‘Twisting again’ Biles prepares gymnastics comeback

World gymnastics superstar Simone Biles, who has not competed since the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, makes her return on Aug. 5, 2023 at the US Classic in Chicago, a possible first stop on the road to the Paris Olympics. (AFP)
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Updated 04 August 2023
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‘Twisting again’ Biles prepares gymnastics comeback

  • The 26-year-old superstar has not taken part in elite competition since her tumultuous campaign at the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Olympics two years ago
  • Biles: But I’m fine. I’m twisting again. No worries. All is good

CHICAGO: Simone Biles makes her long-awaited return to gymnastics in Chicago on Saturday, with the dreaded “twisties” firmly behind her in what could be the first step on the road toward next year’s Olympic games.

The 26-year-old superstar has not taken part in elite competition since her tumultuous campaign at the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Olympics two years ago.

The four-time Olympic gold medalist and 19-time World Championships gold medallist arrived in Japan as one of the stars of Olympic sport, widely expected to crown her legacy with a successful defense of her 2016 Olympics all-around title.

But in what became one of the most gripping dramas of the Tokyo Games, Biles’s challenge unraveled dramatically, with the American making a series of uncharacteristic stumbles during early qualification rounds.

Biles later confided that she felt she had the “weight of the world on my shoulders” and after struggling in the early rounds of the team competition, she withdrew citing mental health issues.

Those same issues prompted her withdrawal from the all-around competition as well as the vault, uneven bars and floor disciplines.

She eventually returned for the balance beam final, opting for a safer-than-usual routine that earned a bronze medal.

Biles attributed her problems to an attack of the “twisties” — a phenomenon in gymnastics where athletes become disoriented and lose their sense of where they are in the air at a given moment, potentially leaving them at risk of injury when they land.

“It’s the craziest feeling ever. Not having an inch of control over your body,” Biles explained in 2021.

“What’s even scarier is since I have no idea where I am in the air, I also have no idea how I am going to land. Or what I am going to land on.”

Biles’ decision to withdraw from competition was widely hailed as a watershed moment for the issue of mental health in elite sports, with the gymnast applauded for prioritizing her own well-being before competition.

After confirming her return to competition last month, Biles said she is still undergoing therapy to help her “handle the mental side” of her craft.

“Lots of therapy, I go once a week for almost two hours,” she said on Instagram. “I’ve had so much trauma, so being able to work on some of the traumas and work on healing is a blessing,” added Biles, one of dozens of elite gymnasts who suffered sexual abuse at the hands of jailed USA team doctor Larry Nassar.

In a Q+A with fans on Instagram last weekend, Biles said her fear of the “twisties” had been put squarely behind her, even if she admitted to nervousness when returning to the gym.

“When the twisties happen, you go right into the gym and work on it. I took over a year off and THEN came back ... So I was petrified,” she said.

“But I’m fine. I’m twisting again. No worries. All is good,” Biles wrote.

What the future holds for Biles beyond this weekend remains uncertain.

She has not yet confirmed whether she plans to participate in the Paris Olympics next year.

“For Paris, as of now, I would say, I’ll be there regardless,” Biles said in a September 2022 interview.

“I just don’t know if it will be as an athlete or as an audience member.”

This weekend’s US Classic has been a happy hunting ground for Biles in the past. In 2018 she used the event as her comeback meet after taking a lengthy break following her gold-medal winning campaign at the Rio Olympics.

She followed that return with two world championship all around gold medals in 2018 and 2019.

This weekend’s event in Chicago will also mark a return to competition for reigning Olympic all-around champion Sunisa Lee, who has battled a kidney-related health issue this year.


Lovesick Blues looking for better showing in Riyadh Dirt Sprint

Updated 11 February 2026
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Lovesick Blues looking for better showing in Riyadh Dirt Sprint

  • Having finished sixth in Breeders’ Cup, the sprinter goes again for trainer Librado Barocio

RIYADH: Mia Familia Racing Stable’s hard-knocking American sprinter Lovesick Blues (US) will bid to atone for a luckless Breeders’ Cup run in Saturday’s group two $2-million Riyadh Dirt Sprint Presented by Saudi National Bank.

Trainer Librado Barocio’s grey son of Grazen is part of a formidable US trio for the race that includes group two Santa Anita Sprint Championship winner Imagination (US) and group three Elite Power Stakes winner Just Beat the Odds (US).

The nine-time winner from 43 starts was last seen finishing sixth in the group one Breeders’ Cup Sprint after a tough trip.

“After the Breeders’ Cup I was always dreaming of coming to places like Saudi Arabia and Dubai,” Barocio said.

“He got a really bad trip in the Breeders’ Cup. He got squeezed and was left like 10 lengths behind, but then he started really closing. Unfortunately, then he couldn’t find room.

“He had to keep going inside and outside of horses down the stretch and in the end gets beat by about six lengths for the whole thing. He came back after the race and he was mad.

“After the Breeders’ Cup I said, ‘you know what, let’s focus on the big races and see what he can do,’ and that’s what we’re doing. He’s got an attitude, which I like, and he has his quirks. You just have to know him and I know he’s doing great.”

Lovesick Blues continued his preparation with a proper leg-stretcher around the King Abdulaziz Racecourse dirt track on Sunday morning with exercise rider Danny Ramsey in the saddle.

“I’m excited and was happy with that,” Barocio said.

“I like to give him a little open gallop for a couple furlongs to give him a feel for the track and let his muscles get loose. I like the way he did that and I like that he was on his toes coming off the track. He’s something else. All signs point to a great day, hopefully, so far.”

Climbing his way up gradually from the claiming ranks, though the allowance conditions, and ultimately becoming an earner of $830,000, it now seems that Lovesick Blues is at his peak at age 8.

“He’s ready to go,” Barocio said. “I won’t do much more with him. He will have a couple of easy days and jog on the training track, then come to the main track another day, then jog on the small track the day before the race.

“Before coming here, he had some really good works and I think I have him ready. Danny said he’s really liking the track, so all we can do is pray at this point and keep dreaming.”