• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

American Gold Sports Alliance

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Media
    • Featured News
    • Diversity and Inclusion Committee
    • Youth Advisory Committee
    • Wrestling for Gold Initiative
  • Raffles
  • Radiosport
  • Try Cricket
  • Athlete of the Month
  • Camps
  • Join Our Team
    • Richard Montgomery Wrestling
    • Richard Montgomery Girls Lacrosse
  • Donate
    • Giving Tuesday
  • Contact Us

Featured News

For Olympic boxer Claressa Shields, biopic ‘The Fire Inside’ is a knockout depiction of her career

January 9, 2025 by Tara S

By Ronda Racha Penrice | NBC News

To boxing and Olympics enthusiasts, Claressa “T-Rex” Shields is a household name. The film “The Fire Inside,” starring Ryan Destiny as Shields and Brian Tyree Henry as her trainer, Jason Crutchfield, now aims to bring the 29-year-old phenomenon’s story into every household and the world.

Written by Oscar-winning “Moonlight” filmmaker Barry Jenkins and directed by Oscar-nominated cinematographer Rachel Morrison, who worked on “Black Panther,” “The Fire Inside” traces Shields’ boxing journey starting at age 11, concentrating on her teen years working with volunteer boxing coach Jason Crutchfield, through her historic 2012 Olympics win at 17 and its aftermath, which included numerous titles and her second Olympic gold in 2016.

As a young Black girl growing up in Flint, Michigan, in a struggling household where she and her siblings often went hungry, Shields’ rise to become the first female boxer to win an Olympic gold medal for the United States was not exactly in the cards.

And casting Destiny for the lead role was unconventional, too, as she had started her career as a singer in girl groups before co-starring in the Lee Daniels’ TV series “Star,” about an aspiring girl group.

“For a long time, I had been wanting to do a project that really challenged me in a different way. With a project like this, it wasn’t something that specifically came to me,” the actor said.

In fact, to score this role, Destiny said she truly had to earn it.

Beyond the long audition process, the physical transformation into a believable, Olympic boxer took “months and months of training with a boxing trainer who was incredible and treated me like a fighter and not an actor,” she said. “And I think that really put me in the mindset more of an actual boxer in understanding the craft and the sport.”

Then there was the work of embodying Shields as a person. A 2015 documentary about Shields, “T-Rex,” provided the actor “a front-row seat” to Shields’ life, her relationship with Crutchfield and her journey to the Olympics.

“I studied it really hard to try to learn a lot of things — her mannerisms, the way she would talk, the way she would walk, the way she would fight, the way she would interact with her mom, interact with her siblings — and I think it really, really helped me,” Destiny said.

Shields herself told NBC News she was impressed by Destiny’s portrayal. “I’m happy she understood the calling and understood her role and who she was in the film,” Shields said. “I’m happy that she was able to include that confidence, show that grit.”


TSA reveals craziest confiscations of 2024, from snakes in pants to meth in crutches
Shields said she was impressed by Destiny and Brian Tyree Henry’s portrayal of her relationship with Crutchfield. “They got the relationship between me and Jason right,” she said. “Jason was like my best friend, mentor, my coach, my dad, and they were able to exude all of that in the film.”

Shining a spotlight on coaches like Crutchfield and many other Black men like him in other urban communities was critical to Jenkins, who once was a high school and college athlete.

“I felt like it was a story that I hadn’t seen told very often, even though I had seen that story in my everyday life,” Jenkins, who also directed “Mufasa,” told NBC News.

“Where I’m from in Miami, there are all these athletes being raised in some ways by these coaches who themselves are just working-class, working poor, the same way these athletes are,” he continued. “There’s this really great sacrifice that’s constantly happening with all of these communities all over America.”

Shields wanted Jenkins to hit several key points in his script when they initially met, prior to the release of his Oscar-winning 2016 film “Moonlight,” she said.

“Boxing is very physical, but I wanted him to catch the mental part,” Shields said. “And I wanted him to also not leave out the part that I believe in God.”

She also emphasized to Jenkins how she wanted the film to correct one critical depiction of her in the media. “People have written so many articles about me being an angry Black woman, but I let him know how I’m not angry to be a boxer. I love boxing. I’m passionate about it,” she said.

And she also did not want to be portrayed as a victim. “I wanted my hard times to show,” Shields said. “I wanted [people] to see what I went through, but I don’t want nobody feeling sorry for me.”

Filed Under: Boxing

LOVB Hits the Court for Inaugural Pro Volleyball Season

January 9, 2025 by Tara S

Just Women’s Sports

League One Volleyball Pro (LOVB) ​kicks off its inaugural season on Wednesday, as the largest brand in youth volleyball enters its professional era.

LOVB’s debut season will feature six teams playing a collective total of 60 games over 14 weeks of play, with all squads taking aim at mid-April’s league Finals.

Also on the inaugural schedule is a winner-take-all in-season tournament called the LOVB Classic, which will begin on Friday, February 14th, running through the Valentine’s Day weekend.

Capitalizing on markets known for their rabid NCAA volleyball fanbases, LOVB has rooted its six teams in Atlanta, Austin, Houston, Madison, Omaha, and Salt Lake City. Austin’s roster, for example, includes eight former NCAA champions from the University of Texas, allowing Longhorns fans to easily follow recent college stars like Logan Eggleston and Madisen Skinner into their professional careers.

Similarly, Omaha’s lineup will allow the Cornhusker faithful to see University of Nebraska legends Justine Wong-Orantes and Jordan Larson — the most decorated US indoor volleyball Olympian in history — back in action.

