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2024 Olympics: Why Hezly Rivera Won’t Compete in Women’s Gymnastics Final
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Date:2025-04-18 23:29:22
Hezly Rivera is down for the count.
After a shaky Paris Olympics debut during the July 28 women’s gymnastics qualifier, the 16-year-old will not compete in the team final alongside Simone Biles, Suni Lee, Jade Carey and Jordan Chiles.
Hezly pulled the lowest score for Team USA at the qualifier and failed to make the finals in any individual gymnastics event. As the youngest person representing the U.S. this year, she participated in the beam event, receiving a score of 12.633, as well the uneven bars, where she walked away with a 13.900. (Hezly’s scores landed her 26th and 13th in the beam and bars, respectively.)
Team USA dropped the teen’s beam score to decrease their error margin, but her overall performance on bars did allow the squad to advance to the finals. If Team USA wins the gymnastics finals on July 30, Hezly will still earn a gold medal.
Heading into the all-around team final, Team USA is on top finishing the qualifier with an overall score of 172.296, several points ahead of Italy (166.86) and China (166.628).
But Hezly sitting out of the finals is just one of the shake ups Team USA has had so far. Despite enduring a minor calf injury during the qualifying round, Simone will compete in all four events—bar, beam, floor and vault—on July 30. Jordan will also participate in all four events, while Suni will compete in the beam and bar—her signature event—as well as claiming a spot in the floor event over Jade, who will only compete in the vault.
Suni's spot in the upcoming floor routine comes as surprise following Jade nabbing a gold medal for the event in Tokyo 2020. However, the July 28 qualifer saw Jade manage a lower score than usual, a result the 24-year-old suspected was due to an illness she'd been battling.
As she told Olympics.com following her event, "I just have not been feeling well the past few days and haven't been able to eat or anything."
Later, Jade reflected on her qualifying performance on social media.
“I haven’t been feeling the best the past few days but I gave it everything I had today.” she wrote in a July 28 X, formerly Twitter, post. “Thank you for all the support I have received. I’m so grateful.”
And Aly Raisman—who previously competed on the 2012 and 2016 Olympic teams, nabbing three gold medals—gave a fellow nudge of support to her fellow Olympian.
“You did so well today & I’m so proud of you!” Aly wrote in response to Jade’s post. “It breaks my heart that our society is so hard on athletes that you feel the need to explain yourself. You’re human. It’s ok to make mistakes. I can’t wait to watch you in the days to come & I hope you feel better. You inspire so many & remember there are people at home dreaming of one day being just like you.”
Jade later responded thanking the retired gymnast—who is currently in Paris supporting Team USA—adding, “You’re the best!”
Keep reading for more sweet moments from Team USA.
There’s a reason Simone Biles is called the G.O.A.T.
The 27-year-old from Texas is the most-decorated gymnast in history—racking up seven Olympic medals (four golds, one silver and two bronze) from the 2016 and 2020 Games as well as 30 World Championship medals (23 golds, four silver and three bronze).
However, Biles’ gymnastics journey—which began at age 6—hasn’t been without challenges. At the 2020 Olympics, she experienced the “twisties" during the women’s team final.
While it wasn’t an easy decision and she feared what the world would think, Biles knew she had to take care of herself. So, she withdrew from that event and others—sparking an important discussion on mental health.
Biles won silver with her team and returned to win bronze in balance beam. However, she questioned if she would compete again.
So, the champion took the time she needed for her mental and physical health.
"I didn’t want to be afraid of the sport anymore," she said in Netflix's Simone Biles Rising. "Because so much has happened in the sport, so much has scared the living s--t out of me that I couldn’t have it take that one last thing from me. Also ending on my terms.”
Biles went on to win gold in many events at the 2023 World and 2023 and 2024 U.S. Gymnastics Championships. And she’s excited for Paris.
“The only thing I have to prove is to myself that I can get out there and do it again,” Biles—who’s married to NFL player Jonathan Owens—told Today. “I think we’re gonna get the job done.”
Born in Minnesota, Sunisa “Suni” Lee started training in gymnastics at age 6 and continued to vault her way to success.
During the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, the 21-year-old made history as the first Asian American woman to win the gold medal in the all-around competition. She also won silver with her teammates and bronze in the uneven bars.
After the Games, Lee enrolled in Auburn University, where she competed for the school’s gymnastics team. With her sights set on returning for the 2024 Paris Olympics, the athlete announced in November 2022 that her next collegiate season would be her last. However, Lee’s time on the squad was cut short as she shared in April 2023 that she was dealing with an issue involving her kidneys.
In June 2024, following her performance at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships, Lee told E! News she was “doing really good” health-wise. She qualified for the Olympic team soon after and is proud of how far she’s come.
“I think I would give myself a medal for not giving up,” Lee added. “There has been so much that I could have given up on and so many things that have happened to where I could have just put this aside and moved on with my life. But I wanted better for myself, and I also wanted to be able to walk away from this Olympics or this quad knowing that I gave everything that I had and not regret anything.”
