Anyone judging Suni Lee strictly on her medal placement in the last two Olympics could make the mistake of thinking that she has regressed.
Lee won the all-around gold in Tokyo three years ago. She won the all-around bronze on Thursday in Paris. In other sports and under different circumstances, hard-hitting analysis of her performance might have questioned why she couldn’t repeat.
Under the circumstances facing Lee, that kind of thinking is silly.
What Lee did to capture bronze, given everything she has faced, was the Minnesota sports equivalent of Kirby Puckett’s Game 6 home run or Jack Morris’ Game 7 complete game.
Needing a stellar score on her floor exercise to launch herself onto the podium, she performed brilliantly and beautifully. When she catapulted herself through her first tumbling run and stuck the landing, her smile told the story.
She had recovered, persevered and triumphed, becoming the first woman since 1980 to follow an all-around gold with a medal in the subsequent Olympics. The last to do it? The great Nadia Comaneci.
Lee’s gold in Tokyo was the story of the Olympics, especially if you live in a certain Midwestern state. She won there in part because her U.S. teammate Simone Biles, the greatest gymnast ever, withdrew from the event because of the infamous “twisties,” a mental block that keeps gymnasts from safely competing.
After winning gold, Lee spent too much of the following three years dealing with kidney problems that caused her to gain 45 pounds, while also dealing with the difficult transformation from relatively anonymous gymnast to international superstar.