LOVB Austin outside hitter Leah Hardeman taps the ball over in a scrimmage against LOVB Houston last month.
Former NCAA volleyball stars will feature on LOVB’s court. (LOVB Austin)
The LOVB youth league pipeline goes pro
With 54 junior clubs currently entrenched across the US, League One Volleyball already has an established pipeline for many NCAA stars interested in turning pro, including several members from Team USA’s 2024 Olympic silver medal-winning squad.

That infrastructure aided LOVB in raising over $160 million in funding before its first serve, with sports icons like retired WNBA star Candace Parker and Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn backing the league.

In another testament to the league’s anticipated success, LOVB’s inked a broadcast deal with ESPN in May 2024. The contract guarantees that 10 of this season’s matches will air across the sports giant’s networks this season, with 18 contests set to stream on ESPN+.

“As viewership numbers for the Olympic Games and marquee collegiate games have proven once again, there is a massive audience appetite for women’s volleyball around the globe, and we can’t wait to bring an elite level of professional volleyball,” said LOVB president Rosie Spaulding.

LOVB pro volleyball players jump above the net to spike a ball.
LOVB kicks off its first season with six teams across the US. (LOVB)
How to watch the first-ever LOVB pro volleyball match
LOVB is kicking off its professional league with an historic clash, as Atlanta’s three-time Olympic medalist Kelsey Robinson Cook will face fellow Team USA stars Haleigh Washington and Jordyn Poulter of Salt Lake City for the first time on US soil on Wednesday.

Atlanta will host Salt Lake in the league’s debut match, which will stream live at 7:30 PM ET on ESPN+.

Filed Under: Volleyball

January 7, 2025 by Tara S

https://agsa.org/2025/01/6078/

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Tennis, Women's Tennis

Miles Sets ACC Record as NCAA Basketball Enters Conference Play

January 3, 2025 by Tara S

Women’s college basketball star and Notre Dame guard Olivia Miles recorded ​her second-straight triple-double on Sunday, becoming the first ACC player to hit the tally in back-to-back NCAA games.

Miles notched a career-high 14 assists in Notre Dame’s 95-54 win over Virginia, complementing the feat with 11 points and 10 rebounds.

The 21-year-old now has six career triple-doubles, tying WNBA mainstay and Maryland alum Alyssa Thomas for the most in ACC history.

“It’s even more special coming off a year where I just sat on my butt,” Miles told reporters​, referencing last season’s sidelining ACL tear.

“It’s definitely not an easy thing to do, to sit out, but I learned so much, and it’s enabled me to come and do what I do.”

Rori Harmon of the Texas Longhorns dribbles against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish during the first half of an NCAA women's college basketball game at Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center in South Bend, Indiana.
No. 5 Texas plays No. 9 Oklahoma in Thursday’s SEC college basketball matchup. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

NCAA conference play tips off with Top 10 matchups

With non-conference fireworks smoldering, college basketball is transitioning to conference play​ as tournament contenders enter the regular-season gauntlet hoping to peak at just the right time.

Subsequently, top NCAA basketball teams held court in two ranked Big Ten matchups over the weekend. No. 8 Maryland edged out No. 19 Michigan State 72-66 while No. 4 USC took down No. 23 Michigan 78-58.

This week’s lone Top 10 matchup revives a longtime rivalry, when SEC newcomers and former Big 12 foes No. 5 Texas and No. 9 Oklahoma tip off in Norman on Thursday.

Star Texas sophomore Madison Booker and senior point guard Rori Harmon will face big name Oregon State transfer Reagan Beers. Since joining the Sooners, Beers has emerged as Oklahoma’s leading scorer this season.

The Sooners won’t see much rest after their clash with the Longhorns, as Oklahoma then gears up for Sunday’s date with No. 15 Tennessee.

How to watch Texas vs. Oklahoma college basketball this week

Oklahoma hosts Texas on Thursday at 9 PM ET, with live coverage on ESPN2.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Women's Basketball

2024 Sports in Review: Year of the Woman went from wave to tsunami

January 3, 2025 by Tara S

Tom D’Angelo | Palm Beach Post

At first, it was a wave. Then, it turned into a tsunami.

Now, the increase in popularity and exposure is everywhere in women’s sports, in large part thanks to Caitlin Clark.

Clark turned the NCAA women’s basketball tournament title game into a more popular watch this year than its men’s counterpart (18.9 million viewers to 14.8) while playing for Iowa, and as a member of the Indiana Fever single-handedly pushed the WNBA into the sports mainstream.

But Clark is not the only one responsible for this movement. More, many more, athletes and executives have contributed to 2024 being the Year of the Woman in sports.

Coco Gauff gestures with her hands on her 20th birthday after defeating Elise Mertens 6-0, 6-2 in the fourth-round at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., on March 13, 2024.
  • Tennis star Coco Gauff of Delray Beach was the highest-earning women’s athlete for the second consecutive year, netting a reported $30.4 million.
  • Swimmer Katie Ledecky became the most decorated female American Olympian of all time, winning four medals in Paris – two gold, one silver, one bronze – to add to her 10 previous Olympic medals.
  • Gymnast Simone Biles took home three golds and one silver from Paris, bringing her career total to 11 Olympic medals, including seven gold.
  • Jessica Campbell became the first female coach behind the bench in NHL history after being hired by the Seattle Kraken.
  • The Pro Women’s Hockey League brought in nearly 400,000 fans in its inaugural regular season, including a record crowd of 21,105 in Montreal for a game against Toronto.
  • The NFL saw the first matchup between teams with female presidents when Kristi Coleman’s Carolina Panthers faced Sandra Douglass Morgan’s Las Vegas Raiders.
  •  LPGA Player of the Year Nelly Korda won seven times on tour, was a member of the winning U.S. Solheim Cup team and captured her second major.
  • Locally, Wellington resident Rebecca Hart won three gold medals in dressage, equaling the most golds of any U.S. athlete at the summer Paralympic Games in Paris.

