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Maggie Nichols (gymnast)

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Full name
  
Margaret Mary Nichols

Nationality
  
American

Career start
  
2013


Name
  
Maggie Nichols

Club
  
Twin City Twisters

Role
  
Gymnast

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) 635751065322665572USPGYMNASTICSPGGYMNASTICSCHAMPIONSHIPS75119906JPG

Born
  
September 12, 1997 (age 26) Little Canada, Minnesota (
1997-09-12
)

Discipline
  
Women's artistic gymnastics

Level
  
Senior International Elite

College team
  
Oklahoma Sooners (2016–20)

Head coach(es)
  
Sarah Jantzi, Rich Stenger

Similar People
  
MyKayla Skinner, Simone Biles, Madison Kocian, Aly Raisman, Gabby Douglas

Years on national team
  
2013–present (US)

Country represented
  
United States of America

Twin cities gymnast maggie nichols preparing for rio


Margaret Mary "Maggie" Nichols (born September 12, 1997, in Little Canada, Minnesota) is an American artistic gymnast currently competing for the University of Oklahoma. She is one of only nine NCAA gymnasts to have scored a perfect 10 on all four events, and the first to do so for Oklahoma.

Contents

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) Maggie Nichols39 Gymnastics Competition Leotard

Previously, Nichols represented the United States in international competitions, including the 2015 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, where she won a gold medal with the American team and an individual bronze medal on floor exercise. At the USA Gymnastics National Championships, she finished third all-around in 2014 and second all-around in 2015. Before a knee injury in early 2016, she was a contender for the U.S. women's gymnastics team at the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) Maggie Nichols on Pinterest Senior Day Posts and Gymnastics

2013

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) Maggie Nichols39 Gymnastics Competition Leotard

Nichols was added to the national team in March and was selected to represent the United States at the City of Jesolo Trophy and the Germany-Romania-USA Friendly. At the City of Jesolo Trophy, she finished first with the team and sixth in the all-around, and won a silver medal on the floor exercise.

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) 1bpblogspotcomqlSnnHevucQUnGpGxLUclIAAAAAAA

At the U.S. Classic, Nichols finished sixth in the all-around, eleventh on uneven bars, eighth on balance beam, and fifth on floor. At the National Championships, she placed fifth in the all-around and on beam, sixth on bars, and ninth on floor.

2014

At her second City of Jesolo Trophy, Nichols finished first with the team and third in the all-around. At the Tokyo Cup, she finished third in the all-around.

She went on to place third in the all-around and on floor at the U.S. Classic, fifth on uneven bars, and seventh on balance beam. At the National Championships in August, she placed third in the all-around behind Simone Biles and Kyla Ross, third on uneven bars and floor exercise, and fourth on balance beam.

Nichols helped the United States finish first at the Pan American Gymnastics Championships in Mississauga, Canada, and placed third in the all-around competition with a score of 55.500. However, she dislocated her kneecap on floor exercise during the team final and withdrew from the selection camp for the 2014 World Championships team.

2015

At the City of Jesolo Trophy, Nichols finished first with the team and seventh in the all-around.

On July 25, she competed at the Secret U.S. Classic and finished third in the all-around, behind two-time reigning world all-around champion Simone Biles and 2012 Olympic all-around champion Gabby Douglas. She debuted her Amanar vault, scoring 15.80; finished fifth on bars and beam with scores of 14.95 and 14.45, respectively; and placed third on floor with a 14.80, for a total all-around score of 60.000.

The following month, Nichols competed at the 2015 P&G Championships in Indianapolis. On the first night of competition, she led for the first three rotations, scoring 15.80 for her Amanar vault; 14.95 on bars; 14.40 on beam (she debuted several new skills, including a tucked Barani and a switch ring leap, and dismounted with a full-twisting double tuck, but incurred a one-tenth deduction for going overtime); and 14.55 on floor. Her all-around total for the night was 59.700, 1.400 points behind Biles.

On night two, she began on bars with a 14.8. During her beam warmup, she fell on her full-twisting double back dismount and decided to change it to a simpler double pike. She scored a 14.65, higher than her score on night one despite losing three-tenths in start value. On floor, she stumbled out of bounds on her double-double mount, incurring a three-tenth deduction, and scored a relatively low 14.15. She finished the competition on vault, where she scored 15.85 to finish in second place with a two-night total of 119.150.

At the 2015 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Nichols competed on vault, beam, and floor in the preliminary round. During the team final, she competed on all four events, contributing an all-around total of 59.232 toward the U.S. women's gold-medal finish. She also qualified for the floor event final where she earned a bronze medal.

2016

Nichols competed at the 2016 AT&T American Cup on March 5, scoring 59.699 to place second behind Gabby Douglas. Afterward, U.S. national team coordinator Márta Károlyi said, "Maggie showed again that I can rely on her". This competition cemented Nichols as a contender for the 2016 Olympic team.

A month later, Nichols tore her meniscus while training her Amanar vault and had to withdraw from the 2016 Pacific Rim Gymnastics Championships in Seattle. She underwent arthroscopic knee surgery and was out of competition for two months.

In June, she returned to competition at the P&G Gymnastics Championships. She performed only on the uneven bars and balance beam, finishing 13th and 10th, respectively, and advanced to the 2016 Olympic Trials in July. There, she finished sixth in the all-around, fifth on vault, ninth on uneven bars, eighth on balance beam, and fourth on floor. She was not chosen for the Olympic team or as an alternate athlete.

A few days after the conclusion of the Olympic Trials on July 13, 2016, Nichols announced her retirement from elite gymnastics via Instagram and interview, and said she was taking time to rest before starting her NCAA career at the University of Oklahoma in August.

College career

Nichols committed to the Oklahoma Sooners women's gymnastics team in 2015 with a full athletic scholarship.

In the 2016–17 season, as a freshman majoring in health and exercise science, she made the competitive lineup on all four events and scored at least one perfect 10 on each. As of Week 5, she led the NCAA standings in all four events and the all-around. She finished the regular season in first place in the all-around, ahead of Utah's MyKayla Skinner; second on vault, behind Ashleigh Gnat of LSU; second on bars, behind Kyla Ross of UCLA; tied for second on beam with Oklahoma teammate Chayse Capps, behind UCLA's Katelyn Ohashi; and tied for first on floor with Skinner. At the 2017 NCAA Championships, she had a surprising fall on beam, her first major mistake of the entire season, missing out on the all around podium despite being favored to win. However, she performed well on the other events, including bars in which she finished first in a six-way tie. She also helped Oklahoma qualify to the Super Six. In the Super Six final, Nichols scored a ten on beam – the same event that she fell on the day before – en route to Oklahoma's victory in the finals, defending their national title. This also ensured Oklahoma's first ever undefeated season in program history.

Personal life

Nichols graduated from Roseville Area High School in 2016. She is a devout Christian and regularly posts bible verses on social media.

References

Maggie Nichols (gymnast) Wikipedia