Cecile and Laurent Landi helped Simone Biles reach new heights. The Olympics serve as a homecoming

Cecile and Laurent Landi helped Simone Biles reach new heights. The Olympics serve as a homecoming
The Landis are moving on after the Olympics. Cecile Landi was named co-head coach at the University of Georgia in April.(AP)
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Updated 28 July 2024
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Cecile and Laurent Landi helped Simone Biles reach new heights. The Olympics serve as a homecoming

Cecile and Laurent Landi helped Simone Biles reach new heights. The Olympics serve as a homecoming
  • The Landis say the key to their coaching success is making it a point to adjust to each athlete rather than the more rigid style they grew up with in France
  • The Landis are moving on after the Olympics. Cecile Landi was named co-head coach at the University of Georgia in April

SPRING: Cecile Canqueteau-Landi fit “in the box,” as she put it. She was skinny. She was blonde. She was pretty good at gymnastics.
And so at 9 years old, she was whisked away to become part of the French national team program, a path that ultimately led her to the 1996 Olympics.
There was reward in that journey. Yet looking back nearly three decades later, Landi wonders how many promising young athletes had their careers and their lives altered — and not for the better — because they didn’t fit someone’s preconceived notion of what a gymnast needed to look like by the time they reached their 10th birthday.
When Landi transitioned into coaching in the early 2000s, she vowed not to make the same mistake.
So maybe it’s not a coincidence that when Landi and her husband Laurent — himself a former French national team member — walk onto the floor at Bercy Arena for women’s Olympics qualifying next Sunday, they will do it while leading the oldest US women’s gymnastics team — headlined by 27-year-old Simone Biles — the Americans have ever sent to a modern Games.
A healthy partnership
In another country in another era, maybe Biles becomes something other than an icon. Maybe she becomes a casualty.
“An athlete like Simone would never have reached her full potential in France,” said Cecile. “Because she would have been put aside because she didn’t fit that box.”
For the Landis — who began coaching Biles in 2017 — there is no “box.” There can’t be.
“It’s not the athlete that needs to adjust to the coaches,” Laurent Landi said. “The coaches need to adjust the athletes and the athlete’s abilities.”
Biles was already 20 and the reigning Olympic champion when the Landis agreed to helm the elite program at World Champions Center, the massive gym run by the Biles family in the Houston suburbs.
They knew Biles fairly well at the time having already coached gymnasts who competed alongside Biles at several world championships and the 2016 Olympics. During the interview process, all three agreed there was no point — and no fun — in having Biles merely try to hold on to her otherworldly talent. To keep her engaged, they needed to make sure she kept moving forward.
The result has been perhaps the best gymnastics of Biles’ remarkable career, a stretch that includes three world all-around titles and another handful of entries in the sport’s Code of Points with her next name next to them, from the triple-double on floor exercise to the Yurchenko double pike vault that drew a standing ovation at the Olympic trials last month.
Biles views her relationship with the Landis as more of a partnership.
“They’ve been big mentors in like my adulthood (because) they got to see and harness the more mature Simone,” Biles said. “They’ve helped me a lot not just in the gym but out of the gym too.”
When Biles moved into her first house, Cecile who came over and showed her how to operate the dishwasher. When a gymnast who had just gotten their driver’s license had a problem with one of her tires, Cecile went to a nearby gas station and gave a tutorial on how to use the air pump.
“If we can help and they want the help, then why not?” she said with a laugh.
Changing with the times
The trick is finding a way to provide that help safely and productively, particularly amid a culture shift in the sport aimed at empowering athletes to take ownership of their gymnastics. It is a delicate needle to thread. What serves as motivation for one athlete could be construed negatively by another.
It’s a reality the Landis are well aware of as they try to find the proper balance between being too rigid and too lax. They grew up in a time when the coach/athlete relationship was one-sided. There was no back and forth. There was no discussion. The coach set the standards and expectations. The athlete met them or they didn’t last long.
The shift toward a more cooperative approach was overdue, but that doesn’t mean it is always easy. Laurent Landi admits he’s not the most patient coach, though those around him say he has mellowed a bit over the years. He also understands if he wants to keep doing this for a living, he didn’t have much of a choice.
“Yeah, there will be frustration,” he said. “But you can always go around some stuff and just take your pride (as a coach) away and make sure that the athletes still get the skill done.”
It’s an approach that helped World Champion Center’s elite program send five athletes to the Olympic trials, with Biles and Jordan Chiles making the five-woman US team while Joscelyn Roberson and Tiana Sumanasekera were selected as alternates.
It’s the kind of success Roberson envisioned when she moved to the Houston suburbs a few years ago to train under the Landis. She was intimidated at first before realizing her new coaches “have a million different ways to coach one skill,” a marked departure from what she was used to.
The goal is to meet the athletes where they are at on a given day, understanding no two gymnasts are the same and what works for one might not necessarily work for another. Perhaps even more importantly, they have learned to evolve as the nature of coaching evolves.
“We’re not always right,” Laurent said. “If you do your own way all the time, you will hurt the majority of the athletes. Maybe one will survive and will be an amazing person, amazing athlete but the (other) 90 percent, they will be broken. ... We had to adjust to Simone, otherwise we would have broke her.”
It’s not just Biles’ age they had to accommodate, but her schedule. She is no longer a precocious teenager who buries herself in the gym. She’s a newlywed whose schedule is packed with everything from corporate commitments to building a house and a family with her husband, Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens.
“When (we) tell him he just hears ‘you’re missing practice’ and kind of freaks out,” Biles said. “Because he sees all the end goals and then he gets the calendar and then he’s like, ‘Oh, OK, that’s fine. We’ll do this today, we’ll do that.’ So it just takes time for him to process.”
Biles certainly appears well-prepared. She arrives in Paris at the height of her powers more than a decade after ascending to the top of her sport. She’ll be accompanied by a pair of coaches who view the trip as more of a business trip than a homecoming.
A new challenge awaits
While the Landis have been approached to take over the women’s national team program in France in recent years, returning never made much sense to them even with the women’s program is in the midst of a resurgence.
“I think our family will be very proud, probably more than we are,” Cecile Landi said. “Because in a weird way, it’s just work for us.”
And perhaps, goodbye too.
Cecile, long a supporter of NCAA gymnastics, earlier this year agreed to become the co-head coach at the University of Georgia. Laurent will remain at World Champions Center in the short term until the Landis’ daughter Juliette — who will dive for France during the Games — graduates from high school next spring.
After that, who knows? The young gymnast who was put in a box has become a coach who no longer puts limitations on anyone, herself maybe most of all.
“I think I’ve done everything I could do in elite, and beyond what I could ever have imagined as a little French girl in a little town,” Cecile said. “I’ve coached the greatest of all time. I’ve coached many kids. I’ve had many great athletes in NCAA and elite that I feel like I want to try what’s next, a new challenge.”


