of “mess it up” is different than most others. The bronze gave her a full rainbow of Olympic bling to go with the all-around gold and the silver she claimed in the team competition.
It’s impressive by any stretch. It’s also not quite what she came here for.
“It’s really cool,” Lee said. “I just wish the bronze medal was a (balance) beam medal, not bars.”
Lee will get a chance to add to her stash in the beam final on Tuesday. A medal there would be a bit of a surprise. One on bars was almost a given. Though she earned one, she didn’t put on a show while doing it. She thinks her inability to put down her phone the last few days had a little to do with it.
Her popularity has exploded in the 10 days since the Games began. She’s added 950,000 followers on Instagram, a stunning 390 percent increase, including 365,000 since last Thursday.
It typically comes with the territory when you find yourself atop the podium after one of the marquee events at the Olympics. She just wasn’t expecting it. She figured she would be vying for silver behind teammate Simone Biles. Then the 2016 Olympic champion pulled out of the all-around final to focus on her mental health, opening a door that Lee stepped through with a performance both graceful and gritty.
The two-plus days since her victory have been a whirlwind of interviews and social media mentions. It’s a lot. At the moment, it’s probably too much. Lee thinks she might delete Twitter until the competition is over.
As MyKayla Skinner launched herself off the vault, she heard the roar from her teammates watching in the stands. One voice seemed louder than the rest — Simone Biles, rooting for Skinner in what would become a silver-medal winning performance.
“I knew she was going to be the loudest one in there tonight,” Skinner said.
Skinner had always dreamed of competing at the Olympics, and described the unexpected, 11th-hour opportunity as a “one in a million” chance that she was not going to waste.
She was not supposed to be there, competing on vault in the women’s event finals Sunday.
She had the fourth-highest score during qualifications. But the rules allow each country a maximum of two athletes in the finals. Biles and Jade Carey finished first and second, pushing Skinner from the competition.
She was devastated that her Olympics — and her gymnastics career — appeared to have ended at qualification. She was preparing to get on a plane to fly home.
Skinner, 24, posted a farewell online.
“This is closing the book on my gymnastics career,” she wrote. “For now I will just try to fill the hole in my heart.”
But then Biles struggled at team finals Tuesday and withdrew from that competition. Biles told her coach to text Skinner and tell her to stay, just in case she couldn’t continue competing and Skinner would have to step in.
Biles was struggling with what gymnasts call the “twisties,” a sudden inability to control their body while flying through the air. Skinner said she’s had them once but was able to rebound quickly. She knows other gymnasts who’ve taken weeks to recover. Biles was deciding day by day if she felt up to competing in any competitions.
Skinner said it was a struggle to get her mind back in the game; after qualifying she’d resigned herself to going home and moving on. But she rallied, with the support of Biles and the rest of the team, she said.
Biles decided Saturday she would not compete the next day.
Skinner posted the news on Twitter: “Looks like I get to put a competition leo on just one more time. Doing this for us, Simone Biles. It’s go time baby.”
Biles told her: “I want you to make it onto the podium. I want you to medal.”
Skinner’s road to the Olympics was not a straight line, nor was it easy.
She was an alternate on the 2016 Olympic team that won gold in Rio de Janeiro — a frustration for her because at qualifying she racked up the fourth-highest score.
She retired from elite gymnastics after that and focused on her collegiate career at the University of Utah. Competing in college made her fall in love with the sport again, she said, and so in 2019 she chose to return, driven by an intense desire to make the Olympic team for Tokyo.
COVID-19 delayed her training. She caught the virus and was hospitalized in January. She missed about a month at the gym, and wasn’t sure she would ever make it back.
But she did, marking an unprecedented comeback at 24 years old, an age considered ancient in this sport dominated by teenagers.
“I think it’s so cool to show that age is just a number, and that anything is possible if you work hard and dream for it,” said Skinner, adding she hoped young gymnasts entering the sport are inspired by her endurance.
The only person to score higher on Sunday was Rebeca Andrade of Brazil, who took home gold. As Skinner stood on the podium she saved her biggest wave for when she turned to her teammates in the stands. Biles and the others danced and screamed.