The U.S. Women’s Gymnastics team has won its seventh consecutive world championship, taking home the gold medal in Antwerp, Belgium, on Wednesday night.

The six-member squad put up a score of 167.729 in the final competition, overcoming an injury to Joscelyn Roberson to beat Brazil and France by 2.199 points and break a tie with the Chinese men’s team for most consecutive championships.

“It wasn’t easy to watch that,” teammate Simone Biles told the media after the meet. “I think that not only me but everyone got a little bit frazzled. We had to change the line-up, but we made it happen, and we worked it out.”

Roberson was replaced by Leanne Wong, who helped keep the U.S. team in the competition with her last-minute performance.

“First I was like, ‘Oh no, what happened, is she okay?’ and then I was like, ‘Start kicking off your stuff,'” Wong said. “So I started running and going crazy; I had to get up there and beat it.”

Biles added to her team’s lead with her floor routine, flipping and jumping high in the air as she crossed the mat multiple times without issue.

The win gives her 33 international medals (26 from World Championships, seven from the Olympics) in her career, and she could add more as the individual competitions continue through the weekend.

“I’ve been here for a very long time, so it’s crazy that I just keep going year after year,” she told the media. “I’m really proud of the fight the team put together out there, especially having a teammate withdrawn. It’s not easy, but you saw the strength and the courage of our team to keep going and pushing it out.”

Frisco’s Skye Blakely was also part of the team, competing in the bars competition. She won her second gold medal after missing the 2021 Olympic trials with an injury.

“So surreal just knowing my dreams are coming true,” she told NBC 5 DFW. “Just to turn around the next year and be a world champion and now a two-time world champion, I just didn’t think it would happen so quick[ly].”

Biles, Roberson, and Shilese Jones have advanced to the championship rounds of the individual competitions, which will be held on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

The U.S. men’s team was also in Antwerp. It won the bronze in the World Championships.