And
barring a major disaster, the question heading into the team final
Tuesday afternoon at the Rio Olympic Arena won't be whether these five
American women will win gold. It will be which teams get silver and
bronze behind them.
On
Sunday, Team USA dominated team qualification. The US led all countries
with a total score of 185.238, almost 10 points higher than the
second-best team, China (175.279).
The
US women are also on a winning streak. In addition to winning team gold
in London in 2012, Team USA has won team gold at the world
championships three consecutive times -- 2011, 2014 and 2015 (the team
event was not held in 2013).
In short, this is the team to beat.
"They
were not only physically prepared, but mentally prepared, and that's a
nice place to be because you don't have to snap anybody into place," US
Olympic coach Aimee Boorman said, according to the USA Gymnastics website. "It was fantastic."
The
other teams that qualified for the team final are Russia (174.620),
Great Britain (174.064), Brazil (174.054), Germany (173.263), Japan
(172.564) and the Netherlands (171.929).
The US lineup for the team final looks like this:
- Vault: Laurie Hernandez, Aly Raisman and Simone Biles
- Uneven bars: Biles, Gabby Douglas and Madison Kocian
- Balance beam: Raisman, Hernandez, Biles
- Floor exercise: Hernandez, Raisman, Biles
Domination in team qualification
As usual, Team USA was led Sunday by Biles, who is right on target to win five gold medals.
The 19-year-old led the field in qualification in all-around (62.366),
vault (16.050), beam (15.633) and floor (15.733). She's the favorite to
win all of them, including team gold on Tuesday.
"Simone
is Simone," US national women's team coordinator Martha Karolyi said.
"She is a big talent, but she proved also at controlling herself and how
she is able to perform under pressure. There's a reason why she's
three-time world champion. Simone is doing gymnastics because she wants
to prove to the world how good she is."
On Sunday, the US had the top three
all-around finishers. After Biles, Raisman (60.607) finished second and
Douglas (60.131) was third. Both were members of the "Fierce Five"
gold-medal winning team from the 2012 London Games. It will be Raisman's
second appearance in an Olympic individual all-around final; she
finished fourth in London.
However,
while the top eight qualify for the individual all-around final, which
is Thursday, only two are eligible from each country for that
competition. That means Douglas, the reigning Olympic all-around
champion, has been left out for Thursday.
But Douglas' performance wasn't wasted, as she qualified for event finals with a third-place finish on uneven bars (15.766).
"It's
not really a bummer," Douglas said. "I wanted to go out there and
defend my title, but it is what it is. I'm still rejoicing. I'm pretty
pleased with everything overall because there's nothing to be ashamed
about."
In fact, all of Team USA qualified for
the event finals, which will begin Sunday. Kocian had the highest score
on bars (15.866), while Laurie Hernandez (15.366) was second on beam.
Raisman, who took home gold in the London Games in 2012 on floor, was
second in the event on Sunday with a 15.275.
"I
think everyone out there, we all performed how we trained, and that's
all very special -- something we have to keep for team finals and any
event finals that we qualified for," Biles said.
But on Tuesday afternoon, the focus is squarely on the team final. And the five will have to deliver again.
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