Top seed Judd Trump through to semifinals of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters as Ronnie O’Sullivan exits after loss to Si Jiahui

Top seed Judd Trump through to semifinals of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters as Ronnie O’Sullivan exits after loss to Si Jiahui
Updated 06 September 2024
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Top seed Judd Trump through to semifinals of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters as Ronnie O’Sullivan exits after loss to Si Jiahui

Top seed Judd Trump through to semifinals of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters as Ronnie O’Sullivan exits after loss to Si Jiahui
  • Shaun Murphy overcame Xiao Guodong and Mark Williams beat Jimmy Robertson in the other quarterfinals

RIYADH: Seven-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan has been eliminated from the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters as the tournament enters the semifinals stage on Friday.

Top seed Judd Trump is set to face fellow Englishman Shaun Murphy and Wales’ Mark Williams takes on China’s Si Jiahui at the Green Halls in Riyadh.

Thursday’s quarterfinal matches saw top seed and tournament favorite Trump continue his blistering form, with a 6-3 win against Australia’s Neil Robertson.

The former world champion is now through to the 63rd ranking event semifinal of his career, and many are tipping “The Ace in the Pack’ to go all the way this weekend.

Awaiting the 28-time ranking event winner in the last four is Murphy, with the ex-world champion and current world no. 7 seeing off Xiao Guodong 6-2.

This will now set up a replay of the Shanghai Masters final in July, where Trump emerged victorious against Murphy.

Meanwhile, the second semifinal will see Si continue his quest for a maiden ranking title after the 22-year-old defeated O’Sullivan.

All square at 2-2 heading into the interval, Si established a three-frame lead to move within one of victory at 5-2 before O’Sullivan responded with back-to-back frames to make it 5-4.

But a break of 82 in the 10th frame secured a famous victory for Si, who meets three-time world champion Williams next.

Williams whitewashed the in-form Jimmy Robertson 6-0 in his quarterfinal to move within touching distance of the 42nd ranking event final of his career.


