Olympics recap: What you may have missed in gymnastics, swimming, rowing and more

Olympics recap: What you may have missed in gymnastics, swimming, rowing and more

Day 6 of the Olympics saw continued brilliance in women’s gymnastics and women’s swimming, a dominant women’s team given a scare, a banner day for rowing and more.

Let’s jump into the action.

Women’s gymnastics

Simone Biles won gold in the women’s all-around final on Thursday, further cementing her status as one of the greatest Olympians of all time. It was Biles’ ninth gold, the most ever by an American gymnast.

Her dominance caught the eye of basketball star Kevin Durant, who was in the crowd.

Biles was trailing after an uneven performance on the uneven bars, but she rebounded with stellar showings on the balance beam and in floor exercise.

“Three years ago, I never thought I’d step foot on a gymnastics floor again just because of everything that had happened,” Biles said after her win, referring to a battle with the “twisties” in Tokyo. “Tonight, it means the world to me.”

Meanwhile, Suni Lee also took home a medal, winning bronze in the all-around.

“I went out there and I just told myself not to put any pressure on myself because I didn’t want to think about the past Olympics or even trying to prove to anybody anything because I wanted to just prove to myself that I could do it, because I didn’t think that I could,” Lee said.

Women’s swimming

Katie Ledecky won her 13th medal on Thursday, earning a silver in the women’s 4×200-meter freestyle relay, making her the winningest American Olympian ever.

Ledecky will race again Friday for a chance at her ninth gold medal, which would tie her with Soviet Union gymnast Larisa Latynina for the most golds won by a woman.

The 27-year-old Ledecky has shown no signs of slowing down in Paris, and as of now she expects to compete in Los Angeles in 2028, which means her record breaking could just be getting started.

Olympics recap: What you may have missed in gymnastics, swimming, rowing and moreOlympics recap: What you may have missed in gymnastics, swimming, rowing and more

Katie Ledecky (Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Men’s rowing

The U.S. men’s rowing team won gold in the four rowing event, the Americans’ first Olympic gold in the race since 1960.

It was a tight contest, with the U.S. holding off silver medalist New Zealand by less than a second despite leading at every 500-meter interval. During the last Olympics in Tokyo, the U.S. men’s rowing team failed to medal in any event for the first time in its history, so Thursday was also about redemption.

“There have been a lot of emotions that’ve gone through my head already. A few tears almost came out,” rower Michael Grady said. “I can say I held them back — not toxic masculinity or anything — but it’s really an emotional moment to be able to represent the USA on the highest stage and walk away in the most successful position.”

If your only exposure to rowing so far in life has been that one scene in “The Social Network,” you can expand your knowledge of the sport by watching Friday and Saturday, when more medals are up for grabs.

Women’s basketball

Belgium gave USA all it could handle on the hardwood Thursday.

The U.S. pulled out an 87-74 victory, but it was not easy.

Belgium’s Emma Meesseman looked like a prime Zach Randolph, giving USA’s frontcourt all they could handle. Meessemen scored 24 points in 38 minutes, doing all she could to help her country pull off one of the greatest upsets at the Games.

But the U.S. is just too talented. With the perimeter players struggling a bit, Breanna Stewart and A’ja Wilson stepped up, combining for 49 points and 20 rebounds. They were the only two Americans to score in double digits, and they were needed against Belgium’s bruising attack.

One area to keep an eye on for the United States moving forward: turnovers, of which the team had 16 on Thursday. Talent can usually overcome it, but USA is playing with fire every time it gives the ball away.

Men’s tennis

And so the curtain has come down on Andy Murray’s glittering tennis career.

Three Grand Slam titles, two Olympic gold medals and 41 weeks as the world No. 1 — all in the greatest era in the history of men’s tennis along with Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

Murray, 37, signs off as one of Great Britain’s greatest ever sportspeople, with the Scot’s career drawing to a close this evening after a straight sets loss alongside partner Dan Evans to American pair Taylor Fritz and Tommy Paul. The result puts the American pair into the semifinals of the men’s doubles and guarantees that they will play for a medal.

After a heartbreaking loss to Federer in the Wimbledon final in 2012, Murray went on to take Olympic gold on the same courts a matter of weeks later, capturing the hearts and minds of the British public and a global audience, truly establishing himself as a global icon.

He went on to claim his maiden Grand Slam title at the U.S. Open later that summer, going on to finally win his home slam at Wimbledon twice, in 2013 and 2016, before becoming the first player ever, male or female, to win back-to-back Olympic singles tennis golds at the 2016 Rio Games.

“I’m proud of my career,” Murray said after the match Thursday night. “I worked really, really hard to achieve the results I did at a really difficult time to win the major titles. I’m proud. I gave it a good go. How my body has finished up shows I’ve put it through a lot. So I’m looking forward to a rest now.”

Murray is the second of the “big four” era to bow out after Federer’s emotional retirement at the Laver Cup in 2022.

Signing off his career in his typical dry British wit, Murray had this to say: “Never even liked tennis anyway.”

What’s next

France and Germany square off in basketball, and that should be a fun game not only because of the NBA talent on the floor, but also because of the raucous home fans who appropriately lose their minds whenever Victor Wembanyama does something cool.

Medals will be handed out in some of the true Olympic-fiend events, including sailing, archery, diving and equestrian.

There is also plenty of 3×3 basketball, as well as the table tennis semifinals, happening Friday.

Lastly, men’s hammer throw is on Friday, and though people will not literally be throwing hammers, it’s the kind of event that screams Olympics.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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