It was a glorious and celebratory moment when Simone Biles clinched the gold medal for Team USA at the women's gymnastics team final on Tuesday during the 2024 Olympics. But amid the joy of becoming the most decorated Olympic gymnast of all time, queen Simone found a spare moment to be petty.
On Simone Biles's Instagram, the athlete seemed to take aim at former Olympic team member MyKayla Skinner, who had previously appeared to criticise the current women's gymnastics team as lacking talent and not working hard.
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“lack of talent, lazy, olympic champions ❤️🥇🇺🇸,” Biles captioned her Instagram post. The day after Biles posted that caption, she posted on X that she'd been blocked, presumably by Skinner (which teammate Jordan Chiles later confirmed).
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Skinner had made the comments in a YouTube video shortly after the Olympic team was solidified, saying, "I feel like the talent and the depth just isn't like what it used to be. I mean, obviously a lot of girls don't work as hard. The girls just don't have the work ethic.”
While Skinner's criticism that seemingly sparked Bile's caption happened in the last few months, Skinner has been a frequent source of controversy for many years. Here's the history behind the beef:
Despite placing 4th all-around at the Olympic trials, Skinner was chosen as an alternate for the Rio Olympic team when the Gymnastics Board decided to pull the 7th and 8th place finalists onto the team instead.
One of those spots went to Gabby Douglas — a reigning Olympic gold medalist. Apparently upset about being named an alternate, Skinner posted a photo of her face Photoshopped on Douglas's body in a team photo along with what Slate called “a racist series of emojis.” This, Slate reported, along with what was described as a bad attitude, “cemented [Skinner's] villain edit in the gymnastics world.”
Skinner apologised on social media at the time, writing, “I’m so sorry if I offended anyone. I was in the wrong by retweeting that tweet! I’m so grateful to be part of the team! Go USA.”
She continued to face mild controversy because of her outspokenness about the sport online, which has been interpreted as her being “cocky,” something that some have defended, given how male athletes are often permitted to advocate for themselves while female athletes can face criticism for it.
In 2021, Skinner went to the Tokyo Olympics as an event specialist, but secured a silver medal when she stepped in to tackle the vault in Simone Biles' absence — something Biles reportedly encouraged.
According to ESPN, Biles told Skinner she wanted to see her on the medal podium when she decided to step back from the 2021 event because of the twisties. "With Simone, we're the OGs ["Olympic Grandmas"] of the team, and to just have her support, and her having to step out of finals, and her just pushing me along every single day to help me to place on that podium has been so cool," Skinner told ESPN at the time. Later, Biles commented on Skinner's Instagram, “I'm so freaking proud of you,” according to ESPN.
Oh, how things have changed…
After the Olympic gymnastics team was solidified on 30 June, Skinner posted a YouTube video reflecting on the choices, which is when she made the comments that sparked Biles' reaction a month later. In the now-deleted video, Skinner said, "Besides Simone, I feel like the talent and the depth just isn't like what it used to be. Just notice like, I mean, obviously a lot of girls don't work as hard. The girls just don't have the work ethic."
The backlash to her comments was swift. By 3 July, Skinner had issued an apology, claiming that her words were misinterpreted.
“Hey, guys, just wanted to pop on here really quick, because I know we did the recap on YouTube, and I feel like a lot of you guys had misinterpreted or misunderstood exactly what I was meaning or had said,” Skinner said in an Instagram story, according to People. She claimed that her comments weren't "always necessarily about the current team, because I love and support all the girls that made it and I'm so proud of them."
In her initial YouTube video, Skinner said that some of the apparently lacking work ethic could be attributed to new SafeSport regulations, rules put in place to help prevent abuse in US Olympic sports. “Coaches can't get on athletes, and they have to be really careful what they say,” she said in the video.
Skinner addressed this claim in her apology, saying that her comments were geared toward her experience in the gym compared to what she sees today. “It was more about going back into my own gym, just the work ethic is different compared to when we were doing gymnastics in the [former team coordinator] Márta [Károlyi] era,” People reports. "And I'm not sticking up for Márta or saying what she did was good, I'm just saying it was different."
In a formal apology posted to X, Skinner said she's still “coming to terms” with emotional and verbal abuse that she experienced, which she said may have contributed to her hurtful comments.
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After the current Team USA won gold, Skinner posted a picture of the team with heart emojis on her Instagram story.
Still, after Biles's clapback, it appears the former friends are now officially on the outs. Team USA member Jordan Chiles posted a photo of Biles's phone with Skinner's Instagram opened, only to reveal that Skinner's page has no posts visible to Biles. “When she blocks Simone,” Chiles wrote.
Chiles isn't the only one to weigh in on the Simone Biles Instagram drama. Infamous Pommel Horse Guy Stephen Nedoroscik wrote, “Caption goes crazy,” on Bile's post, while teammate Suni Lee wrote, “put a finger down if Simone Biles just ended you.” McKayla Maroney, former Olympic gymnast, wrote, “It doesn't get more iconic than this. She f'd around n found out fr… Feels like I need to apologise just to redeem my first name.”
USA Gymnastics even dipped in the comments section, leaving three blushing emojis.
Yikes!
We've reached out to Skinner for comment.
This story originally appeared on Teen Vogue.
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