MINNEAPOLIS -- Simone Biles is heading back to the Olympics. So are some of her friends.
The gymnastics superstar earned a third trip to her sport's biggest stage by cruising to victory at the U.S. Olympic trials on Sunday night, posting a two-day all-around total of 117.225 to clinch the lone automatic spot on the five-woman team.
Three years removed from the Tokyo Olympics -- where she pulled out of multiple finals to prioritize her safety and becoming a touchstone on the importance of mental health in the process -- Biles returns to the Games looking perhaps as good as ever at 27.
"Trusting the process and [my coaches], I knew I'd be back," Biles said.
Biles isn't going alone.
Reigning Olympic champion Sunisa Lee, 2020 Olympic floor exercise champion Jade Carey, 2020 Olympic silver medalist Jordan Chiles and 16-year-old Hezly Rivera were named to the five-woman team later Sunday night. Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong are the alternates.
A trip to France has never really been in doubt for Biles since she returned from a two-year break last summer. In the past 12 months, she has won a sixth world all-around title and her eighth and ninth national championship -- both records -- while further cementing her status as the best in her sport.
Biles will be a prohibitive favorite to bookend the Olympic gold she won in 2016, though there is plenty to work on before women's qualifying July 28.
She backpedaled after landing her Yurchenko double pike vault, a testament to both the vault's difficulty and the immense power she generates during a skill few men gymnasts try and even fewer land as cleanly.
Biles hopped off the beam after failing to land her side aerial, though she wasn't quite as frustrated as she was during a sloppy performance Friday that left her uttering an expletive.
Biles finished with a flourish on floor exercise, her signature event. Though there was a small step out of bounds, there was also the unmatched world-class tumbling that recently drew a shoutout from pop star Taylor Swift, whose song "Ready For It" opens Biles' routine.
She stepped off the podium to a standing ovation, then sat down atop the steps to take in the moment in what could be her last competitive round on American soil for quite a while.
Next stop, Paris, where the Americans try to return to the top of the podium after finishing second to Russia three years ago.
Yet the Biles that will step onto the floor at Bercy Arena in four weeks isn't the same one that left Tokyo.
She's taken intentional steps to make sure her life is no longer defined by her gymnastics. Biles married Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens in the spring of 2023 and the two are building a house in the northern Houston suburbs they hope to move into shortly after Biles returns from Paris.
Biles heads to France as perhaps the face of the U.S. Olympic movement, though she's well aware that more than a few of the millions that will tune in to watch next month will be checking to see if the challenges that derailed her in Tokyo resurface.
And while there are still moments of anxiety -- including at last year's world championships -- she has put safeguards in place to protect herself. She meets with a therapist weekly, even during competition season, something she didn't do in preparation for the 2020 Games.
Biles and the other four women who join her in France will be considered heavy favorites, particularly with defending Olympic champion Russia unable to compete as part of the fallout from the war in Ukraine.
The Americans will take their oldest women's team ever to the Games, as Biles' unrivaled longevity -- she hasn't lost a meet she's started and finished since 2013 -- and the easing of rules around name, image and likeness rules at the NCAA level allowed Carey (24), Chiles (23) and Lee (21) to continue to compete while cashing in on their newfound fame at the same time.
They have relied on that experience to get back to this moment during a sometimes harrowing meet that saw leading contenders Shilese Jones, Skye Blakely and Kayla DiCello exit with leg injuries that took them out of the mix weeks before opening ceremonies.