Deloitte has predicted that this year women’s elite sports will surpass $1 billion in global revenues for the first time, generating $1.28 billion.

“We have seen exceptional growth in women’s sport across the globe, driving a significant uplift in its commercial value, which in turn has led to growing interest from investors,” said Jennifer Haskel, insights lead for Deloitte’s Sports Business Group.

The growth in popularity and interest in women’s sports heads our list of things we loved to see about 2024 when it comes to sports.

Here are some things we’d like to see in 2025:

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Simone Biles Is SI’s 2024 Sportsperson of the Year

January 3, 2025 by Tara S

Stephanie Apstein | Sports Illustrated

imone Biles stood alone and stared at the 25 meters separating herself from the vault table, from her greatest fears, from her legacy. She had just turned to her closest friend on the U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team, Jordan Chiles, and asked the question on everyone’s mind: What if it happens again?

Chiles gaped. Biles had been kidding around earlier, reminding her teammates—in case they’d forgotten—that the last time they were at the Olympic team final, her entire world had collapsed. But this quiet moment in Paris last July felt just a bit more serious. “I think maybe half her brain was joking,” Chiles says now. “But the other half was like, Uhhh …”

Her teammates and coaches wondered the same thing. So did journalists, broadcasters and fans. At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Biles contracted a case of the twisties—gymnastics vertigo—and lost her bearings in the air during her vault at the team final, then withdrew from event after event. 

https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.679.0_en.html#goog_1979657663

Up Next – Simone Biles Is SI’s 2024 Sportsperson of the Year-00:15

Eventually she stripped the twisting dismount from her balance beam routine and took bronze. Then she quit gymnastics entirely. When she resumed competing two years later, every performance held drama. Once fans had asked themselves: What will the greatest gymnast of all time do next? Now they thought: Can she do this at all? 

No one was quite sure how Paris would unfold. On the day before the opening ceremony, the team took the floor for podium training—their first practice on the hard competition surface—and just about everyone stared at Biles. Volunteers filmed on their phones. Other gymnasts paused their routines. American fans woke up in the early morning hours to watch the livestream. On vault, Biles pulled off a flawless Yurchenko double pike, or Biles II—two flips with her legs perpendicular to her body, giving her no margin for error—drawing gasps from the crowd of journalists. “We’re all breathing a little bit better right now,” said coach Cécile Landi afterward. “I’m not going to lie.”

Biles Sportsperson of the Year
Shaniqwa Jarvis/Sports Illustrated

Three days later, Biles sealed the U.S.’s spot in the team event and qualified first in the all-around and on the vault, floor exercise and balance beam, despite aggravating a tear of her left calf. Her 59.566 was the second-best score of the Olympic cycle among gymnasts in the field, second only to her own performance at 2024 U.S. nationals. (She also owned the other eight spots in the top 10.)

And then came the team final, where the U.S. would start with the vault, the same event that had derailed her Olympics three years earlier. If it was going to happen again, this would be the moment.

You know what happened next, of course. Biles, 27, banished the twisties, and with them any question about her greatness. But you might not know what it took to get there. 

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Simone Biles is Sports Illustrated’s 2024 Sportsperson of the Year because she won gold, and then another gold, and then another; because she changed the face of her sport and the conversations around athletes in general; because she continues to speak out about issues that matter to her. And perhaps most of all because after she wondered aloud to Chiles whether she was about to relive the darkest period of her career, she took a deep breath, she saluted the judges and she broke into a run. 

Order Now: Get Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year issue


As Tokyo neared, so did disaster. Biles could feel it. She just wasn’t sure what form it would take. 

She had never really experienced failure. She had never suffered a serious injury. She had never fallen short. She had not lost an individual all-around event since she was a 16-year-old beaming through her braces.

 Sometimes she wondered if her run of success was “almost too good to be true,” she says. She adds, “In the back of my head, I was always worried about that. Because who has a career like that?”

To that point, pretty much just Biles. She was making a case for greatest of all time even before she made her Olympic debut, at 19, in Rio de Janeiro in 2016. She led the U.S. to gold in the team final, then captured first in the individual all-around, the vault and the floor exercise, and third on the balance beam. 

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

She felt pressure even then—and shame when she stumbled in the beam final. She salvaged bronze, and she wanted to be proud of her recovery, but she knew she had disappointed others. Márta Károlyi, the national team coach at the time, greeted her afterward with a terse, “See, you can never lose a second of concentration.”

Simone Biles Tokyo Olympics
The twisties derailed her Tokyo Olympics and cost her two years of competition, but Biles reasserted her dominance in Paris. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

COVID-19 postponed the Tokyo Games by a year and gave Biles too much time to think. Something wasn’t right when she returned to the gym after lockdown, although she couldn’t identify quite what it was. “I’ve kind of given myself—I wouldn’t say mental blocks, but it’s definitely different,” she told SI in April 2021. She noticed that she would try a twisting skill but was unable to finish the twist. 

Chiles first grew concerned during the U.S. Olympic Trials that June. “Her face just didn’t look O.K. to me,” Chiles recalls. On the second night of competition, Biles fell on her beam routine and seemed disproportionately upset. “I kinda got in my head,” Biles admitted afterward. 

