Rio Olympics 2016: Simone Biles wins fourth gold, Amy Tinkler takes bronze

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Great Britain's Amy Tinkler won Olympic bronze in the women's floor as the United States' Simone Biles secured her fourth gold medal of Rio 2016.

Tinkler, 16, scored 14.933 to become only the third British woman to win an individual gymnastics medal, after Beth Tweddle's uneven bars bronze in 2012., and Bryony Paige won trampoline silver.

Biles, 19, scored 15.966 to take the title and add to her all-around, vault and team gold medals.

Biles' US team-mate Alexandra Raisman won silver with 15.500.

"It has been incredible," Tinkler, the youngest member of Team GB at Rio 2016, told BBC Radio 5 live. "I can't believe it. I'm in total shock.

"I wasn't thinking about winning a medal. My coaches said I had nothing to lose and just to go out and enjoy it. I could hear a lot of cheers from the crowd and that helped me a lot.

"Max Whitlock and Louis Smith have inspired me so much over the years, so to have a medal like them is incredible."

Tinkler, who missed June's European Championships to focus on her school exams, was part of the bronze medal-winning British team at the 2015 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Glasgow.

She will get her GCSE results the day after returning from Rio, saying: "I've got that look forward to now."

Analysis

Beth Tweddle, London 2012 bronze medallist and BBC Sport analyst:

"It is amazing. The British team have worked so hard to get here.

"All credit to Amy for performing under such pressure. To take that bronze medal, it is incredible."

Brilliant Biles

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Simone Biles is 4ft 8in tall

Biles' gold capped a stunning Olympic debut for the teenager, who was too young to qualify for London 2012.

She becomes only the fifth woman to win four gold medals at a single Games, after Agnes Keleti and Larisa Latynina for Hungary and the Soviet Union respectively in 1956, Vera Caslavska for Czechoslovakia in 1968 and Romania's Ekaterina Szabo in 1984.

"It's very crazy. To think what I've done," said Biles. "It's been an amazing experience and I don't think I could be more proud of myself.

"Your first Olympics you walk away with five medals, that's not tough at all. Especially four being gold, that's just unheard of. I'm very proud."

Since starting her senior career in 2013, the 19-year-old is undefeated in all-around competitions.

Biles, from Texas, became the first black gymnast to win the all-around title at the World Championships in 2013 and, after retaining her crown in 2014, she won an unprecedented third successive all-around gold in Glasgow in 2015.

She has 10 world golds to her name, more than any other woman in history - and 14 medals in total.

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