When Biles competed at her first Olympics in 2016, she already had risen to the top of her sport. Whether Biles could get better seemed uncertain. But as Biles continued on, with Cecile and Laurent Landi as her new coaches, she kept climbing. Biles mastered innovative elements so difficult that no woman had ever attempted them in a competition, and her all-around dominance made her nearly unstoppable. For Biles, a podium-worthy floor routine marked the satisfying end to her Paris run. And for Cecile Landi, it brought another highlight in a career that will soon take a dramatic turn.
Landi is trading elite gymnastics — the world she has long known, both as a 1996 Olympian for France and as a coach — for the NCAA. Landi is heading to the University of Georgia to be the co-head coach tasked with revitalizing a program with historic success but recent struggles.
Landi’s closing act in this chapter was a memorable Olympics in her home country. Landi was the coach of the U.S. women’s gymnastics team, and two of the athletes she and her husband coach year-round in the Houston suburbs — Biles and Jordan Chiles — helped the Americans win gold. Landi’s daughter, Juliette, also competed here in diving for France, turning the Olympics into a family trip to Paris.
“It’s really insane,” Landi said before the competition began, “so I’m trying to not cry.”
Landi has coached multiple Olympians and world champions, plus dozens of athletes who went on to compete in college. Top gymnasts from around the country flocked to World Champions Centre, the club owned by Biles’s parents, in large part to be coached by the Landis. Everything had been going so well for Landi. And in a way, that’s why it was time to move on.
“I think I’ve done everything I could do in elite and beyond what I could have ever imagined as a little French girl in a little town,” Landi said.
Two decades ago, Cecile and Laurent, a former French national team member, moved to pursue a coaching career in the United States. Without knowing English, they landed in Norman, Okla., and eventually headed to the Dallas area to work at WOGA, a prominent club. There, the Landis coached 2016 Olympian Madison Kocian and world championships team member Alyssa Baumann. They had planned to open their own gym when, in 2017, Biles decided to return to training and needed new coaches. Seven years and two Olympics later, Landi is set to take on a different type of challenge at Georgia.
“She’s got that dreamer’s mentality where she always wants to push herself to learn and grow,” said Janelle McDonald, the gymnastics coach at UCLA and a close friend.