On the flight to Tokyo, she thought, This isn’t going to go how I want it to. She endured a rocky qualifying session but finished first overall and qualified for every event final, and the U.S. placed second as a team.  

By the next day, Chiles recalls, “something just turned off.” Biles started snapping at teammates, a completely out-of-character response. That night, alone in her hotel room, she practiced flipping and twisting on her bed. I know how to do gymnastics, she tried to remind herself. 

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

So when she lost her air awareness and plummeted to the mat during the team final, everyone else was shocked. She fetched chalk and cheered as her teammates took silver without her. She withdrew from event after event, unable to tell up from down, sometimes unable to finish a practice because she was crying so hard. She was devastated that this was the moment her brain had chosen to break. It was not until later that she understood why.


For a long time, it looked like nothing bothered Biles. Under Károlyi and her husband Béla, who ran the U.S. national team for three decades, athletes followed strict rules that many have since said amounted to abuse. (Márta and Béla, who died in November, have always denied that they harmed the gymnasts.) As their program racked up medals, the Károlyis enforced an environment of isolation, dietary restriction and little tolerance for injuries or complaints. Gymnasts were discouraged from laughing. 

Biles posted photos of herself eating pepperoni pizza on Instagram. She snuck off at competitions and returned with cinnamon sugar pretzels. In Rio, the team was in the elevator leaving the Olympic Village and heading to team qualifiers when Márta went through the checklist: Do you have everything? Do you have your grips?

“No,” Biles deadpanned. “I forgot my grips to compete at the Olympics.”

“Simone is the only gymnast in history to feel confident enough to make a joke to Márta Károlyi when we’re on our way to compete at the Olympics,” says three-time Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman.

Biles would commit small acts of rebellion, then dominate the competition. She believed she was managing the mistreatment. Even when she revealed that she was one of the more than 500 athletes who had survived sexual abuse at the hands of longtime national team doctor Larry Nassar, she felt she was controlling what came next. 

After Nassar was sentenced to 40 to 175 years in state prison for first-degree criminal sexual conduct, and 60 years in federal prison for possession of child pornography, Biles tweeted that it was “impossibly difficult to relive these experiences” and return to the Károlyi Ranch, the site of many of the assaults. Three days later, USA Gymnastics severed ties with the facility. That summer, Biles criticized two USAG officials, one for her silence on the Nassar case, another for a tweet she made against Nike and Colin Kaepernick; both women resigned within weeks. Biles took pride in using her voice. But everyone wanted to hear from her, and the pressure built. 

Biles photos Sports Illustrated
Hair by Justin Revenge. Makeup by Deja Blackwell. Styling by Kesha McLeod for KMCME. Bodysuit and skirt by David Koma. Jewelry by Jacob & Co. | Shaniqwa Jarvis/Sports Illustrated

She combines the fame of a pop star with the demands of an athlete. Her life is soundtracked by the shrieks of little girls. At meets, the cheers begin during introductions and continue through the medal ceremony. She brings young fans in the stands to tears just by saying hello. 

After that, the cavernous Ariake Gymnastics Centre felt like a tomb. Spectators were barred from attending the Tokyo Olympics. Biles missed the fans. She missed her family more. Her parents, Nellie and Ron, had attended every meet of her life, usually in matching Team Biles gear. Her now husband, NFL safety Jonathan Owens, schedules offseason workouts so he can support her. Her younger sister Adria often screams so loudly that others turn to look. Before every meet, Biles finds them in the stands. 

In the lead-up to the Games, people—she declines to name them but says some still work at USAG—had referred to her as a guaranteed gold medal. They also expected her to shepherd the rest of the team to victory. She felt pressure to teach them how to be champions. 

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“We don’t ask for that when we’re 6 years old and sign up for it,” she says. “I wanted to do my sport. I didn’t want people to criticize every little thing that I do. I didn’t want millions and millions of followers. I just wanted to do gymnastics.”

So there she was, alone in an empty gym, surrounded only by everyone else’s expectations. The weight knocked her over. 

After three years of therapy, she is confident enough now to explain it: “Mental trauma from past years that can’t be swept under the rug anymore, that just is overflowing at that point,” she says.


Biles had wanted to make the Tokyo Olympics about herself. But she is not fundamentally a selfish person. She throws birthday parties for teammates and makes sure friends get home safely at night. When a celebrity acknowledges her, she feels guilty for having taken that person’s time. She enjoys life as a football wife in part because on Sundays, everyone is looking at Owens. 

In Tokyo, she tried to notice how many fellow Olympians thanked her for being brave enough to step aside, how many of her friends told her they’d never been prouder of her. But the haters were louder. 

She scrolled through videos of pundits calling her a national embarrassment. The noise drowned out her own thoughts. Wow, she remembers thinking as she left the floor. Thank God I made that decision. She knew she had saved her health and her teammates’ silver. Then she checked her phone. “Everyone’s like, ‘You’re a quitter!’ ‘You suck!’ ‘You’re a disgrace!’ ” she recalls now. “I felt strong. And then I was like, Maybe I’m weak. Maybe I should have tried. Maybe I should have—but then I was like, No, I just could not have. There’s no way.”

Adria, 25, still gets heated thinking about the idea that Simone withdrew solely because she felt stressed. The crossed wires in her brain produced a physical inability, Adria explains. It’s like the yips in golf—if yanking a putt could cause you to break your neck. “It wasn’t like a panic attack,” Adria says. “She’s trying one of the most difficult things in the world and she almost died!”

Biles had revolutionized the sport; she now has five skills that are named after her. Now she could do none of them.

