Olympic Trials Field by the numbers
16 women
20 men (16 Senior National Team, 4 Senior Development Team)

Encore performances
15 of the 36 athletes entered have previously competed at an Olympic Trials

  • Women: Simone Biles*, Jade Carey, Jordan Chiles, Kayla DiCello, Shilese Jones, Sunisa Lee, Leanne Wong
  • Men: Cameron Bock, Alex Diab, Paul Juda, Brody Malone, Yul Moldauer*, Stephen Nedoroscik, Donnell Whittenburg*, Shane Wiskus

*This will be the third Olympic Trials for Biles, Moldauer and Whittenburg

Among all athletes scheduled to compete in the 2024 Olympic Team Trials:

  • They collectively have won 92 medals in Olympic or World Championships competition, including 15 Olympic medals and 77 World Championships medals
  • 13 athletes have been Olympic team members (8) or alternates (5)
  • 23 World Championships roster members
  • 20 athletes have won medals at either the Olympic Games or World Championships
  • 16 athletes have won a combined 74 U.S. titles

Oldest athletes entered
Men: Donnell Whittenburg (8/18/94)
Women: Simone Biles (3/14/97)

Youngest athletes entered
Men: Kau Uemura (2/16/06) – Sr. National Development Team
Women: Zoey Molomo (7/11/08)

2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials participants who have won an Olympic medal
Simone Biles – 7 (Team-20, 16; BB-21, 16; AA-16, VT-16, FX-16 )
Suni Lee – 3 (Team-20; AA-20; UB-20)
Jade Carey – 1 (FX-20)
Jordan Chiles – 1 (Team-20)

2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials participants who have won at least one U.S. title (apparatus-year)
Women – 6 athletes with 41 titles

  • Simone Biles, 32 gold (including AA, FX, BB, VT and UB in 2024)
  • Jade Carey, 2 gold (VT-22, 17)
  • Shilese Jones, 3 gold (UB-22(T), 23; FX-22)
  • Suni Lee, 2 gold (UB-21, 19)
  • Leanne Wong, 1 gold (UB-22(T))
  • Joscelyn Roberson, 1 gold (VT – 23)

Men – 10 athletes with 33 titles

  • Donnell Whittenburg, 7 gold (SR-22, 23; VT-24, 17(T), SR-16, SR-15, VT-14)
  • Brody Malone, 7 gold (AA – 24, 22, 21; FX – 22; HB – 24, 22; VT – 21)
  • Yul Moldauer, 5 gold (PB-24, 21, 23; AA-17, FX-17(T))
  • Stephen Nedoroscik, 4 gold (PH-24, 23, 22, 21)
  • Alex Diab, 3 gold (SR-24, 21, 19)
  • Asher Hong, 2 gold (AA-23; VT-22)
  • Paul Juda, 1 gold (FX-23)
  • Curran Phillips, 1 gold (PB-22)
  • Fred Richard, 2 gold FX – 24, (HB-23)
  • Shane Wiskus, 1 gold (VT-19)

The Simone Zone
Minneapolis will be third Olympic Trials for most decorated gymnast in history. Her career highlights include:

  • 7 Olympic medals (4 gold)
  • 30 World Championships medals (23 gold)
  • 32 U.S. championships, including 9 all-around titles

For more information on the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials, including event schedule, broadcast information and athlete bios, visit www.usagymolympictrials.com.

Other-Worldliness
The U.S. is coming off of an incredibly successful showing at the 2023 World Championships. Highlights from Antwerp are listed below.
Women:

  • Record seventh-straight team title for U.S. women, breaking the streak of 6-straight wins previously shared with China’s men’s team
  • Simone Biles:
    • With five medals in Antwerp, became the most decorated gymnast in World Championship and Olympic competition (37), eclipsing the total of 33 owned by Vitaly Scherbo of Belarus.
    • Brought her career World Championships medal haul to 30 (23 gold, 4 silver, 3 bronze).
    • Remained unbeaten in World Championships all-around and floor exercise competition, taking her sixth titles in each event.
    • Performed her fifth career eponymous skill in Antwerp. The Yurchenko double pike vault is now known as the Biles II.
  • Shilese Jones was a repeat medalist in the team, all-around and uneven bars competitions, finishing with three medals in at these championships, bringing her career medal total to six.

Men

  • The four medals won by the U.S. is their largest medal tally since 2013, when they also won four.
  • First men’s team medal since 2014.
  • Khoi Young became the first man to win three medals at a single World Championships since Paul Hamm in the 2003 and the first to win multiple individual apparatus medals since Kurt Thomas and Bart Conner in 1979.
  • Young became the youngest-ever U.S. medalist on both pommel horse (20 and 291 days) and vault (20 and 292 days).
  • Young’s vault silver was the first medal for the U.S. in the event since 2015 (Donnell Whittenburg, bronze).
  • Fred Richard won the first men’s individual all-around medal since 2010 and became the first U.S. man to win a team and all-around medal since Paul Hamm in 2003.
  • At 19 years and 165 days during the all-around final, Richard became the youngest-ever U.S. medalist in any men’s event at the World Championships.