Watching Simone Biles, you expect the profound, but there’s just as much to enjoy when she’s profane.
An audible wave of gasps and laughter rippled through Target Center on Friday night when Biles mouthed an expletive to herself — caught clear as day on the jumbotron — after a disappointing beam routine during the first day of women’s competition at the United States Olympic gymnastics trials.
Thirty minutes later she sprinted toward the vault and executed the Biles II, an electrifying round-off entry into a double backflip. It led to a standing ovation and a monster score of 15.975. Biles, soaking in the scene, walked back down the runway and performed her second vault as more than 16,000 people went insane.
It was a wonderful distillation of what makes Biles, 27, a one-of-a-kind draw who has turned Minneapolis into the epicenter of the sports world this weekend. She is a revolutionary athlete, arguably the greatest gymnast of all time. But it’s her relatability that makes her heroic to fans.
Carolyn Kuz was strolling through Target Field Plaza an hour before the trials got underway. She wore a shirt which read “Simone Freaking Biles.” Strangers walked over to give her high fives.
Kuz had never seen Biles in official competition. She saved her money to travel from Philadelphia and secured tickets to all four nights of the trials. She has been following Biles’ career for more than a decade. They are a year apart in age.
“Totally different life experiences, but it’s nice having somebody to look at and it’s like, ‘Wow, she’s just like me in a way,’” Kuz said. “It’s a dream of mine to be here.”

’She is impeccable’
Even for the highest level of athletes this country has known, Biles exists in a unique space.