But she held out hope that she could compete in the balance beam final. She pared her dismount down to a double pike, a flip so simple she hadn’t done it since she was 15 and took bronze. She called it the most meaningful medal of her career. 

Biles
Biles has won 33 consecutive all-around competitions at the national and international levels, a streak that dates back to 2013. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

When she got home and returned to the gym, she says, “I remember feeling broken a little bit. Because it’s what I love to do, and now I’m so terrified. So it didn’t really make sense, and I was kind of stumped. Like, why am I here? Do I want to be here? Is this what I want to do?”

Biles had done everything in gymnastics except find meaning in it. Now she had to try.

She spent more than six weeks in the fall of 2021 on the road headlining her post-Olympic event—the Gold Over America Tour, or GOAT—performing only skills she could land easily. After the tour, she tentatively returned to World Champions Centre, the gym her parents own near their home outside Houston. Now she has a hard time untangling those early days. “A lot of that is like trauma blocking,” she says. “You don’t really remember it.”

She does recall switching on her Tokyo teammates’ college meets—Chiles at UCLA, Jade Carey at Oregon State, Suni Lee at Auburn, Grace McCallum at Utah—and having to fight waves of nausea. So at first Biles returned to the gym not because she wanted to be able to do gymnastics again but because she wanted to be able to watch it.

She tried not to get ahead of herself. She just wanted to feel safe in what used to be her safe place. 

“The end goal wasn’t even the Olympics,” she says. “It was, like, be happy doing gymnastics again. Feel like you’re not gonna die.”

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I remember feeling broken a little bit. Because it’s what I love to do and now I’m so terrified.”Simone Biles

She had stashed her Tokyo gear in a little-used guest room in her home, in what she now calls the forbidden Olympics closet. Sometimes she would pull out the leotards and Team USA pins and masks, and weep. But she always waited until Owens was out of the house.

“I never wanted to see him see me at my weakest point,” she says. “He put in so much effort and he showed so much support and love. I didn’t want him to think it wasn’t working.”

She had dabbled in therapy before, but she was familiar with an athlete’s injury program: Treat a problem until it improves, then stop. Now she prioritized that work, with the understanding that she might do it for the rest of her life. 

And she messed around in the gym. She bounced on the trampoline. She worked on skills you might see at a grade-schooler’s birthday party. She tried to stay in shape. She got lost in the air on consecutive days. She felt cured. She disappeared for weeks at a time. She practiced twice per day. She felt everyone else’s eyes on her as she sobbed, terrified. She did not know if any of this would work. 

Every time, she would say she was going to quit. And every time, she would come back. 


She was not yet cured when she first told her coaches, Cécile Landi and her husband, Laurent, that she wanted to shoot for Paris, less than two years away. 

Their answer came fast: “No.”

Biles was astonished. “I think they were just worried,” she says. “Mentally, could I do it, and if I don’t do it, would that break me?”

Biles and her family
Biles turned to her parents and sister for support as she worked her way back to gymnastics competitions. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

Eventually they all agreed that she would try to rediscover her love for the sport before she aimed at any particular competition. The coaches were in charge of setting her schedule. She would just worry about her gymnastics. She never came out and told her mom what she had in mind, although Nellie could tell. And she did not approve. 

“We didn’t want her to! Are you kidding me?” Nellie says with a hard-earned laugh. “I’m like, Girl! Don’t put me through this again! I wanted her to move on with her life.”

She never told her daughter how hard it had been for the people close to her, she says. While Simone was headlining her tour, her coaches and family stayed in Houston, tried to get back to their lives … and realized they couldn’t. They had been in triage mode during the Tokyo Games; it was not until everything slowed down that they allowed themselves to mourn. They took turns blaming themselves. Even now, Cécile feels sick when she watches footage from Tokyo. Looking back on it, Nellie wishes that when she was finding Simone a therapist, she had found one for herself, too. She thinks her daughter probably still doesn’t understand what those months were like. 

“No, no, absolutely not, absolutely not,” Nellie says softly. “Because I never discussed my feelings . I don’t think she knew how hard it was for the coaches.”

Biles and Landi
As Biles tried to recover and regain her love for gymnastics after Tokyo, Landi (above, right) helped her find a way back. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

She did not try to dissuade her daughter. But when she saw the leotards for the 2023 U.S. Classic, Simone’s first competition since Tokyo, Nellie bawled. We’re gonna go through this again, she thought.

Meanwhile, Simone was having her own second thoughts. When Laurent told her in July that he had signed her up for the U.S. Classic, in August, she panicked. She began falling on her routines. 

“He’s like, ‘Well, that’s your anxiety,’ ” she recalls. “ ‘Because two weeks ago, you could do everything.’ ”

She was attempting among the most dramatic comebacks in sports history. The trick was not to think of it that way. 

“The hardest part of coming back,” she says, “was learning to trust myself again.”


She had invented so many skills. Now she had to hone the one that mattered most. 

“You do feel forced ,” she says now. “You do feel like you have to accomplish something, and that has weight that you carry, and nobody realizes that. It’s hard and it’s not always fun. So we have to really remember why we’re doing it, who we’re doing it for, and if this is really an enjoyable experience that we can look back on in a couple years . There’s a lot to take in consideration, especially that we’re so much older. You can just, like, have a great life, go get a job and move on.”

Adria was relieved to hear her sister talk about her new motivation. In the past, Adria felt like Simone was doing it for the fans. “She was always trying to please other people,” Adria says. “And a lot of the people she was trying to please betrayed her.”

