Photo: Li Ying/Xinhua via Getty

Gold medalists team USA pose during the awarding ceremony of the women’s team event at the 51st FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Liverpool, Britain, Nov. 1, 2022.

Paris 2024, here they come!

The U.S. Women’s gymnastics team officially qualified for the Paris Olympics on Tuesday, winning the gold in the team final of the 2022 World Championships in Liverpool, England.

It is Team USA’s sixth consecutive team title, dating back to 2011,according to The Athletic.

The current iteration of the team consists ofJade Carey, who won the gold for floor exercise at the Tokyo Olympics; Tokyo silver medalistJordan Chiles; 2021 world all-around silver medalist Leanne Wong; Shilese Jones and Skye Blakely.

Shortly after the final results were posted, Chiles embraced her fellow gymnasts in a group hug,according toUSA Today.

BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty

USA’s team wait for results after competing ing the Women’s Floor Exercise team final event during the World Gymnastics Championships in Liverpool, northern England on November 1, 2022.

“Beyond words, honestly. Speechless,” Jones said, per the outlet, following the final. “We’re all capable of doing big things and more. This is just the beginning of everybody’s comeback career. Just wait and see. I’m super proud and I know we’ll be able to hit something big in ‘24.”

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Since 2011, the women have won the team title at every major competition except for last year’s Olympics, whereSimone Bilesfamously withdrew with a case of the “twisties.”

Neither Biles nor Tokyo all-around championSunisa Leecompeted on the team this year.

Chellsie Memmel, a former gymnast who was part of the 2003 squad that won its first world title, now serves as a coach.

“I told them, ‘If something doesn’t go perfect, it’s OK. Brush it off. You’ve got your team. They’ve got your back,’ " she toldUSA Today.

After falling off the beam during qualifying in Tokyo and then at Liverpool, Chiles went on to post the team’s highest score on the apparatus in the final — 13.333.

“I stood up and screamed,” Memmel said. She needed that. That was my first thought. She needed to do that for herself.”

She continued, “I knew she could, we all knew she could. But she needed to do that to prove to herself that she could do it when she needed to.”

Chiles agreed — to a fault.

source: people.com