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Think you can build a gold medal U.S. gymnastics team? Try it.

As the competition heats up and the Paris Games near, use our tool to make your best team.

Updated June 1, 2024 at 1:35 p.m.Originally published May 16, 2024

Selecting an Olympic gymnastics team is a complicated puzzle — especially for the U.S. women, who are the favorites to win gold in Paris and have a deep pool of experienced contenders. Among the gymnasts vying for spots are two past Olympic all-around champions, two other Olympic medalists and several more gymnasts who have competed at world championships.

Team

When the U.S. selection committee names the Olympic team on June 30 — taking into consideration each gymnast’s recent scores and her potential — it will be a difficult decision with life-changing implications.

For you, though? The stakes are low. And while the choices are hard, we’ll make it easier by helping you experiment with building your own roster. When you’re done, we’ll tell you how well your team would score.

The top finisher at the Olympic trials in late June will automatically earn a spot on the team. The selection committee chooses the other four members based on discretionary criteria laid out in its procedures, which include results from “tryout events” — which are international meets since last fall and the major competitions this year — plus a gymnast’s consistency and the overall strength of the team.

It’s reasonable to assume that scores earned closer to the Olympics, especially at the trials, will carry more weight than others. In general, scores above a 14.000 are ones that would boost the U.S. team on any apparatus.

But unless you’re secretly a committee member, you can build your team however you want. (Again: Stakes = low.)

First, how do you want to analyze scores?

Do you want to see each gymnast’s best marks from the tryout events? Or would you rather see a score that reflects each gymnast’s recent performance? That mark is an average of scores beginning with the U.S. Classic on May 18.

Choose your approach:

You can keep coming back to build new teams as the gymnasts progress through their seasons. There are still two major competitions to go: the national championships (which end June 2) and the Olympic trials (June 28 and 30). After each competition, we will update these scores.

Which gymnasts would you pick for the Olympic team?

Your team:

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The star

Simone Biles, widely considered the best gymnast in history, is seeking a spot on her third Olympic team. She won the all-around title at the world championships last year, capping an impressive comeback season after she withdrew from multiple events at the Tokyo Games in 2021. Biles has won 🏅37 world and Olympic medals, and she often dominates competitions.

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🏅37

Olympian

Simone Biles

Spring, Tex.

Simone Biles

World Champions Centre

Age 27

Vault

15.800

Bars

14.650

Beam

14.800

Floor

15.200

Olympic champions

Joining Biles in the field of contenders are two other Olympic champions: Sunisa Lee, who won the all-around title in Tokyo, and Jade Carey, the gold medalist on floor in Tokyo. Last year, Lee dealt with two kidney diseases, and she hasn’t competed internationally since the Tokyo Games. Gabby Douglas, the 2012 all-around champion, made a comeback this season but ended her hopes of earning a spot on the Paris team when she withdrew from nationals.

🏅6

Olympian

Sunisa Lee

Little Canada, Minn.

Sunisa Lee

Midwest Gymnastics

Age 21

Vault

14.000

Bars

14.300

Beam

14.600

Floor

13.250

🏅8

Olympian

Jade Carey

Corvallis, Ore.

Jade Carey

Oregon State University

Age 24

Vault

14.500

Bars

13.500

Beam

13.650

Floor

13.800

Strong all-arounders

Shilese Jones has lately solidified herself as the country’s second-best all-around gymnast behind Biles. Jones won all-around medals at world championships in 2022 and 2023, and she is one of the country’s best gymnasts on bars. Other gymnasts who are strong on all four apparatuses include Tokyo Olympian Jordan Chiles, three-time worlds team member Leanne Wong and 2023 worlds alternate Kayla DiCello.

🏅6

Worlds

Shilese Jones

Auburn, Wash.

Shilese Jones

Ascend Gymnastics

Age 21

Vault

14.350

Bars

15.250

Beam

14.066

Floor

14.000

🏅4

Olympian

Jordan Chiles

Spring, Tex.

Jordan Chiles

World Champions Centre

Age 23

Vault

14.400

Bars

14.500

Beam

13.700

Floor

13.533

🏅4

Worlds

Leanne Wong

Gainesville, Fla.