Berrade wins Spanish Vuelta stage as O’Connor protects 5-second lead over Roglic

Berrade wins Spanish Vuelta stage as O’Connor protects 5-second lead over Roglic
Updated 06 September 2024
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Berrade wins Spanish Vuelta stage as O’Connor protects 5-second lead over Roglic

Berrade wins Spanish Vuelta stage as O’Connor protects 5-second lead over Roglic
  • Berrade made his move to the front with about five kilometers (3.1 miles) to go in the 179.5-kilometer (111-mile) mid-mountain stage through Basque Country roads
  • O’Connor and Roglic finished together again, and the gap between the two remained at five seconds entering the decisive stages and the weekend finish in Madrid

VITORIA-GASTEIZ, Spain: Urko Berrade made a late move to escape the breakaway group and win the 19th stage of the Spanish Vuelta on Thursday, with Ben O’Connor holding on to a five-second lead over three-time champion Primoz Roglic.

It was the third stage win for team Kern Pharma, whose founder — Manolo Azcona — passed away last week. Pablo Castrillo, another Spaniard, had won twice following Azcona’s death.

Spanish riders have won four Vuelta stages so far, their best tally since 2019.

“Without a doubt, it’s a dream,” Berrade said. “The stage closer to home, with all my family watching me, friends, in the last stages of La Vuelta... When there are so few opportunities left it seemed complicated to get a stage. I’ve been close in others, but it’s incredible. At the end, that last climb, with everyone pretty cooked, they told me: ‘You all have a chance, try it.’ I tried from there, almost without looking back, I tried not to look back. I didn’t see myself as the winner until I crossed the finish line.”

Berrade made his move to the front with about five kilometers (3.1 miles) to go in the 179.5-kilometer (111-mile) mid-mountain stage through Basque Country roads.

O’Connor and Roglic finished together again, and the gap between the two remained at five seconds entering the decisive stages and the weekend finish in Madrid. Enric Mas was also in contention, 1 minute, 25 seconds off the lead.

“It wasn’t an easy stage at all, to be honest. There are no easy days this year,” said O’Connor, an Australian. “But somehow, I’m still managing to crack out some pretty good numbers, so I don’t think it makes any difference now. And I’m still in the lead. It’s nice to have it for another day. I don’t know if it’s 13 or 14 days, a long time. I’ve loved it and I enjoyed it a lot.”

On Friday, riders will face a 173.5-kilometer (107.8-mile) route that includes a challenging climb of nearly 10 kilometers (6.2 miles).


Pegula in thrilling comeback to set-up US Open final with Sabalenka

Pegula in thrilling comeback to set-up US Open final with Sabalenka
Updated 06 September 2024
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Pegula in thrilling comeback to set-up US Open final with Sabalenka

Pegula in thrilling comeback to set-up US Open final with Sabalenka
  • The sixth-ranked American will take on world No. 2 and Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka in Saturday’s championship match
  • Pegula has now won 15 of 16 matches on the US summer hard court swing which saw a title in Toronto and defeat in the Cincinnati final to Sabalenka

NEW YORK: Jessica Pegula staged an astonishing recovery from a set and a break down to defeat Karolina Muchova and reach her first Grand Slam final at the US Open on Thursday.
The sixth-ranked American came through 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 and will take on world number two and Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka in Saturday’s championship match.
Sabalenka reached her second successive US Open final by seeing off another American, Emma Navarro 6-3, 7-6 (7/2).
“I thought I was lucky to still be in it,” admitted Pegula after seeing Czech opponent Muchova miss an easy chance to go 3-0 up with a double break in the second set.
“She made me look like a beginner, she was destroying me and I was about to burst into tears but it all came down to small moments.
“I don’t know how I turned that around.”
Pegula has now won 15 of 16 matches on the US summer hard court swing which saw a title in Toronto and defeat in the Cincinnati final to Sabalenka.
“It’s a chance for revenge, but she’ll be tough to beat,” said Pegula.
Muchova saved three break points in the third game of the first set which sparked a rapid collapse by Pegula.
The 30-year-old American dropped serve in the fourth and sixth games and lost a set for the first time in the tournament.
Muchova’a all-court game yielded 11 winners to her opponent’s three as the opener was wrapped up in just 28 minutes.
It was a severe comedown for Pegula who had knocked out world number one Iga Swiatek on Wednesday to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal after losing all six of her previous last-eight matches.
Muchova then broke for a 2-0 lead in the second set, racking up a seventh game in a row before Pegula stopped the rot.
That suddenly reinvigorated the American who went 4-2 ahead before being pulled back to 4-4 but then levelled the semifinal when Muchova double-faulted on set point.
Pegula sprinted to a break up at 3-0 in the decider and then 5-2 after a seventh game which stretched to alnmost 10 minutes.
The last of Muchova’s 46 unforced errors sealed her fate.
 