Named after fellow sports great Michael Jordan, Jordan Chiles entered gymnastics at age 6 and quickly advanced through the levels of competition—adding to her trophy shelf along the way.
Despite her success, the 23-year-old didn’t always feel welcomed.
“Every single time I went into a competition, I was like, ‘Well, what are they going to say this time?’” Chiles recalled to ELLE in a July 2024 interview. “I was racially attacked. I was always told, ‘You’re not the typical gymnast. You look like a man. You’re too muscular.’”
After feeling like “gymnastics didn’t want me,” Chiles continued, she considered leaving the sport. Instead, Biles invited her to train at her Texas gym in 2018.
“I wish I could take that part of my life back,” the athlete from Washington added, “but at the same time, I wouldn’t be the person that I am today if those things hadn’t happened, because they made me stronger, more confident, and helped me understand who I am as a person. But it did take me a while to get the love back. I can tell you that.”
Fast-forward a few years, they both competed at the 2020 Olympics—where Chiles filled in after Biles withdrew from the team final—and they took home the team silver.
The UCLA gymnast has also gone viral, earning a perfect 10 for her 2023 NCAA Championship performance set to 90s hip-hop and securing a spot at the 2024 Olympics with her Beyoncé-inspired routine.
Jade Carey can thank her dad (who’s also her coach) and mom for her introduction to gymnastics.
“My parents owned a gym when I was born,” the 24-year-old, who’s been training since 2002, stated in her USA Gymnastics bio, “so I was always in the gym playing!”
Carey started competing at the elite level in 2017 and joined the 2020 Olympics team just a few years later. However, things didn’t go according to plan.
Carey struggled with her footwork on her run towards the vault, which resulted in her performing a different routine, not sticking her landing and coming in eighth place. Still, the gymnast from Arizona didn’t give up, and she won the gold in the floor exercise event shortly after.
“I’m just really proud of myself for turning it around after vault,” she told Olympics.com in a video at the time. “It was really hard, especially at first because I was so upset. But my dad just told me we had to let it go and we could turn the worst day into the best day.”
While Carey has certainly had several moments of redemption—including winning the gold in vault at the 2022 World Championships—she’s looking for another at the 2024 Olympics.
“I thought after the Olympics I would be done and just go to college and enjoy it,” the Oregon State University athlete told the outlet in another clip. “But after the experience that I had, it made me want to go back because I feel like I'm capable of more."
Hezly Rivera was more than ready to make her Olympics debut.
And she’s did it less than two months after turning 16—making her the youngest member of the entire U.S. team competing at the 2024 Games.
“I was ecstatic because everything I’ve been working for finally paid off,” Rivera told E! News in July. “I heard my name, and I was shocked. I was like, ‘Oh my gosh! I made the team!’ I almost couldn’t believe it.”
But make no mistake: While Rivera is a first-timer at the Olympics, she’s certainly no rookie. The athlete from New Jersey was the 2024 Winter Cup balance beam champion and won first in the all-around, uneven bars and balance beam events for the junior division at the 2023 Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships.
As for how Rivera got her start in gymnastics, it all began just over a decade ago.
“At the age of 5 I attended a friends birthday party that was celebrated in a gymnastics facility,” she noted in her USA Gymnastics bio, “and the staff at the facility approached my parents and told them that they should try to have me try out for the team and that's what they did.”
Joscelyn Roberson is one of two traveling replacement gymnasts for the 2024 U.S. women’s Olympic team. And let’s just say, the 18-year-old from Texas is pretty excited about it.
“THIS! IS! EVERYTHING!” she wrote on Instagram in July after qualifying. “I am going to Paris!!!! Dreams really do come true. See you guys there!”
While she’s been practicing since 2009, Roberson has recently seen her gymnastics career reach a new level. According to NBC Sports, after the athlete made her senior nationals debut in 2022 and placed 18th in the all-around, her mom got a job in Houston. Roberson had the opportunity to attend World Champions Centre—the gymnastics training facility run by Biles’ family—and she took it.
“Having people I could relate to every single day,” she told the outlet in 2023, “it worked wonders for me.”
At the 2023 Winter Cup, Roberson placed first in vault and second in balance beam. She also won first in vault at the 2023 Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships.
Leanne Wong is also a traveling replacement athlete for the 2024 women’s gymnastics team at the Olympics.
The 20-year-old from Kansas was originally an alternate for the 2020 Games in Tokyo. But after fellow alternate Kara Eaker tested positive for COVID-19, they both had to quarantine.
“After the last Olympics and getting quarantined and then just being stuck in my hotel room, I think that really gave me time to think about what I wanted to do after that,” Wong recalled to Olympics.com in May. “That’s why I decided to go back to elite gymnastics after that and go to my first worlds.”
And she did just that—winning a silver and a bronze in the 2021 World Championships. Wong also took home the gold in the 2022 and 2023 World Championships with her team. In addition, she competes with the University of Florida Gators, being named the NCAA uneven bars champion earlier this year.
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