Thuc Nhi Nguyen covers the Chargers for the Los Angeles Times. She also contributes to The Timesâ Olympics and college sports coverage. She previously covered a wide range of sports including professional basketball after joining The Times in 2019 from the Southern California News Group, where she covered UCLA, professional soccer and preps. Because she doesnât use her University of Washington mathematics degree for work, it makes great decoration in her parentsâ Seattle home.
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PARIS â She didnât make the world championship team. She struggled at the consolation meet, the Pan American Games. Jordan Chiles appeared to be on the outside of the Olympic conversation eight months ago.
âWe told her you never know until itâs over, so keep working, keep your head high,â said Cecile Landi, the U.S. head coach who also trains Chiles. âShe did the work and sheâs Olympic champion today.â
The UCLA star won her first Olympic gold medal and competed on all four events during the team final Tuesday at Bercy Arena to help the United States get back on top after a silver medal in Tokyo.
Among teammates looking for collective and personal redemption after Tokyo, Chiles is only starting to get hers. She can add to her medal haul Monday during the womenâs floor final.
Before falling while mounting the beam during Tuesdayâs team final, Chilesâ Olympics were looking like a complete 180 from her performance three years ago. She entered the Tokyo Olympics having hit every routine for a year. Then she committed a major form break on bars during qualification and fell on beam. She didnât advance to any event finals.
Three years wiser with two seasons of college competition steeling her nerves, Chiles put together a stellar qualification Sunday to exorcise her Olympic demons. She hit every event. She finished third in the all-around. She should have been in position to advance to the individual final.
The problem was that her U.S. teammates Simone Biles and Suni Lee finished first and second, respectively.
Countries are limited to two athletes in each event final. The rule was meant to promote fairness, but itâs often under fire for keeping the best competitors out of medal contention.
U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles will have plenty of supporters in her corner when she competes at the Paris Olympics, including recording superstar Beyoncé.
Chiles is, understandably, not a fan of the rule, she said Tuesday after the team final. She was in position to qualify for three individual finals but will instead compete again only on floor, where she qualified third with a 13.833. In addition to her all-around qualifying score that Lee edged out by 0.067 points, Chiles was fourth on vault but did not advance because Biles and Jade Carey qualified in first and third, respectively.
âItâs devastating for her,â U.S. gymnastics technical lead Chellsie Memmel said after qualifying. âItâs the nature of the sport. ⊠It just happened to be today, it was Suniâs day. And it sucks for Jo, but I know that theyâre all still going to come together, theyâre going to support each other.â
Chiles did just that during competition Tuesday when she jumped in the air after Biles landed her vault. When Chiles bounced back from her fall on beam with a stellar floor routine, Lee gave her a high-10 and called the performance that had a packed crowd clapping to the beat âfire.â Lee, Carey, Chiles and Hezly Rivera, who did not compete in the team final, all held hands when Biles took the floor for the final routine and they jumped in unison when the 38-time world and Olympic medalist landed her last tumbling pass to clinch the gold medal.
When Chiles received her medal on the podium, she clutched it with both hands and raised it to her eyes.
âBeing able to be a part of winning this gold medal and everything that Iâve just gone through, itâs just been an amazing experience,â Chiles said. âThis smile, itâs always going to be smiling, because itâs just been an amazing experience.â
In addition to her consistent and engaging routines, Chiles has earned the unofficial role of hype woman. U.S. gymnastics strategic lead Alicia Sacramone Quinn called Chiles âthat one person who can change the dynamic in the room.â Her infectious energy made her a perfect fit for UCLA, where she won two individual NCAA titles in 2023 on bars and floor before deferring her enrollment to train for the Olympics.
How Chiles has maintained her energetic college personality while also competing on the national team has only better prepared her for bigger moments.
âSomething thatâs really important in our program is that each individual is able to blossom and show up as their true authentic self,â UCLA coach Janelle McDonald said. âI feel like when youâre able to show up as your full, authentic self, youâre gonna really be able to add to the people around you in a way that you canât when youâre sort of closed off.
âJordan is a perfect example of that. Sheâs so authentic to who she is and she goes out on that floor and she shows the world who she is, and thatâs joyful and silly and fun and passionate.â
Ever the performer, Chiles looked directly into the TV camera during her team final floor routine and winked. During qualifying, her performance had Snoop Dogg bobbing his head to the soundtrack of Beyoncé hits. He gave her a standing ovation when she hit her final pose.
Chiles will have one more opportunity in Paris to bring the crowd to its feet.