logo
Hezly Rivera edges Leanne Wong for U.S. gymnastics championships title

Hezly Rivera edges Leanne Wong for U.S. gymnastics championships title

Los Angeles Times17 hours ago
NEW ORLEANS — Hezly Rivera met the moment.
The 17-year-old Olympic gold medalist pulled away for a victory at the U.S. gymnastics championships on Sunday, looking more than ready to be the standard-bearer for the women's program in the early stages of the run-up to the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.
Rivera, the youngest member of the five-woman team that finished atop the podium in Paris a year ago, posted a two-day total of 112.000 just eight-tenths (0.8) clear of runner-up Leanne Wong.
Three weeks after a shaky meet at the U.S. Classic, where she finished a distant 12th, Rivera responded with the kind of polished performance that all but assured her of a spot on the four-woman world championship team that will head to Jakarta, Indonesia, in October.
Rivera, at the very least, locked up a spot in the world championship selection camp next month. So did Wong, a four-time world championship medalist. Third-place finisher Joscelyn Roberson, an Olympic alternate last summer, also figures to be at the selection camp as the three veterans put significant distance between themselves and the rest of a remarkably young field.
Unlike Asher Hong's easy win in the men's competition on Saturday, things did not come easily for Rivera. She was pushed through four rotations by Wong, a pre-med student at Florida and a budding entrepreneur who has been remarkably consistent over the last four-plus years.
Wong put pressure on Rivera from the start with a stuck Cheng vault and didn't relent over the course of two hours. Rivera responded each time — she posted the top scores on three of the four events — but it wasn't until she walked off the podium following her floor routine with victory in hand that she could relax.
Roberson looked ready to make it a three-woman race until she tweaked her ankle on floor exercise during the second rotation. The rising sophomore at Arkansas, visibly limping at times, continued on anyway. She gritted her way through her vault dismount, though the five-tenths (0.5) deduction for using an additional pad for her protection took her out of contention for the all-around.
Skye Blakely, who was injured at the Olympic Trials in both 2021 and 2024, was sublime on both uneven bars and balance beam to put herself in consideration to make the world team.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LeBron James ‘addicted' to new hobby amid rocky Lakers offseason
LeBron James ‘addicted' to new hobby amid rocky Lakers offseason

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

LeBron James ‘addicted' to new hobby amid rocky Lakers offseason

He's not the first all-time great to hit the greens. Lakers superstar LeBron James posted on social media that he has a new addiction that has claimed many before him: golf. 'Addicted. I'm sorry. I know, yep, that's it. Yep. Rain and everything,' James said on his Instagram Story as the weather conditions worsened. Advertisement James, who was recently seen in St. Tropez with his wife, Savannah, wasn't getting excellent sunlight as rain poured down, but he continued to fight through and prepped to tee off. There has been some apparent tension between the Lakers and the 40-year-old James this offseason, as the franchise has gone all-in on new star Luka Doncic, whom they recently signed to a three-year, $165 million contract extension. When James exercised his player option for the 2025-26 season, his agent, Rich Paul, alluded to a potential trade request by reinforcing James' desire to compete for a championship next season. Advertisement 3 LeBron James (r.) and Luka Doncic (l.) NBAE via Getty Images There were also conflicting reports about how James found out about Jeanie Buss reaching a $10 billion deal to sell the Lakers and whether informing Doncic was prioritized. Paul confirmed other teams had reached out to him regarding the possibility of a James trade, but for now, it appears the 21-time All-Star — whose son Bronny is entering his second year with the Lakers — will remain in purple and gold. Advertisement 3 LeBron James golfs through the rain. Instagram, @KingJames The four-time NBA champion might just need to get onto the course with a few fellow basketball legends. James had played golf in the past, getting made fun of by Olympic teammate and friend, Stephen Curry, for having a baseball-like swing. 'Unbelievable impersonation of my guy [LeBron James] Bron's follow-through in the golf swing,' Curry joked in July. 'But we all want to welcome Lebron James to the world of golf because the game needs you, big fella.' Advertisement 3 James says he's addicted to golfing now as his offseason in Los Angeles stays rocky. Instagram, @KingJames James will need some practice, but perhaps he can improve after his NBA career is complete and do a match opposite Michael Jordan. The Bulls legend was a notorious golfer who sometimes played before games and surely would have an edge. Many other NBA players, past and present, went into golf as an outlet for their competitive energy, with others including Charles Barkley, Chris Paul, and many more.

Hezly Rivera adds U.S. all-around gymnastics title to her Olympic gold medal
Hezly Rivera adds U.S. all-around gymnastics title to her Olympic gold medal

