PARIS: Simone Biles soared to her third gold of the Paris Games on Saturday, her gravity-defying Yurchenko double pike propelling her to the women's vault title for a seventh Olympic crown.
Biles, who led the United States to team gold before grabbing all-around gold, produced a pair of stunning vaults to notch a resounding victory over Olympic and world champion Rebeca Andrade of Brazil.
American Jade Carey took bronze.
Biles took control with her opening vault, the Yurchenko double pike now named the Biles II.
Her height off the vault table was astonishing, and even though her momentum carried her back a step on landing, her execution score of 9.4, along with the 6.4 difficulty score for the move so tough no other woman attempts it, earned 15.700.
Biles produced another soaring effort on her second vault, a Cheng, scoring 14.900 for a winning average of 15.300.
"I'm super excited, ecstatic for how my vaults were," Biles, 27, said. "I wanted to perform them well, and I think you saw that today.
"I put in a lot of work to be able to perform that vault (the Yurchenko double pike) well. I'm excited I got to show that here during finals today."
Andrade opened with a beautiful Cheng vault that garnered 15.100 points and had a slight hop on landing off her second vault for a 14.833 and an average of 14.966.
The Brazilian, who won vault gold in Biles's absence in Tokyo but edged the American for the world title last year, had hinted she might unveil a new triple-twisting Yurchenko in a bid to challenge Biles.
But after celebrating her silver she said she had decided before the competition that she would not attempt it, even though she would like to unleash it in competition someday "just because it's so cool."
Carey was the last one up of the eight finalists and snatched bronze with an average of 14.466, denying North Korea's An Chang-ok.
"It was stressful being the last one up, but I knew that if I stayed in my lane, stayed focused, everything would work out well," said Carey, who won floor gold in Tokyo but was eighth in the vault final.
Biles, clad in shimmering red, gave a big smile as she received another rapturous reception at Bercy Arena.
Her smile was just as big as she saluted the judges after landing her second vault, and she was still smiling as she high-fived coach Laurent Landi.
The US great now owns a total of 40 world and Olympic medals – 30 of them gold.
She could add to that tally on Monday, when she competes in the balance beam and floor exercise finals, capping her return to the Olympic pinnacle.
At Tokyo she suffered a bout of the disorientating and dangerous mental block called the "twisties" and pulled out of most of her events.--AFP