Sunisa Lee wins gold for U.S. in gymnastics all-around at Tokyo Olympics

TOKYO -- A podium finish by an American woman in the women's Olympic gymnastics all around, just like always.Sunisa Lee, the fifth consecutive American woman to win the Olympic title, beat Rebeca Andrade from Brazil in an exciting and heated final. Simone Biles, the defending champion, watched from the stands.Lee's score of 57.433 was enough to surpass Andrade who won the first all-around gymnastics medal by a Latin American gymnast, but she missed out on gold because she twice stepped out of bounds during her floor routine. Two days after leading ROC's team to gold, Russian gymnast Angelina Melnikova won bronze.Lee and the Americans won a silver medal in that event. Biles was forced to withdraw after she realized she wasn't mentally ready to compete in one rotation.Biles, 24 years old, opted to withdraw from the all-around final. This led to the startling sight of Biles, the gymnast who is considered to be the greatest ever, watching the largest meet in five decades from the stands with teammates Grace McCallum and Jordan Chiles.Biles' absence gave rise to an opportunity for the 24 Ariake Gymnastics Centre women to take the floor. They had a chance at the top of this podium, something they probably didn't expect when they arrived in Tokyo earlier in the month. Biles had won every major international competition except 2017 world championships since 2013, which was five years after her Rio de Janeiro triumph.But even though Lee, Andrade, and the rest were nervous, it didn't show. Andrade's Cheng vault was near perfect, but Lee used her incredible uneven bars set -- currently the most difficult in competition -- to get closer.Lee, an 18 year-old Hmong American girl from Minnesota, ate her way through a nervy beam routine. While performing a wolf spin, which is basically a seated spin, she almost fell off and had to suction cup her feet to the beam in order to keep going. She was able to score 13.833 and move ahead of Andrade as she entered the floor exercise.Lee chose to do a first routine that included three tumbling passes rather than four. She hoped better execution would outweigh any potential tenths lost by not performing a fourth pass. Andrade was able to take advantage of the 13.700 she had.Andrade, 21 years old, was two years away from her third surgery to fix a torn ACL. She had the highest floor score among the qualifiers during qualifying. She stumbled with both her feet after her first tumble pass. Her right foot stepped onto the blue carpet and off the white mat.To win, she needed a 13.802 but received a 13.666. This extended the U.S. lead in the Olympics' marquee event. Since Carly Patterson's victory at the 2004 Athens Games, the Americans have won every Olympic final.Biles was highly favored to continue that streak, but she opted out. Lee, who suffered from ankle injuries that were so severe she could barely walk at times last month during the U.S. championships, took over the reins. During the Olympic trials, she beat Biles on the second night.One month later, she was standing on the podium as one the new faces in a sport that is becoming more diverse in America. She joins Gabby Douglas and Biles in 2016 to become the third consecutive woman of color to win Olympic gold.Jade Carey, who was replaced by Biles in the finals of the U.S. team's volleyball tournament, placed ninth.