Gymnastics World Championships

U.S. women decimate world's best

New world champions Team USA with Simone Biles, Kara Eaker, Morgan Hurd, Ragan Smith, Grace McCallum and Riley McCusker celebrate after the women's team final of the Gymnastics World Chamionships at the Aspire Dome in Doha, Qatar, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2018. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
New world champions Team USA with Simone Biles, Kara Eaker, Morgan Hurd, Ragan Smith, Grace McCallum and Riley McCusker celebrate after the women's team final of the Gymnastics World Chamionships at the Aspire Dome in Doha, Qatar, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2018. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)

DOHA, Qatar -- Relaxed, relieved and with the U.S. women's gymnastics team gold medal, Morgan Hurd needed a break. So the 17-year-old hopped on the back of Simone Biles and went for a brief ride, the two teammates laughing all the way.

While the scene lent itself to an easy metaphor, that's not the reality.

Sure, having the best gymnast on the planet tends to help while putting together a dynasty. Except the United States' dominance in the sport -- one that shows no signs of ending after the Americans won the world championship by a record 8.766 points Tuesday -- goes far deeper than its 21-year-old superstar.

It's 15-year-old Kara Eaker gracefully drilling her balance beam routine in her first major international meet. It's 17-year-old Riley McCusker proving high-performance coordinator Tom Forster's hunch correct by being rock steady on the beam after a shaky performance in qualifying. It's Grace McCallum celebrating her 16th birthday by coming through on floor and vault. It's Hurd posting top-five scores on vault and uneven bars on a day the U.S. put up the top overall scores by at least a full point in each of the four events.

The faces Biles shared the podium with at the 2016 Olympics are gone. The machine rolls on.

"It shows how strong the group of girls are and how strong Team USA is," Biles said after collecting the 15th world championship medal of her career despite dealing with pain from a kidney stone. "I feel like anything you guys throw at us we'll try and work even harder to improve ourselves and our scores for the team."

The U.S. put up a total of 171.629 to win its fourth consecutive world title and secure a spot at the 2020 Olympics. Silver medalist Russia and bronze medalist China also locked up Olympic berths by reaching the podium.

The gap between Russia and eighth-place Germany was all of 3.43 points, less than half of the margin between first and second. The Russians didn't lock up silver until the final routine on the final rotation. By then, gold was already well in hand for the Americans, just as it has been since their winning streak began seven years ago.

Not bad for a group that Biles said had a terrible warmup session before making its way into the half-filled Aspire Dome. Then the lights came on and the U.S. did what it has done in all four hemispheres of the planet -- from Tokyo to London to China to Brazil -- for the better part of a decade: It made the impossibly difficult look remarkably easy.

The Americans weren't perfect, even Biles. She looked angry after a beam routine in which she briefly lost her balance while trying to land a front pike, forcing her to reach down and hold on. She later stepped out of bounds during her first tumbling pass on floor exercise.

Yet they're mistakes Biles and the rest of the U.S. can absorb without fear of getting caught. The Americans put together the toughest routines and do them cleaner than everyone else.

It's why Forster can afford to put McCusker on beam over Hurd in the final even though Hurd scored higher during qualifying. Her score of 13.7 on Tuesday was markedly better and the boost to her confidence immeasurable.

"It meant a lot to me because I knew my first-day performance was not my best," McCusker said. "I was definitely very nervous going in. I feel like I got all those nerves out on the competition stage. I was ready to come in today and kill it."

Three of the five women will be in at least one event final. Biles will have the heaviest workload of all. She'll be in the all-around final and all four event finals.

Medals in each -- Biles finished first in qualifying in everything but bars, where she was second -- would give her 20 in her career at world championships, tying the record for most ever.

photo

AP/VADIM GHIRDA

Simone Biles of the United States performs on the balance beam during the women’s team final of the Gymnastics World Championships at the Aspire Dome in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday. The United States won the world championships by a record 8.766 points.

Sports on 10/31/2018

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