Argentina cruise past Chile, Bolivia thrash Venezuela in World Cup qualifiers

Argentina cruise past Chile, Bolivia thrash Venezuela in World Cup qualifiers
Updated 06 September 2024
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Argentina cruise past Chile, Bolivia thrash Venezuela in World Cup qualifiers

Argentina cruise past Chile, Bolivia thrash Venezuela in World Cup qualifiers
  • Liverpool midfielder Mac Allister swept in a low finish three minutes after halftime to break the deadlock at the Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires
  • Lionel Scaloni’s team lead South America’s 10-team round-robin qualifying table by five points after seven games
  • Goals from Ramiro Vaca, Carmelo Algaranaz, Miguel Terceros and Enzo Monteiro handed Bolivia only their second win of qualifying

BUENOS AIRES: Alexis Mac Allister, Julian Alvarez and Paulo Dybala were on target as Argentina tightened their grip on South America’s 2026 World Cup qualifying tournament with a 3-0 win over Chile on Thursday.

Liverpool midfielder Mac Allister swept in a low finish three minutes after halftime to break the deadlock at the Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires against a defensive Chile side.

Former Manchester City striker Alvarez doubled the lead in the 84th minute with a thumping shot from outside the area before substitute Dybala put the seal on the victory with a late strike in stoppage time.

It was another clinical victory for the reigning world champions, who are now cruising toward confirming their place at the 2026 finals being staged in the US, Mexico and Canada.

Lionel Scaloni’s team lead South America’s 10-team round-robin qualifying table by five points after seven games.

The top six teams in the final standings qualify automatically for the 2026 finals in North America with the seventh-placed team advancing to a playoff.

Argentina, who also beat Chile 1-0 on their way to clinching back-to-back Copa America titles earlier this year, went into Thursday’s game missing injured captain Lionel Messi and veteran winger Angel Di Maria, who retired from international football after the Copa America triumph in July.

Di Maria was feted by his former teammates at a pre-game ceremony before taking his place in the stands to watch the world champions secure their sixth win from seven qualifying games.

Despite the absence of Messi and Di Maria, Argentina had plenty of creative guile in attack with Lautaro Martinez and Atletico Madrid’s Alvarez causing problems for the Chile defense.

Argentina, meanwhile, controlled midfield with Mac Allister lining up alongside Rodrigo De Paul and Enzo Fernandez.

After a cagey first-half, the breakthrough came in the 48th minute when Alvarez whipped in a low cross from the right.

Martinez dummied cleverly and allowed the ball to roll through to Mac Allister, who guided an accurate shot into the bottom corner.

In Thursday’s other qualifier, Bolivia reignited their campaign with a 4-0 drubbing over Venezuela in a game played more than 4,000m (13,100 feet) above sea level.

Goals from Ramiro Vaca, Carmelo Algaranaz, Miguel Terceros and Enzo Monteiro handed Bolivia only their second win of qualifying and lifted them into seventh place in the standings.

The result was a vindication of Bolivia’s move to play Thursday’s game in El Alto — Spanish for “The Heights” — rather than at their usual home venue in neighboring La Paz, which is 3,600m above sea level.

The thin air of El Alto clearly left Venezuela’s players struggling for energy against a Bolivian team aiming to qualify for their first World Cup since reaching the 1994 finals in the United States.

Despite his team’s heavy loss, Venezuela coach Fernando Batista refused to dwell on the altitude issue after the game.

“Out of 10 questions, eight are about altitude,” Batista said. “You won’t hear anything from me about it.”

The pick of Bolivia’s goals came from Vaca after just 13 minutes.

The 25-year-old midfielder gathered the ball around 30 yards from goal, cut in from the left and unleashed a ferocious shot which flew into the top corner.

Venezuela, the only team from South America never to have qualified for a World Cup, remain well-placed to reach the finals despite Thursday’s loss.

The ‘Vinotinto’ are fourth in the standings with nine points from seven games, trailing Argentina, Uruguay and Colombia.

