The 5 Gymnastics Moves Named After Simone Biles — and Their Difficulty

If you ever wondered why Simone Biles is widely considered the most talented gymnast of all time — truly the GOAT — let us explain. She's the most decorated gymnast in history, with 37 Olympics and World Championship medals to her name. President Joe Biden awarded her a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2022 — making her the youngest person to ever receive one — for her contributions to society, both as a history-making gymnast and as an advocate for mental health, sexual assault victims, and children in foster care. And she's landed gymnastic moves that no other woman gymnast has done before — not just one or two, but five, all of which now bear her name.

Here, we've compiled all the moves named after Biles (so far). Each is given a difficulty value in the Women's Artistic Gymnastics Code of Points — numerical values for vaults and letters for skills on every other event — or a provisional value, when a skill has yet to be landed in international competition. If the scores don't wow you, the skills themselves surely will.

— Additional reporting by Mirel Zaman

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The Biles on Floor

This is Biles's signature move: a double back layout with a half twist. She's been doing it since at least 2013, and it was named after her once she competed with it at the World Championships that year. In this routine, it's her second tumbling pass. In true Biles fashion, she keeps making it harder, and has progressed the tumbling pass over the years. At the 2019 GK US Classic, for example, she added a front layout to the Biles.

Difficulty value: G

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The Biles II on Floor

This is Biles's second namesake skill on floor. It's the triple-double (that's two flips and three twists in a tucked position) that she warmed up with before the 2019 GK US Classic but then did in competition for the first time at the 2019 US Gymnastics Championships. She landed it successfully during the qualifying round of the 2019 World Gymnastics Championships, meaning it bore her name. Watch her full routine from the World Championships in this video (the Biles II is the first tumbling pass).

Difficulty value: J

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The Biles on Beam

Biles debuted this beam dismount, a double-twisting double backflip, during the first night of the 2019 US Gymnastics Championships. By landing it during the qualifying round of 2019 Worlds, it was added to the Code of Points under her name. You can view it at the end of her routine in the video here. The FIG Women's Technical Committee declared that it is worth an H, or eight tenths of a point, despite the fact that Biles argued it should be worth more. (If you want further details about the controversy, check out this breakdown.)

Difficulty value: H

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The Biles on Vault

The first vault skill with Biles's namesake is a roundoff on the springboard connected to a half turn onto the vault with two full twists. Biles unveiled it for the first time at the USA Gymnastics 2018 World Team Selection Camp and debuted it while competing at the 2018 Worlds, when it was officially named after her. Just look at her fly!

Difficulty value: 6.00

The Biles II on Vault

Biles became the first woman to ever perform the Yurchenko double pike vault in competition at the 2021 GK US Classic; however, it wasn't until the 2023 World Championships, where she competed with the skill during the qualifying round, that the move was officially named after her. The Yurchenko double pike is a roundoff onto the springboard followed by a back handspring onto the vault and two backflips with straight legs. It's typically only performed by men, and few men at that. It's also the most difficult vault named in the women's scoring code.

Difficulty value: 6.4


Samantha Brodsky is a former assistant editor at POPSUGAR. She uses her gymnast background to inform her sports and fitness coverage, powering through Peloton videos in her free time.