Indeed, when Biles made that return, 733 days after her Tokyo bronze, at the U.S. Classic, she expressed astonishment—not that she had seemingly overcome the twisties but that the fans had embraced her. 

“They still have so much belief in me,” she marveled a few minutes after obliterating the field. “They still love me.”

Biles Sports Illustrated photos
Romper by SER.O.YA. Shorts by Retrofête. Shoes by Giuseppe Zanotti.Jewelry by Effy Jewelry. | Shaniqwa Jarvis/Sports Illustrated

She won the U.S. championships, too, and the world championships trials. At the 2023 worlds, in Antwerp, Belgium, she became the first woman to land the Yurchenko double pike in international competition; it became the fifth skill named after her. Her sixth world championship all-around gold and three more in event finals gave her 30 world medals, the most in history. The next summer, she mowed down her opponents at the U.S. Classic and the U.S. championships. 

When she won the Olympic trials, guaranteeing her a spot on the Paris team, she became at 27 the oldest woman to compete for the U.S. in gymnastics at the Games in 72 years. After so many months of focusing only on the goal directly in front of her, she was ready to admit she wanted two things: gold in the team final and gold in the individual all-around. 

Within a few minutes of her Olympic return in Paris, both looked out of reach. During warmups for the floor exercise, Biles felt a tug in her lower leg, where she had torn her calf in June. 

“My calf or something just pulled,” Biles told Cécile. “Like, all the way.” The coach tried to appear calm, but she was panicking. “At the moment she came to tell me that,” she says now, “I went back to Tokyo.”

Biles Paris
In Paris, Biles won her 11th Olympic medal, tying her for second all-time among female gymnasts. | Simon Bruty/Sports Illustrated

So did Biles. Not again, she thought. She opted to have her calf taped and return to competition, despite pain that would have her crawling, then hopping, down the vault runway. As Tom Cruise, Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande looked on, Biles dominated the rest of the event. Afterward, Raisman asked her how on earth she had done it. “I just can’t have people calling me a quitter again,” Biles said.

She still cared what people thought. But instead of letting them define her, she wanted to define herself for them.

Over the next two days, her calf improved. The morning of team finals, she told her therapist that she felt calm and ready. She visualized herself nailing her routines. She FaceTimed with Owens, who had just arrived in Paris after receiving the Bears’ permission to miss a few days of training camp. She teased teammates: “Remember what happened the last time we were at team finals?” She was fine. 

Still, as she prepared to begin on the vault, she felt her heart rate quicken. What if it happens again? Chiles raced to reassure her. “It’s not going to happen again,” she said. “You’re fine.”

Biles knew that, of course. “It was just the little voice in my head,” she says now. “I knew I had worked way too hard, way too much in therapy, figured out all that stuff.” The weight was no lighter. But she was stronger. 

“You kind of have to go up there and tell yourself, I’m a boss ass b—-.”Simone Biles

She raced down the runway, flung herself onto the springboard and flipped and twisted through the air. She burst into a grin as she landed. Their gold medal would not be official for nearly two hours, but she knew right away. 

Two days later, in the individual all-around, Biles finally faced an opponent other than herself. Rebeca Andrade of Brazil had won gold in the vault in Tokyo in Biles’s absence, and she’d done it again in 2023 in Antwerp in Biles’s presence. Biles has always succeeded because she can do skills so difficult that no other gymnast comes close, giving her extra margin for error on execution. But Andrade comes closer than anyone else. 

Biles and Chiles
The 2024 U.S. Olympic women’s gymnastics team was the most diverse in history, as four of the five members—including Biles and Jordan Chiles (right)—were women of color. | David E. Klutho/Sports Illustrated

Both gymnasts began on vault, where Biles pushed herself to do her Yurchenko double pike—the hardest vault ever performed by a woman, the one that has terrified her every single time she has attempted it. 

It gave Biles a cushion, and she would need it: She rushed through a skill on the high bar, which affected her timing as she transitioned to the low bar; she had to bend her legs to keep from scraping the ground. She finished the rotation in third place, after Andrade and Kaylia Nemour of Algeria. Furious with herself, Biles paced the floor and made eye contact with Owens, who gave her a thumbs up. Biles forced herself to stay calm. Up next was beam, the most mentally demanding event. She had to decide to succeed. 

“You kind of have to go up there and tell yourself, I’m a boss ass b—-,” she says. 

She nailed her routine, catapulting herself back into first, where she would remain. Before her floor routine, Laurent reminded her to stay focused and have fun. “Show them who’s the best,” he said. She knew as she finished that she had done enough. Her smile could have lit the Eiffel Tower. 

Biles now has five eponymous skills, including two on the vault.
Biles now has five eponymous skills, including two on the vault. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

Three days later, she won gold on the vault. Then she finished fifth on the beam and took silver, to Andrade, on the floor exercise. While warming up for that event, Biles flew out of bounds on her triple-twisting double somersault. She wondered: Did I just get lost in the air?

This time, instead of letting the twisties scare her, she laughed at them. This would be the cherry on top! she thought. Oh well! 

As it turned out, she had not overcooked her triple double because she’d gotten lost in the air. She was simply too powerful. The silver was her 11th Olympic medal, tying her for second all-time among female gymnasts. That plus her 30 world championship medals makes her the most decorated gymnast ever.


Three months later, days after finishing the 2024 Gold Over America Tour, Biles has transitioned fully to football wife. She is coordinating which friends will attend Bears games with her and trying to choose a heavy winter coat to buy.

She is also fighting a cold. This happens every time she takes a break from gymnastics. “It’s like I’m allergic to the outside world,” she laments. “Like I’m allergic to not flipping.”

