Simone Biles

  • Her birth

    He was born on March 14, 1997 in Ohio. the third of four brothers. Her birth mother, Shanon Biles, was unable to care for Simone or her other children: Adria, Ashley, and Tevin. All four were in and out of foster care.
  • Her new life

    In 2003 she was adopted by her maternal grandfather along with her siblings. Ron's sister, Shanon's aunt Harriet, adopted the two older children. Biles has Belizean citizenship through her adoptive mother and refers to Belize as her second home.
  • Start with the gymnastics

    Start with the gymnastics
    In 2005 she began gymnastics training with her coach Aimee Boorman. Aimee Boorman is an American artistic gymnastics coach. She coached 2016 Olympic champion and 2013-2015 world champion Simone Biles. She was the USA women's gymnastics team head coach at the 2016 Rio Olympics
  • Her first competition

    Her first competition
    At her first junior championship at just 14 years old at the 2011 American Classic in Houston, she was bronze all-around, gold on vault and balance beam. on July 1, 2011, at the 2011 American Classic in Houston. She placed third overall, first on vault and balance beam, fourth on floor exercises, and eighth on uneven bars.
  • Her first medal

    Her first medal
    In 2013, when he won two World Championship golds as a 16-year-old at the 2013 Copa América, a FIG World Cup event. She and Katelyn Ohashi were named as replacements for Elizabeth Price and 2012 Olympic gold medalist Kyla Ross, who withdrew from competition due to injuries. Biles led for two rotations but finished second behind her teammate, Ohashi, after a fall from the beam.
  • Her first Artistic Gymnastics World Championships

    Her first  Artistic Gymnastics World Championships
    4 world golds in 2014 On October 17, she was selected to compete in the 2014 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Nanning, China. She dominated the standings despite her big mistake on the uneven bars, qualifying first for the individual, vault, balance beam and floor competition, which also meant that with her contribution, the US team qualified first for the team final. .
  • Her first sponsor

    Her first sponsor
    In July 2015 he signed his sponsorship with Octagon which also markets to people like michael phelps is a company that produces American live events.
  • Artistic Gymnastics World Championships held in Glasgow

    Artistic Gymnastics World Championships held in Glasgow
    4 world gold medals in 2015 Biles was selected to be part of the team that represented the United States at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships held in Glasgow. Biles captured the gold medal in the team final along with her teammates Gabrielle Douglas, Aly Raisman, Brenna Dowell, Madison Kocian, Maggie Nichols and McKayla Skinner. In the individual field, Biles won three gold medals in the individual circuit categories and gold in groups
  • Rio 2016

    Rio 2016
    In Rio 2016, he won gold. On July 8 and 10 of that year, the event was held to form the artistic gymnastics team that would compete in Rio 2016. On July 10, the appointment of the team was made official, which was made up of Simone Biles, Aly Raisman, Gabrielle Douglas, Laurie Hernandez, and Madison Kocian. In the competition for the selection process, Biles automatically qualified as a member of the US team by placing first in the individual all-around competition with a total score of 123.250.
  • She started to help people

    In September 2016 she became the spokesperson for Mattress thee foster families. It is an ONG that helps American families in critical situations
  • She published her book

    She published her book
    in 2017, she published her book Courage to Soar, which achieved the number of books among young adults.
  • New Record

    New Record
    In 2018, she achieved the highest overall score: 58700 At the 2018 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships, held in Doha, Biles was once again the winner of the all-around, in addition to winning the vault and floor finals and getting the team victory. with the United States, for which he won four gold medals out of six possible, in addition to silver on uneven bars and bronze on balance beam
  • The Greatest

    The Greatest
    Stuttgart 2019 world champion: 5 golds, . For the finals, the United States gymnastics team won the gold medal for the fifth consecutive time, awarding it to Biles her twenty-first medal and sixteenth gold medal in world championships. Individually she was proclaimed world champion in the individual general competition, vault, balance beam and floor, ending with 25 medals won in world championships, of which 19 are gold, becoming the most decorated gymnast of all time
  • Tokyo 2020

    Tokyo 2020
    Simone Biles’ bravest move wasn’t any of her incredible, daring, viral artistic gymnastics elements, not the triple double nor the Yurchenko double pike. It was choosing herself on the world’s biggest stage at last summer’s Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. When Biles stepped down from the vaulting podium after getting lost while attempting a two-and-a-half twisting vault in the women’s team final, she knew she couldn’t keep competing. She had a case of the 'twisties'
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom

    Presidential Medal of Freedom
    In 2022, she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Joe Biden The gymnast, along with soccer player Megan Rapinoe, received recognition for their fight to defend the rights of athletes.