NBC News

timean hour ago

  • NBC News

Hezly Rivera adds U.S. all-around gymnastics title to her Olympic gold medal

In a year, Hezly Rivera has gone from the youngest U.S. Olympian across all sports in Paris to the all-around national champion. Rivera totaled 112 points in two nights of competition in New Orleans, prevailing by eight tenths over Leanne Wong, a two-time Olympic alternate. Joscelyn Roberson, another Paris Olympic alternate, was third. Rivera led Wong by two tenths going into the last rotation, then delivered the best floor exercise score (14.2) by anyone on either night. 'I was aware it was pretty close, right before I went on the floor, probably a minute or two,' she said on NBC Sports. 'It's a little bit nerve-racking, but I just tried to trust the process and trust God and just let my body do what it knows how to do.' While the rest of her Paris gold-medal teammates are taking this season off, Rivera took a major step in her young career. Rivera is: at 17, the youngest U.S. all-around champion since Ragan Smith in 2017 the first woman to win junior and senior all-around titles since Jordyn Wieber (2008 and 2011-12) the sixth American woman since 2000 to pair Olympic gold with a national all-around title (Simone Biles, Wieber, Shawn Johnson, Nastia Liukin, Carly Patterson) Rivera, the 2023 U.S. junior all-around champ, opened the 2024 Olympic selection season by placing 24th at the U.S. Classic (about a week after her grandmother died). She climbed to sixth in her senior U.S. Championships debut, then fifth at the Olympic Trials as some veteran gymnasts became sidelined by injuries. Rivera was picked to be the lone rookie on the Olympic team alongside Biles, Suni Lee, Jade Carey and Jordan Chiles. She competed on uneven bars and balance beam in the qualifying round in Paris. 'My mindset is kind of like, I achieved my dreams, I achieved my goals, but I still have more (goals), so I kind of like to put that (the Olympics) in the back of my head for now,' Rivera, who now has a set of Olympic rings above her bed, said in July. 'Every time in the gym, I don't think that I went to the Olympics. I'm just kind of training like I've almost never been, in a way.' This week, Rivera had the highest scores on beam and floor, plus shared the bars title with Skye Blakely. Wong, the most experienced woman in the field at 21, won vault. She was bidding to become the second non-teen in the last 50 years to win a U.S. all-around title after Biles. Next up: a selection competition in early autumn, after which four women will be named to compete at October's World Championships in Jakarta, Indonesia. These worlds include individual events only. The all-around winner at the selection event automatically makes it. A committee picks the other three, taking into account results at nationals and other 2025 meets. Skye Blakely stars on balance beam, uneven bars Blakely shows out on bars, beam at nationals Skye Blakely scored a 14.350 and 14.400 on uneven bars and balance beam respectively on Day 2 of the 2025 Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships. Two months ago, Blakely didn't know yet whether she wanted to compete at nationals. She was runner-up to Biles at the 2024 U.S. Championships, then tore her right Achilles two days before the Olympic Trials. In her first elite meet in 14 months, Blakely competed strictly on beam and bars this week. She had the top scores on each event Sunday, two days after placing tied for eighth and ninth on them. 'It was first (elite) meet back in a while, but I have high expectations for myself, so day one wasn't exactly what I was looking for,' said Blakely, who did compete this past NCAA season for the University of Florida. 'Just really staying motivated, allowing my family to motivate me, too. And then this morning, just trying to find that fire in me, really staying motivated, dig deep. You know how to do this. I feel like it really reflected in today's competition.'

Ski jumping's suit-cheating saga rolls on as 5 Norwegians are charged over 'manipulation'

timean hour ago

Ski jumping's suit-cheating saga rolls on as 5 Norwegians are charged over 'manipulation'

OBERHOFEN, Switzerland -- Two Olympic gold medalist ski jumpers and three staffers on the powerful Norway men's team were charged with ethics violations Monday after an investigation into alleged tampering with ski suits at the world championships. The International Ski and Snowboard Federation said star ski jumpers Marius Lindvik and Johann André Forfang, two coaches and a member of the service staff were formally charged as part of an investigation into 'equipment manipulation' at the Nordic worlds Norway hosted in March. Illegally modified suits can help athletes fly further with more aerodynamic resistance. The allegations — backed by video footage and quick confessions by team officials — shook the tight-knit communities of ski jumping and Norwegian sports when they emerged on the final weekend in Trondheim. No timetable was given for hearings or verdicts in a case that intensifies less than six months before the next Winter Olympics open in northern Italy. Bans, fines and disqualification of results are on the slate of punishments open to the FIS Ethics Committee, the governing body said in a statement. Lindvik's gold medal in the men's normal hill event at the worlds held in Trondheim, plus Norway's bronze in the men's team event on the large hill are clearly at risk. FIS said the investigation conducted 38 witness interviews and examined 88 pieces of evidence, and that no one else will be charged in the case. Lindvik and Forfang, who both were in the team that took bronze, denied involvement in March though were disqualified from the individual large hill event and suspended by FIS for the rest of the season. Their charges were signed off by the FIS ruling council, the governing body said. The 27-year-old Lindvik has been expected to defend his Olympic title next year in the men's large hill event at the Milan-Cortina d'Ampezzo Winter Games. Forfang, now 30, took team gold on the large hill and individual silver on the normal hill at the 2018 Olympics held in South Korea. Admissions of guilt were made in March by head coach Magnus Brevik and equipment manager Adrian Livelten, who said suits were altered only before the men's large hill event. 'We regret it like dogs, and I'm terribly sorry that this happened,' Brevik said at the time. A third team staffer, Thomas Lobben, also is now charged. The manipulation was to increase the size of suits pre-approved and microchipped by FIS, and was captured on secretly filmed footage. It led to formal protests from the Austria, Slovenia and Poland teams. The alterations could be confirmed only by tearing apart the seams of the crotch area on the Norwegian ski suits. The case will be judged by three members of the ethics panel which must reach verdicts 'no later than 30 days after the hearing process is concluded," FIS said. FIS has already tightened up its rules on ski jump suits, something which caused a spate of disqualifications when athletes gathered for the first competition of the new season Saturday. FIS said that was down to technical issues and it didn't suspect 'ill intent.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store