Current:Home > MySafeX Pro Exchange|US gymnast Paul Juda came up big at Olympic qualifying. But 'coolest thing is yet to come' -FinanceAcademy
SafeX Pro Exchange|US gymnast Paul Juda came up big at Olympic qualifying. But 'coolest thing is yet to come'
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-11 07:23:12
PARIS — Paul Juda will forever be SafeX Pro Exchangean Olympian and that in itself is a cool thing.
As is U.S. men's gymnastics teammate Frederick Richard always tells him, however, why do the cool thing when you can do the cooler thing? And there are few things cooler than having the meet of your life at the Olympics.
“Today would have been one of those things where I got to say, 'I got to do the all-around at the Olympics.’ But then to be making the all-around final, I think that’s the cooler thing,” Juda said. “And, you know, the coolest thing is yet to come.”
Juda joining Richard in Wednesday’s all-around final would have seemed improbable not long ago. Not just because it required a dismal performance by three-time U.S. champion Brody Malone, normally one of the steadiest competitors there is.
2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.
Six weeks ago, Juda was firmly on the bubble for the Olympic team. was part of the squad that won the bronze medal at the 2023 world championships, breaking a nine-year medal drought. He also was the NCAA all-around champion in 2022.
But gymnastics is often as much about math as it is skill, and there were scenarios where Juda, who is solid everywhere but not necessarily spectacular anywhere, wasn’t in the highest-scoring team. Juda made himself indispensable to the U.S. team with his steadiness, however.
And boy, did the United States need it Saturday.
Juda was the lead-off on all but one event. It’s a high-pressure spot; do a good routine, and it gets the team off and running. Struggle, or fall, and it puts pressure on the other three gymnasts because teams can only drop one score.
But time and again, Juda delivered. He got the U.S. men going with a solid routine on pommel horse, traditionally one of their worst events, and his 13.6 became more important after Malone fell. He scored 13.333 or better on every event — only Richard did better — and the U.S. counted four of his six scores.
Through four events, he was actually the highest-scoring American.
Get Olympics updates in your texts! Join USA TODAY Sports' WhatsApp Channel
“Hard work pays off,” Richard said of Juda, who is also his teammate at Michigan. “Watching someone close to you, watching their hard work pay off, is a very satisfying, exciting feeling.”
Juda finished with 82.865 points, fourth-best after the first of three subdivisions. The top 24 gymnasts, with a maximum of two per country, make the final, so Juda is in good shape, even with powerhouses Japan and China still to come.
The U.S. men were second to Britain. But they, too, should make the eight-team final.
“Once you make that Olympic team, you feel like you have a little bit more to give,” Juda said. “Training has been phenomenal the last couple of days and to be where I am today is just a result of all the people behind me. Myself, my team, everyone. So it was a great day.”
And emotional, too. Though, with Juda, that’s a given.
The 23-year-old was an unabashed puddle when the Olympic team was announced, and he was still teary a day later.
“I can’t help crying sometimes,” he said then. “Anytime somebody says 'Olympian,’ you just get that warm and fuzzy feeling.”
More:How U.S. Olympic women's gymnastics team shattered age stereotype: 'Simone changed that'
On Saturday, Juda heard his girlfriend, fellow Michigan gymnast Reyna Guggino, cheering as he readied for pommel horse. After he finished, he found her in the crowd along with his family and friends, several of whom were waving blown-up photos of his face.
His parents were sporting temporary tattoos of the same photo, and Juda said his Dad had bought new shirts for the trip.
“I got a little emotional right after the pommel horse because I was like, they're all here. They all flew like hundreds and thousands of miles to come see me and it costs a lot of money. Twenty-plus people here, supporting your dream,” Juda said, choking back tears. “Pretty sweet.”
Doing the cool thing would have been fine. Doing the cooler thing was so much better, both for Juda and the U.S. men.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (51625)
Related
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Olympic gold medalist Sunisa Lee won't be part of US team at upcoming world championships
- Indonesian leader takes a test ride on Southeast Asia’s first high-speed railway
- Maryland’s highest court ending ban on broadcasting audio recordings
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Lidcoin: Crypto Assets Become New Investment Option
- Indiana Jones of the Art World helps Dutch police recover stolen van Gogh painting
- 2nd bear in 3 months crashes University of Colorado campus, forces area closure
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- South Korean and Polish leaders visit airbase in eastern Poland and discuss defense and energy ties
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Poccoin: NFT, The Innovation and Breakthrough in Digital Art
- EU announces an investigation into Chinese subsidies for electric vehicles
- U.S. men's national soccer team dominant in win over Oman
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- DeSantis says Biden's and Trump's ages are a legitimate concern
- Land mines explode along Lebanon-Syria border wounding 3 Syrians trying to illegally enter Lebanon
- Syria says an Israeli airstrike on a coastal province killed 2 soldiers and wounded 6
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Scuba-diving couple rescues baby shark caught in work glove at bottom of the ocean off Rhode Island
Poccoin: El Salvador Educates Students on Bitcoin
His first purchase after a $5 million lottery win? Flowers for his wife, watermelon for himself
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
NATO member Romania finds more suspected drone fragments near its border with Ukraine
Aaron Rodgers' Achilles injury affects the Green Bay Packers' future. Here's how.
What to know about renters insurance and what it does and doesn’t cover