INDIANAPOLIS – Three weeks into 2020, Simone Biles envisions this being her final calendar year as a competitive gymnast.

Probably.

Biles, 23, arrived in Indiana this week from her Montgomery County home for a USA Gymnastics monthly training camp along with a dozen other members of the women’s national team setting their sights on the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

Team members will gather a month from now for a more critical camp to determine international assignments for the run-up to the national championships in Fort Worth in early June and the Olympic Trials on June 25-28 in St. Louis.

Biles is likely to draw at least one international assignment, the April 4-5 International Gymnastics Federation World Cup at the Olympic venue in Tokyo.

But after that stretch, culminating in what absent an upset of epic proportions will be one last victory lap at the Tokyo Olympics, the young woman who has spent her life in the gym will contemplate the rest of her life doing something else.

“I’m not going to count anything out, but as of now, I feel like it is (her final year in competitive gymnastics),” Biles said Monday.

“I’ve always been happy and pleased with all my performances and all my meets, and I feel now if that continues I can walk out of the sport and say I did the best I could and I’m happy where I’m at and I’m in a good place to stop because so far, I’ve done everything I’ve wanted to do.”

Nothing, of course, is certain, despite Biles’ unprecedented run of success that includes six national all-around championships, five all-around world titles and four gold medals from the 2016 Olympics.

In that vein, Biles arrived in Indianapolis still recovering from an injury to her left ankle, suffered Nov. 1, that required her to take eight weeks off from some portions of her 32-hour weekly training regimen.

“It was on floor,” Biles said, laughing at the fact that she had a bad landing on the event that has been her primary showcase, including a landmark triple-twisting double somersault that is now named for her in gymnastics’ scoring system for women.

“It was a little mishap, but it’s doing pretty good. It’s almost back to 100 percent,” she said.

She also had to get an injection to relieve the pain in one of her perennially aching big toes, a reflection of the wear and tear that gymnastics takes on even the best there’s ever been.

She’s also working on solidifying routines with her coaches, Laurent Landi and Cecile Conqueteau-Landi. She will perform both floor exercise tumbling passes that bear her name and will reinstate the Biles vault introduced in 2018, which includes a back handspring leading into a somersault with two twists.

Outside the gym, Biles has cut back on sponsor-related activities to focus on training. She will miss Tuesday night’s Houston Sports Awards event at the Hilton Americas for the USA Gymnastics training camp at a newly redesigned gym in suburban Indianapolis that will be the financially troubled federation’s training base for the next two years.

Biles has been among the most noteworthy critics of USA Gymnastics’ past failures stemming from the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, which forced the federation into Chapter 11 bankruptcy as it works to settle millions of dollars in lawsuits by former athletes abused by Nassar.

She is more conciliatory, however, toward the group’s efforts under its current CEO, Li Li Leung.

“It’s definitely going in the right direction,” she said. “There’s always more you can do as a company and as an organization. So far, they’re taking all the right steps. I can’t say they’re not trying.

“When it comes to athletes’ safety, they’ve taken all the right precautions, and they’re doing a better job.”

Biles’ calendar is full through the end of the year with the Olympics and a 35-city post-Olympic tour. The future, however, is a mist.

“I’m not sure,” she said in response to a question about life without gymnastics. “I’ll travel, take time off and learn about myself.

“I don’t know what my interests are like outside the gym because I’ve grown up in the gym and it’s all I’ve ever known,” she said. “When you train 32 hours a week for so long, you kind of lose part of yourself. There’s just the athlete in you.”

For the moment, Biles said, that’s enough.

“This is my job, and it’s my business, but whenever I go to the gym, it’s also kind of fun,” she said. “It’s a hobby. It’s one of my hobbies, and I don’t think about it being work until I get a (competition) assignment or have long days.”

One post-2020 possibility, she said, is a sequel to her 2016 autobiography “Courage to Soar.”

“That was me telling my life story from my perspective,” she said, “This time around, I have a little more wisdom. Maybe it will be a kind of ‘Simone tells all.’”