Leanne Wong

University of Florida

Age 20

Vault

14.200

Bars

13.900

Beam

13.750

Floor

13.700

🏅2

Worlds

Kayla DiCello

Gaithersburg, Md.

Kayla DiCello

Hill's Gymnastics

Age 20

Vault

14.400

Bars

14.500

Beam

14.300

Floor

14.050

Younger contenders

Skye Blakely and Joscelyn Roberson have also won gold medals with the U.S. team at world championships. Blakely has the potential to earn high scores on bars and beam. Roberson was one of the best gymnasts in the country on vault and floor last year, but she’s been held back lately by an ankle injury.

Gymnasts with specialized strengths can earn spots on the Olympic team. Kaliya Lincoln finished second on floor at nationals last year, trailing only Biles. Hezly Rivera, who turns 16 this month, is excellent on beam.

🏅2

Worlds

Skye Blakely

Frisco, Tex.

Skye Blakely

WOGA Gymnastics

Age 19

Vault

15.000

Bars

14.400

Beam

14.500

Floor

13.250

🏅1

Worlds

Joscelyn Roberson

Spring, Tex.

J. Roberson

World Champions Centre

Age 18

Vault

14.466

Bars

13.250

Beam

13.450

Floor

13.633

🏅0

Kaliya Lincoln

Frisco, Tex.

Kaliya Lincoln

WOGA Gymnastics

Age 18

Vault

13.933

Bars

13.100

Beam

13.233

Floor

14.233

🏅0

Hezly Rivera

Plano, Tex.

Hezly Rivera

WOGA Gymnastics

Age 15

Vault

14.200

Bars

14.150

Beam

14.500

Floor

13.350

There is a crowded field of contenders, ranging from up-and-coming teenagers to returning veterans, and they are all trying to prove that they should be chosen for the U.S. Olympic team.

Victory

Your U.S. Olympic team!

Pick five gymnasts to be on your Olympic team.

Swap out your picks or change the approach and see how it affects your score.

Simone Biles

Skye Blakely

Jade Carey

Jordan Chiles

Kayla DiCello

Reese Esponda

Kieryn Finnell

Jayla Hang

Madray Johnson

Shilese Jones

Katelyn Jong

Sunisa Lee

Kaliya Lincoln

Hezly Rivera

J. Roberson

T. Sumanasekera

Trinity Thomas

Leanne Wong

About this story
Methodology

The Post analyzed results from all meets included in the U.S. elite program calendars for 2023 and 2024. Those include international competitions, major domestic meets, selection events and national elite qualifiers. Other competitions were added if top American gymnasts participated. Scores from national team camps were included only if they were released by USA Gymnastics.

Most scores were verified with results published by USA Gymnastics. When the governing body did not publish results, The Post relied on data from gymnastics scoring websites Meet Scores Online and My Meet Scores, as well as the Gymternet, a website that maintains records of elite scores.

Gymnasts must be age eligible for the Olympics to be considered for inclusion. Some gymnasts were excluded because they were not slated to compete at U.S. elite competitions in 2024. Gymnasts who have competed at past Olympics or world championships were automatically included in the list of gymnasts available to select. (Alternates for those events were not.) Others were added if they had a high score at tryout events or an average score from recent competitions in the top seven in the field on any apparatus.

Before most top gymnasts had competed multiple times in 2024, The Post used a metric that reflected overall performance, which was the 75th percentile mark of all scores since the beginning of 2023, rather than recent performance.

Some gymnasts perform two different vaults, which is required to earn individual medals on the apparatus, but in team competitions, the score from the first vault counts. The Post included only scores from a gymnast’s first vault. Jade Carey’s vault scores from the Swiss Cup were not included because the competition reported only the two-vault average.

The towns listed with each athlete indicate where she trains. Because world championships alternates receive a medal in the team competition, those medals were counted in each gymnast’s total. At the Olympics, alternates do not receive medals.

Credits

Editing by Samuel Granados, Joe Tone and Meghan Hoyer. Photos by USA Gymnastics. Sunisa Lee photo by Andrew Kelly/Reuters. Pictograms by Álvaro Valiño for The Washington Post.