For a while, at least, her body will have to get used to sitting still. She does not know whether this break will be permanent, and she is years away from having to decide; after all, she trained less than two years for Paris. And as with any athlete, there are financial incentives for continuing. But Biles does not sound like someone who plans to compete in Los Angeles in 2028. 

Biles and Jonathan Owens
With the Paris Olympics and the Gold Over America Tour behind her, Biles is spending her weekends attending her husband’s NFL games. | Ben Hsu/Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

If Tokyo was about proving something to the world and Paris was about proving something to herself, what would L.A. have to be about for her to return?

“Life and death,” she says. “Because I’ve accomplished so much, there’s almost nothing left to do, rather than to just be snobby and to try again and for what? I’m at a point in my career where I’m humble enough to know when to be done. 

“If you go back, you’ll be greedy. Those are the consequences. But that’s also your decision to decide. What sacrifices would be made if I go back now? When you’re younger, it’s like, prom, college. Now it’s like, starting a family, being away from my husband. What’s really worth it?” She doesn’t know the answer. 

She is not ready to grapple with her legacy, either. “I don’t think the reality has set in of what I’ve exactly done in the sport,” she says. “I can see it, and I hear it from people, and I see a glimpse of it, but the full magnitude I don’t think I’ve realized just yet. I don’t think I’ll realize ’til maybe I retire and look back in a couple years like, Damn, she was good. Because I can see that, but I do it every day. So for me, it’s normal.”

“I’m at a point in my career where I’m humble enough to know when to be done.”Simone Biles

Many great athletes win medals. Fewer redraw the face of a sport. 

When Biles was a child, she believed her ceiling as a Black gymnast was a college scholarship. When Gabby Douglas won Olympic gold in 2012, Biles reimagined what was possible. This year, seven of the 15 women at the U.S. Olympic Trials were Black. 

She has also helped redefine gymnastics as a sport that’s not just for teenagers. Before Tokyo, the oldest all-around gold medalist in the past 50 years was 20-year-old Simona Amânar of Romania, in 2000. But for the first time since 1952, the U.S. women’s gymnastics team featured four returning Olympians: Biles, Carey, 24; Chiles, 23; and Lee, 21. The team’s average age of 22.47 was the highest in U.S. history by more than a year. 

https://3e554c0d87f710d732ce92a9a1fc5c9a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“COVID made me realize that gymnastics is, in a weird way, easier older, because your body doesn’t change that much,” says Cécile. “The ones who struggled were the 14- to 18-year-olds, because the body changed. you still have the motivation and the right training, you can last.” That understanding has changed the way she coaches, she says, with an eye toward longevity.

And Biles’s greatest legacy might extend beyond gymnastics. 

“After Tokyo, I said to , ‘There has to be so many people around the world that were suffering in silence and struggling with their mental health. You have no idea how many of those people you helped,’ ” says Raisman. “She helps people feel less alone.”

Biles isn’t sure what life might look like after she retires. She wants to continue her work with Friends of the Children, a nonprofit that matches children in foster care with long-term mentors. (Biles’s parents adopted her and Adria from foster care.) She wants to take a more active role in designing a 2025 collection with Athleta. She and Owens are building a house outside Houston. 

She is also growing more comfortable showing all sides of herself. In Paris, she teased her teammates during press conferences, and she jokingly begged Andrade to take it easy on her. Biles also collaborated on a Netflix docuseries, Simone Biles Rising, that was released last summer and fall. At one point, the cameras linger on an extended scene in the couple’s hotel room before the first day of the U.S. Olympic Trials in which Biles, visibly anxious, picks minor fights with Owens. “I’m being mean to him,” she acknowledges a few minutes later. “My mom says I’m mean on meet days.” She even gives the crew a tour of her forbidden Olympics closet. 

Biles saw the episodes before they aired. She never asked for a single scene to be removed. “I think she sees the value in just being honest and true,” says Katie Walsh, who directed the project and produced the 2021 digital series Simone vs. Herself. “I think that’s why she is such an appealing person, and why people have really connected with her. Because you can’t relate to her gymnastics. You’re never going to know what that feels like. But you can relate to being a little stressed and impatient before a big moment.”

Biles and her fans
Weekly therapy sessions and support from her husband, family and fans helped Biles cope while she remained in the spotlight. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

At the Philadelphia stop on Biles’s post-Olympic tour in October, it is clear how many people see elements of themselves in her. Maddie and Katie, a pair of 13-year-olds from the neighboring suburbs, discuss what they have learned from Biles. Neither mentions gymnastics. “There’s a lot of mean people,” says Maddie. “She realizes that if you respond to them with anger, then they’re just gonna keep doing it. You’ve just gotta ignore them, and one day you’re gonna wake up and they’re gonna be praising you.”

Biles knows her audience: A Taylor Swift–heavy playlist gives way to a Barbie homage, and at one point, the gymnasts—among them Carey, Chiles and Joscelyn Roberson, an Olympic team alternate for Paris—act out a scene aboard a plane, complete with announcements from “Your captain, Simone.” The show ends with a series of short interviews with the gymnasts and a photo montage of them flipping and twisting as children. 

But the most meaningful portion comes before any of that. “We have this moment in our introduction where they call out Simone’s name, and the way these little kids pour out all of their energy—I don’t think I’ll ever forget it,” Roberson says. “And they did that at 32 different stops.”

