Simone Biles has issued a public appeal supporting fellow Olympic champions after being asked in Paris about her future during which she did not ruled out competing in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
Simone Biles wants fellow Olympic champions to be given time to enjoy their winning moments.
After earning her third gold medal at the 2024 Paris Olympics and answering questions about her future at a press conference, the most decorated U.S. Olympic gymnast in history issued a public appeal.
“You guys really gotta stop asking athletes what’s next after they win a medal at the Olympics,” Simone, who has won seven Olympic gold medals and 10 overall since her debut at the Games in Rio in 2016, wrote on X, formerly Twitter, Aug. 4. “Let us soak up the moment we’ve worked our whole lives for.”
A day earlier, the 27-year-old came in first place in the women’s gymnastics individual vault final, which followed her gold medal victory in the individual all-around competition and Team USA’s collective No. 1 performance at the team final earlier in the week.
At an Aug. 3 press conference, Biles spoke about her Olympic future.
Asked if she had taken part in her final vault competition, Biles referenced her winning performance from earlier that day, saying, “Is this my last? Definitely the Yurchenko double pike. I mean, I kind of nailed that one.”
Biles then gave a hint about whether she would compete at all in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, which would mark her fourth Olympic run.
“Never say never,” the athlete said. “The next Olympics is at home, so you just never know.”
She added, laughing, “But I am getting really old.”
While Biles is not the oldest Olympic champion, she is the oldest Olympic all-around winner in 72 years since Maria Gorokhovskaya competed at the Helsinki Olympics in 1952 at age 30. And former Team USA gymnast Marie Margaret Hoesley was 35 when she took part in the same competition.
The oldest gymnast to compete in the Olympic Games is Uzbek athlete Oksana Chusovitina, who was 46 when she took part in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in 2021.
Read on to relive some of the most emotional moments from the 2024 Paris Olympics…
USA gymnast Simone Biles beams after winning gold in the women’s all-around final, sporting her “GOAT” necklace.
Aug. 1: Tennis
Great Britain’s Andy Murray—who announced his retirement before the Paris Games—tearfully bids farewell to the crowd after being eliminated alongside Dan Evans in the men’s doubles.
Aug. 1: Table Tennis
Tomokazu Harimoto of Team Japan lets off some steam during his match against China’s Fan Zhendong.
Aug. 1: Swimming
Men’s 200m backstroke silver medalist Apostolos Christou of Greece gets emotional while standing on the podium.
Aug. 1: Tennis
Spanish tennis Carlos Alcaraz lets out a victorious scream after defeating Tommy Paul of Team USA in men’s single.
July 31: Diving
Great Britain’s bronze medalists Andrea Spendolini Sirieix and Lois Toulson share a raw moment after the women’s synchronized 10m platform diving final.
July 31: Soccer
Korbin Albert gets emotional after scoring a goal in the women’s soccer game.
July 31: Swimming
Team Sweden’s Sarah Sjoestroem celebrates her gold medal in the Women’s 100m Freestyle Final.
July 31: Swimming
Team USA’s Katie Ledecky reacts to winning gold in the Women’s 1500m Freestyle Final.
July 31: Swimming
French swimmer Anastasiia Kirpichnikova cries tears of joy after seeing her silver medal-winning time in women’s 1500m freestyle event.
July 31: Judo
Serbia’s Nemanja Majdov (L) and Greece’s Theodoros Tselidis (R) share a moment after their round in the men’s 90kg round of 16 in judo. Tselildis, who beat Majdov, later won the bronze medal.
July 31: Sabre
Manon Apithy-Brunet (L) kisses her husband France’s Bolade Apithy after his team beat Egypt.