The Monitor鈥檚 Noah Robertson was in the stands for a moment that, just a few days ago, would have been unthinkable. This morning in Tokyo, America鈥檚 Sunisa Lee won gold in the women鈥檚 gymnastics all-around competition.
Before the Games began, this medal was already all but hung around Simone Biles鈥 neck. But when she withdrew from the team event and the individual all-around, there was Ms. Lee 鈥 a rock in the team competition and now, unexpectedly, in the individual spotlight.
Through these Olympics, Noah says he鈥檚 been thinking about why competition matters and whom athletes compete for. Swimmer Katie Ledecky told him she swims for those who want her to win gold 鈥 to give them hope and joy. For Ms. Lee, it is her father, who refused to let her quit when he was paralyzed in an accident. And her Hmong American community back in Minnesota 鈥 it would mean so much to them, her father told her. Noah sees this as the 鈥渟trength of generosity.鈥
It was apparent, too, when Ms. Biles pulled out of the team event. Ms. Lee could have been resentful, or simply quiet. But she and her teammates were vocal in support of their friend 鈥 Ms. Lee鈥檚 admiration of her hero only amplified.
After her victory today, she hugged her competitors and took selfies with them. 鈥淪he seemed very much at peace,鈥 Noah says. Her golden moment, it seemed, had revealed no hidden superpower, but rather what has always been there, waiting for the world to notice.