Current:Home > ContactSignalHub-Olympic champion Suni Lee's rough Winter Cup day is reminder of what makes her a great -MacroWatch
SignalHub-Olympic champion Suni Lee's rough Winter Cup day is reminder of what makes her a great
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-11 08:19:00
LOUISVILLE,SignalHub Ky. — In gymnastics, as in life, things aren’t perfect.
There are going to be falls. There are going to be struggles. There are going to be days that don’t turn out as you’d hope. It’s how it is and no one, even the most successful and hard-working, is immune.
But you still learn from those days, and they make you better.
That’s what Suni Lee was reminding herself of Saturday afternoon after her disappointing performance at Winter Cup. The reigning Olympic champion had fallen twice on uneven bars, including on the skill she hopes to have named for her, then had a fall on balance beam, too.
“It obviously wasn’t what I wanted. But in all honesty, I think it’s good it happened here rather than somewhere else because you can’t get anywhere without failing,” Lee said. “I’m going to be mad about it for a really long time, but it’s OK.
“Like Jess was saying, you would way rather want to do it here rather than at the Olympics,” she added, referring to longtime coach Jess Graba. “That’s something to remind myself of. Also, I haven’t been training that long.”
This was Lee’s first meet since she was forced to withdraw from the world team selection camp in September because of a kidney ailment that limited her training. And, in all honesty, the entire last year has been tough since the kidney issue first flared up.
Lee hasn’t said what the condition is but has shared that it causes swelling so severe it prevents her from even putting on grips and kept her out of the gym for significant stretches. She also experienced depression, struggling with the idea she couldn’t do the sport she loves and which has always come so naturally to her.
She says she’s in remission now and she and Graba said doctors finally have a good idea of how to manage her condition. But she’s really only been training for six weeks, and the skill she was trying to do Saturday is really, really hard.
To expect Lee to be flawless is to not understand the vagaries of sports. Of life.
“It’s just a day. This is a day,” Graba said. “I told her, `C’mon. You’re not going to make this without making mistakes.’ There’s no way to think that way. She’s doing things that nobody else has ever done. So how do you expect go out here and not make a mistake?
“There shouldn’t be any embarrassment. If I tried any of that stuff, I’d be probably in traction,” he added. “She’s just mad at herself because it was really good in practice. That’s what happens. That’s why you’ve got to practice.”
More:Winter Cup 2024 highlights: All the results, best moments from USA Gymnastics event
People tend to see elite athletes, Olympic champions in particular, as somehow superhuman. As if they don’t experience the pitfalls and setbacks us mere mortals do. As if they can deliver a perfect performance any time they want.
What the public forgets, though, is it took thousands of hours to reach the top of that podium. That the foundation for an athlete’s spectacular success is built over years and years of small achievements and, yes, failures.
When all we see is the end result, of course our expectations are going to be skewed.
Lee has a title only 15 other women have won, a medal that girls all over the world dream of winning. She can do things that defy both gravity and physics.
But she is also still human.
“The way we did it the first time, we made lots of mistakes. You learn from your mistakes and keep pushing. Even in Tokyo, we made mistakes,” Graba said. “So I don’t have any expectations other than, get better tomorrow.”
OPINION:Olympic champion Suni Lee finds she's stronger than she knew after facing health issue
There is no question Lee can do that skill on bars. And a clean beam routine, for that matter. She did both multiple times during training at Winter Cup and looked spectacular in doing them. But they don’t give gold medals for winning practice.
If Lee makes it back to the Olympics, if she wins more medals, it will be because of her otherworldly skills and mental fortitude, yes. But it will also be because of days like this, days that motivate her to go back to the gym and work that much harder.
“This is part of the process,” Graba said. “And the process is hard.”
There’s no straight line to success for anyone, in sports or life.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (56)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- LAPD releases body cam video of officer fatally shooting UCLA grad holding a plastic fork
- Federal Reserve minutes: Officials worried that progress on inflation could stall in coming months
- 7 Black women backstage at the Grand Ole Opry, talking Beyoncé and country music
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- 88-year-old mother testifies in murder conspiracy trial about daughter’s disappearance
- What does it mean for an NFL player to be franchise tagged? Deadline, candidates, and more
- Capital One is acquiring Discover: What to know about the $35 billion, all-stock deal
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- The Daily Money: Car insurance is getting pricey
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Pennsylvania’s high court sides with township over its ban of a backyard gun range
- How an Alabama court ruling that frozen embryos are children could affect IVF
- The Office Actor Ewen MacIntosh Dead at 50
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Beyoncé's 'Texas Hold 'Em' debuts at No. 1 on the country chart
- Chicago Sues 5 Oil Companies, Accusing Them of Climate Change Destruction, Fraud
- Two Indicators: Economics of the defense industry
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Amanda Bynes Reveals Her Favorite Role—and the Answer Will Surprise You
Notorious ransomware provider LockBit taken over by law enforcement
Stock market today: Asian stocks mixed after tech shares pull Wall Street lower
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Olympian Scott Hamilton Shares He's Not Undergoing Treatment for 3rd Brain Tumor
Georgia lawmakers eye allowing criminal charges against school librarians over sexual content of books
Beyoncé becomes first Black woman to top Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart