Simone Biles Has the Twisties What Are They and Why Are They So Dangerous
After completing her first vault in the womenâs gymnasticsâ team competition in Tokyo, the reigning Olympic all-around champion looked worried. Simone Biles didnât seem in pain, and wasnât limping or grimacing. But she was seriously concerned.
Biles was supposed to do two and a half twists in the air after launching off the vault but once airborne, she lost her bearings and only completed one and a half. She immediately knew something was wrong.
And every gymnast can relate. Biles has since said that the combination of mental stress and pressure leading up to the Olympics have affected her confidence. But, more importantly, she felt a disconnect between her mind and body; her body was no longer doing what she wanted it to. Whatever the trigger, gymnasts call this the âtwisties.â
âIf you say âtwistiesâ every gymnast knows what youâre talking about,â says Jordyn Wieber, member of the 2012 Olympics gold medal team and now head womenâs gymnastics coach at the University of Arkansas. âItâs something all gymnasts experience at one time or another.â
For Wieber, it was when she was 10. She want to simply flip forward, but her body automatically twisted, and she felt she had no control over it. âYou get lost in the air, you donât know where you are, you donât know where the ground is, you donât know how many times youâre twisting, and you canât control how many times youâre twisting,â says Wieber. âThatâs the best way to describe it. Itâs really scary. If you open up and land incorrectly, itâs really, really dangerous.â
What causes the twisties?What causes the twisties varies from gymnast to gymnastâ"sometimes, they can be triggered if the gymnast is training different twisting skills at the same time, for instance going back and forth between double twisting elements, one-and-a-half twists, and triples. Stress could contribute to them. Or they can just descend out of the blue for no reason.
For Biles, they occurred on the worldâs biggest stage, and the look of concern everyone saw on her face makes sense. âShe is doing some of the most difficult skills in the entire world, and if youâre not mentally in a great place, or have the twisties, then that can be a matter or life or death,â says Wieber. âOne wrong landing, or landing on your neck, could be really, really dangerous.â Biles has four skills named after her on the vault, floor and beam, including the daring triple-twisting double back flip on floor exercise.
Biles has been answering questions on Instagram about the twisties, and itâs clear she is experiencing the classic signs. âLiterally cannot tell up from down. Itâs the craziest feeling ever, not having an inch of control over your body,â she wrote. âwhatâs even scarier is since I have no idea where I am in the air, I also have NO idea how Iâm going to land. or what Iâm going to land on. Head/hands/feet/backâ¦â
She also shared a video of herself falling on her back after dismounting on the uneven bars following her withdrawal from the Olympics. âFor anyone saying I quit, I didnât quit. My mind & body are simply not in sync, as you can see here,â she wrote.
How Simone Biles could recover from the twistiesHow do gymnasts shake the twisties? If they are at their home gym, they have the option of tumbling on a trampoline or landing in a soft pit or softer surfaces. But at the Olympics, there are no such options at the training or competition sites. Biles has been posting clips of her at a local gym in Tokyo with a soft pit of foam blocks where she has been practicing to overcome the twisties, but even she doesnât know when theyâll resolve.
For Wieber, it took several days of landing all her flips in a soft pit. It didnât help that her coach wasnât sympathetic, and pressured her to âget overâ whatever was keeping her from training properly. âSometimes it takes stepping backward, resetting your skills, and working backward to work back up to where you were,â she says. âMy coach wasnât supportive, and got mad at me, which made it more stressful. I wasnât feeling great about it, and I was feeling even worse because my coach was mad at me.
âSimone is getting the support and empathy she needs, and was able to pull back out of the event for the safety of herself and the betterment of the team, and thatâs a really good thing.â
Even Biles canât predict whether she will be able to compete in the event finalsâ"she qualified for all four events: vault, floor, uneven bars and beam.
Sometimes the twisties resolve themselves after a couple of days, as they did for Wieber, sometimes it takes weeks, and sometimes gymnasts never feel the same in the air. âWhatever happens, whether she competes or not, weâre supportive of her,â says Wieber. âAnd weâre proud of her no matter what.â
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