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Phoebe Mills

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Name
  
Phoebe Mills

Siblings
  
Jessica Mills

Education
  
Vermont Law School

Spouse
  
Chris Mills

Role
  
Olympic athlete


Phoebe Mills US Olympic gymnast to be snowboarding judge at Sochi

Olympic medals
  
Gymnastics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Women's Balance Beam

Similar People
  
Kristie Phillips, Chelle Stack, Brandy Johnson, Daniela Silivas, Gabriela Potorac

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Phoebe Mills (born November 2, 1972 in Northfield, Illinois, U.S.) is an American attorney and Olympic Medalist who has been active in the sports of artistic gymnastics, diving, speed skating and snowboarding.

Contents

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Personal life

Phoebe Mills Olympic Rings and Other Things Happy Birthday Phoebe Mills

Before becoming a gymnast, Mills was a record-holding competitive speed skater. Her brother, Nathaniel Mills, competed in speed skating at the 1992 Winter Olympics, the 1994 Winter Olympics, and the 1998 Winter Olympics, and her sister Jessica Mills won the 1989 World Junior Figure Skating Championships.

Phoebe Mills Biography MILLS Phoebe

She is a 2004 graduate of Vermont Law School, with a degree in environmental law.

Phoebe Mills Phoebe Mills USA Gymnastics Pinterest Seoul Usa

Following her graduation from Law School, she owned her own small environmental law firm near Londonderry, Vermont.

She currently resides in California directing Woodward at Tahoe. She is married and has a young daughter.

Gymnastics

Mills was coached by Marta and Béla Károlyi in Houston, Texas. She attended her first U.S. Nationals in 1984, finishing eighth in the junior division. While Mills was sometimes overshadowed in the media by her teammate Kristie Phillips, she developed a reputation as a steady, consistent competitor in national and international meets, placing third at the 1985 City of Popes competition and second at the 1986 U.S. Olympic Festival and U.S. Nationals (junior division). In 1987 she attended her first and only World Gymnastics Championships as a member of the sixth-place American team.

1988 was Mills' breakout year. She won every meet she entered, including the U.S. Nationals, the American Cup, the Mardi Gras Invitational and the International Mixed Pairs, was named the United States Olympic Committee's Gymnast of the Year and was nominated for the prestigious James E. Sullivan Award. She also placed first at the U.S. Olympic Trials, easily earning a spot on the American squad for the 1988 Olympics in Seoul.

Mills emerged as the U.S. team's most successful gymnast at the Olympics. While she finished a modest fifteenth place in the all-around, she also qualified for three event finals, more than any other member of the team. She performed a solid, artistic routine to win a bronze medal on the balance beam, behind Daniela Silivaş and Elena Shushunova. With her third-place finish, Mills became the first individual American female gymnast to win a medal in a fully attended Olympics, and the only American gymnast, male or female, to medal in Seoul. However, had the competition been held under the New Life Rule developed in 1989, she would've won the silver medal.

Mills continued to compete in early 1989, but retired later that year, due in part to the effects of Epstein-Barr syndrome. She has occasionally returned to the sport as a coach. In 2000, Mills was inducted into the USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame.

Diving

After retiring from gymnastics, Mills became involved with competitive diving, specializing in the 10-meter platform event. She excelled in the sport enough to join the diving team at the University of Miami in Florida, where she won the Big East Conference for three years. She also competed in national diving events, participating in the 1993 Olympic Festival and the U.S. Diving Championships. Mills retired from diving after graduation.

Snowboarding

Most recently, Mills has been involved with the sport of snowboarding. She has acted as a snowboarding coach and instructor, working with the U.S. junior national team. Mills served as a judge at the 2014 winter Olympics at Sochi.

References

Phoebe Mills Wikipedia