Venezuela host Uruguay next Tuesday in their eighth game of qualifying.

South America’s qualifiers continue on Friday with second-placed Uruguay hosting Paraguay in Montevideo while struggling Brazil, who are 11 points adrift of leaders Argentina in sixth, face Ecuador in Curitiba.

Third-placed Colombia, meanwhile, travel to Lima to face bottom-of-the-table Peru.


Duplantis ‘wrecked’ as Tebogo, Richardson star in Zurich

Duplantis ‘wrecked’ as Tebogo, Richardson star in Zurich
Updated 06 September 2024
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Duplantis ‘wrecked’ as Tebogo, Richardson star in Zurich

Duplantis ‘wrecked’ as Tebogo, Richardson star in Zurich
  • World champion Richardson went some way to avenging her Olympic defeat by Julien Alfred by reversing the tables in the 100m
  • Botswana’s Olympic champion Tebogo also left it late for his victory in the men’s 200m

ZURICH: Armand Duplantis admitted to feeling “wrecked” after an exhibition 100m race, while Sha’Carri Richardson and Letsile Tebogo steamed to sprint victories at the Zurich Diamond League meeting on Thursday.

So much is now expected when Duplantis takes to the runway of the pole vault, but it was for him a relatively disappointing competition in cold and rainy conditions, albeit a victory.

The Swede won with a best clearance of 5.82m on countback from American Sam Kendricks.

“Mentally, I felt good today, but my body felt wrecked after yesterday’s race,” he said in reference to the 100m showdown with 400m hurdles world record holder Karsten Warholm.

Duplantis won the sprint in a “very impressive” 10.37sec to Warholm’s 10.47.

“For both of us it was a great experience,” said Duplantis. “It was super amazing. I think we built a super event, it was very new and innovative.”

While Duplantis at least picked up another win, Warholm was an absentee after pinging his hamstring after his sprint endeavors.

But as the loser, Warholm was deigned to wear one of the Swede’s national tops in action on Thursday.

While not competing, Warholm duly made an appearance on the track dressed in Duplantis’ kit, but said it was “terrible. I need to take a really good shower after this!“

The Norwegian added: “I would prefer to race rather than do the walk of shame. But I felt something in my hamstring. I tried to warm up but I made the decision not to run.

“I hope my good friend Mondo will let me get away with this. I hope not to do this ever again!” he said, passionately kissing a Norway flag thrown from organizers, to rapturous applause from the crowd.

Roshawn Clarke of Jamaica, in 47.49sec, won the 400m hurdles in his absence.

World champion Richardson went some way to avenging her Olympic defeat by Julien Alfred by reversing the tables in the 100m.

Richardson headed into the final 20 meters in third behind Saint Lucia’s Olympic champion Julien Alfred and Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith.

But the American stayed strong and focused on the line, producing a savage dip for first place in 10.84 seconds, 0.04sec ahead of Alfred.

“I am training and executing because I know the race is not going to take care of itself,” said Richardson.

Botswana’s Olympic champion Tebogo also left it late for his victory in the men’s 200m.

The 21-year-old edged Olympic silver medalist Kenny Bednarek by 0.02sec as he won in 19.55sec.

“I always dig deep for the races and for everything, so, for me it means a lot,” said Tebogo.

And in a re-run of the men’s 1500m Olympic final, it was American Yared Nuguse who took the spoils, outsprinting Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen to the line in 3:29.21.

“This race was so highly anticipated and I knew that it was going to be quick in the end,” said Nuguse.

“Everyone could have got this race. I am glad I was still able to win.”

Beatrice Chebet, who became double Olympic champion in Paris (5,000m and 10,000m), fell short in her tilt at a world record in the shorter event.

Chebet had pacemakers, wavelight technology and a 30,000 sell-out crowd baying her on, but the Kenyan finally timed 14:09.52, all the while smashing by 21sec the meet record set back in September 2011 by compatriot Vivian Jepkemei Cheruiyot.

There was a fifth consecutive Diamond League victory for Ukraine’s Olympic champion and world record holder Yaroslava Mahuchikh, who managed a best of 1.96m in the high jump for victory.

There were also two more dominant performances from Americans who’d struck gold in Paris.

First up, three-time Olympic champion Ryan Crouser wrapped up another shot put competition with a winning 22.66m.

Grant Holloway then clocked a rapid 12.99sec for victory in the 110m hurdles.