The tour offered a public celebration of all Biles has done. She had already taken stock privately. After Paris, she spent a few days in Houston, then flew to Chicago. It was there that she began to understand what she had accomplished. She let out her three dogs—bulldog Zeus and French bulldogs Lilo and Rambo—and sat for nearly two hours watching them race around and bark and play fight. Amid the chaos, she finally felt peace. Wow, she thought. I did that.

“It’s crazy,” she says now, “That I have the privilege and I have the mental strength to accomplish my wildest dreams.”

She does not know what will come next. All she knows is that she will run toward it.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Gymnastics, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

Marta picked as first winner of Marta Award for best goal

December 18, 2024 by Tara S

ESPN News Services

Marta won the inaugural FIFA award for the best goal in women’s soccer — named after the Brazil great herself.

The 38-year-old was given the Marta Award at The Best FIFA Football Awards on Tuesday for her goal for Brazil in an international friendly against Jamaica in June.

Prior to this year, the FIFA Puskas Award covered all of soccer but it was decided to award it to the best goal in the men’s game — won this year by Manchester United forward Alejandro Garnacho — and create the new Marta Award for the women’s game.

“To compete against so many great players — we had some fantastic goals,” she said. “It’s been a wonderful season, too. But I’m even happier to receive an award that bears my name; this is undoubtedly the greatest honor.”

Marta is widely regarded as the greatest female soccer player of all time and had won the award for the women’s player of the year on a record six occasions.

She scored a record 119 goals for Brazil in 185 appearances for her country, spanning six World Cups and six Olympics, before retiring from international soccer after the Paris Games — where Brazil lost to the United States in the final.

Marta won the first NWSL title of her career last month when Orlando Pride beat Washington Spirit 1-0 in the final. She had scored another wondergoal in the semifinal, that could have also been a candidate for best of the year.

Marta was asked the day before the title match if she thought it was possible she might give the award to herself.

“You guys need to decide, because who votes for the best goal in the year? It’s you. It’s the people in the public. So it should be really interesting, like Marta’s Award goes to Marta!” she said with a laugh.

The Marta Award was voted for by fans and a panel of FIFA legends.

Filed Under: Soccer, Women in Sports, Women's Soccer, Women's Sports

Volunteer Paton, 90, is Sports Personality Unsung Hero

December 18, 2024 by Tara S

Bobbie Jackson | BBC Sports

Volunteer Jean Paton has won the 2024 BBC Sports Personality Unsung Hero award.

Jean, who is 90, has given her time to the Salterns Sailing Club in Lymington, Hampshire, for the best part of four decades.

She is a Royal Yachting Association (RYA) dinghy instructor.

Speaking to BBC One about the children at the sailing club, Jean said: “They are friendly and it is something they can do – it just makes them happy.”

During her time at Salterns, Jean has helped more than 800 children learn to sail.

The club, which is run by children with the support of adults, operates as a not-for-profit organisation and hosts ‘Moppy Camps’ – RYA-accredited sail training weekends – twice yearly.

Paton has been at every camp since they began 20 years ago and has undertaken many roles, which require not only sailing expertise, but also leadership and the ability to inspire confidence in young sailors.

She was presented with the award by Dame Laura Kenny – Britain’s most successful female Olympian – and Radio 2’s Paddy McGuinness at the 71st edition of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards.

Asked what advice she would give to anyone considering being a volunteer, Jean added: “Go ahead and try. There is always a child that needs your abilities.

“A child has a short few years of time when you can get through to them.”

The Unsung Hero Award recognizes the volunteers in sports making a difference in their communities.

Other regional winners were Moon Mughis (Scotland), Liam Mackay (Wales), Rachel Reid (Northern Ireland), Samra Said (London), Ian Bennett (South West), Adam Kenyon (South East), George Sullivan (East), Stewart Nubley (East Midlands), Asha Rage (West Midlands), Bob Purcell (West), Paul McIntyre (North West), Keith Grainge (Yorkshire), Kristen Ingraham-Morgan (East Yorkshire & Lincolnshire), and Stephen Newton (North East & Cumbria).

Des Smith – the chair of the Sheffield Caribbean Sports Club – won the award last year.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Hidalgo Sets Program Record With Sixth ACC Player of the Week Honor

December 17, 2024 by Tara S

Notre Dame Athletics

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Just six weeks into the 2024-25 season, Hannah Hidalgo is your ACC Player of the Week for the third time this year. On Monday, the conference announced that Hidalgo has earned the honor for the sixth time in her young career, passing Jewell Loyd for the most ACC Player of the Week honors in program history.

The sophomore brings home the accolade after averaging 28 points, 7 rebounds, 6 assists and 4.5 steals over the last week in wins over No. 2 UConn and Eastern Michigan. She also shot 58.1 percent from the floor, 53.3 percent from deep and a perfect 12-12 from the charity stripe on the week.

Hidalgo was the leading scorer in both contests and posted a near triple-double over the Huskies with 29 points, 10 rebounds and 8 assists. She had a career-high six triples in Notre Dame’s third victory of the season over top-five competition.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Donate Here!

Categories

Featured Posts

Introducing the Vulcan Pickleball Line in Support of the AGSA!

… [Read More...] about Introducing the Vulcan Pickleball Line in Support of the AGSA!

Top 3 Finalists revealed for 2025 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year

… [Read More...] about Top 3 Finalists revealed for 2025 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year

Fubo debuts women’s sports hub, riding demand for content

… [Read More...] about Fubo debuts women’s sports hub, riding demand for content

Archives

  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • February 2023
  • November 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • June 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Raffles
  • Radiosport
  • Try Cricket
  • Athlete of the Month
  • Camps
  • Join Our Team
  • Donate
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 American Gold Sports Alliance Inc.

Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy