Sunisa Lee wore a deep french manicure to the Glamour Women of the Year Awards. See her manicure here.
Sunisa Lee competes on the balance beam during the Women's Senior competition of the 2019 U.S. Gymnastics Championships at the Sprint Center on August 11, 2019 in Kansas City, Missouri.
Minnesota native Sunisa Lee is the first Hmong American to make a U.S. Olympic team. Back home, her family and friends are celebrating her huge win with glee.
Sunisa Lee serves as proof that you can be an athlete and still love doing your nails, wearing makeup, or otherwise showing your femininity — and win.
Olympian Sunisa Lee shared a photo as she celebrated starting her freshman year of college after scoring gold at the Tokyo Olympics
First Hmong American to compete in the Olympics for Team USA is golden
Sunisa Lee won the women's all-around gymnastics competition in Tokyo, edging out Brazil's Rebeca Andrade to become the fifth straight American woman to claim Olympic gold in the event.
Sunisa Lee made history as the first Hmong American gymnast to win an Olympic title after taking home a gold medal at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.
Sunisa Lee is a member of the star-studded U.S. women's gymnastics team
Sunisa Lee is a member of the star-studded U.S. women's gymnastics team
Simone, 24, and her Olympic teammate Suni, 18, both attended Monday night's Met Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Sunisa Lee earned the top spot at the all-around gymnastics final at the Tokyo Olympics—and she's just getting started
Sunisa Lee has a gold medal from the individual all-around and a silver with Simone Biles, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum from the team all-around final
STUTTGART, Germany (AP) — As Sunisa Lee heard the national anthem play for her first world championship gold medal, her thoughts were back home in Minnesota. Just two months have passed since Lee's father John injured his spine in a fall while helping to trim a tree. He's undergoing rehab after suffering partial paralysis. "It was amazing. I almost started crying. It just feels so surreal and I can't even believe that I'm here and I'm a world champion now. That's so crazy for me," Lee said after being part of the winning U.S. women's all-around team. "(I was) just thinking about the whole routine and my dad. I'm just super proud of this team." The 16-year-old from St. Paul, Minnesota, is at her first world championships after placing second behind only Simone Biles at U.S. nationals in August, days after her father was injured. She won national gold on the uneven bars, the only athlete other than Biles to win an individual event. Lee's father is following her progress closely. "I FaceTimed him last night and he's telling me that he's super excited and proud, and he even woke up super early this morning just to watch," she said Tuesday. Lee competed on the uneven bars, balance beam and floor. She showed resilience to recover from slipping off the beam — saying "the nerves got to me" after a long wait at the apparatus — to post the day's third-best score on the floor behind Biles and fellow American Jade Carey. After a whirlwind two months, Lee is still adapting to being on the U.S. national team alongside athletes like Biles, now a 21-time world championship medalist. "A bunch of them have been helping me a lot. Just because I'm the rookie, they've been giving me a lot of pep talks and stuff like that," she said. "I look up to Simone so much. She's super inspiring and such an amazing gymnast. It's definitely been a crazy ride and I'm super excited to compete in the all-around with her." ___ More AP sports: https://apnews.com/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
Biles, 24, announced on Wednesday that she was dropping out of the all-around final to 'focus on her mental health' following her decision to withdraw from the team final after just one event.
Olympian Sunisa Lee shared a photo as she celebrated starting her freshman year of college after scoring gold at the Tokyo Olympics