Sports
Can Jordan Chiles end her career with an NCAA team title?
JORDAN CHILES DIDN’T initially commit to UCLA because of the program’s seven national championships, legendary floor routines, or even the school’s academic reputation.
Sure, those things helped, but it was something else that pushed UCLA immediately to the top of her list.
It was Jamba Juice.
Chiles was — and still is — obsessed with the smoothie chain and she couldn’t believe there was a location right on campus. Her mind was made up. She was in eighth grade at the time but insists that it would have been a factor no matter at what age she toured colleges.
Chiles, who turns 25 on Wednesday, is now entering the final week of her storied NCAA career. Throughout her four years in college, which saw a one-year hiatus ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games in which she earned a gold medal with the United States team, Chiles has won three individual NCAA titles and helped lead the Bruins to back-to-back Big Ten titles.
And her senior season has been her best one yet: She took home the Big Ten all-around title last month, in addition to earning the top spot on uneven bars, balance beam and floor exercise. She was named the conference’s Gymnast of the Year. She has done all of it while balancing a barrage of external opportunities, including appearing on “Dancing with the Stars” in the fall. She has become a bona fide celebrity, bringing record crowds to meets across the country.
The original Jamba Juice in the student union has since closed, replaced by a robot-run kiosk version, but Chiles couldn’t be happier with the decision she made all those years ago. She credits the school and her team for helping her become the woman she is today.
“My freshman self would be amazed by the transformation and growth,” Chiles said. “She wouldn’t believe all the things I did, all the things I learned, and then how I developed as a person in that time span while I’ve been [at UCLA]. I wish she could know the amazing legacy she’s going to leave and that she’s going to enjoy every moment.”
When the national semifinals take place Thursday, with UCLA in the night session (9 ET on ESPN2) against top-ranked Oklahoma, Arkansas and Minnesota, Chiles will enter the competition with just one piece of unfinished business remaining.
“Bringing home a national championship would mean everything,” she said. “For me, it would have taken four years to get it. I mean, I’m already an individual NCAA champion, but now I’m at a point where it’s all about the team. That trophy isn’t just for me; it’s for every single person that was able to come and be a part of what the Bruins are all about. And I think allowing us to love one another, allowing us to respect one another, being as united as we are, that’s really what goes into that trophy.”
WHEN UCLA COACH Janelle McDonald took the job in the spring of 2022, she had no idea what to expect.
The Bruins had just had a shocking early exit in the NCAA regionals and the morale was low. Chiles, then a freshman, had been a bright spot for the team throughout the up-and-down season with three perfect 10.0 scores on the year. McDonald was friends with Chiles’ club coach, Cecile Canqueteau-Landi, now the head coach at Georgia, and knew Chiles had a “big personality.” McDonald was hopeful she could get Chiles on board, but she simply didn’t know how receptive she would be to a new coach.
But McDonald didn’t have to wonder for long.
“From day one, Jordan gave me a chance to build trust and to just really be able to make this program my own, but also do it with them hand in hand,” McDonald told ESPN. “And I think that’s something that I’ve always really appreciated about her is that she really just right away dove into the vision I had for this team and where we were headed and that she wanted to be a helping hand in that transition and that process.”
McDonald believes Chiles’ buy-in helped get the rest of the team on board to accept her as well. Even though Chiles was already a star in the gymnastics world and an Olympic silver medalist from the 2020 Games, she emphasized a team-first mentality that McDonald said was contagious.
“Being the caliber of athlete that she is and still just wanting what was best for the team each and every day, she has helped the entire team see it more clearly,” McDonald said. “Having a leader like Jordan, who teaches all of these values to the newcomers who come in, that’s how you build a long-lasting team culture.”
It didn’t take long for the results to follow. UCLA reached the semifinals at the 2023 NCAA championships, narrowly missing the chance to advance to the final, and Chiles won the NCAA individual event titles on both bars and floor, and finished in second place in the all-around.
With McDonald’s full approval, Chiles then decided to defer her junior season to focus on making her second Olympic team. The choice paid off. She not only was named to the team but helped win gold, alongside Simone Biles, Sunisa Lee, Jade Carey and Hezly Rivera. She even qualified for her first event final on floor. Of course, what happened next is well known: Chiles initially finished in fifth place with a score of 13.666, but a last-second inquiry with the judges changed the score to 13.766 and earned her the bronze medal. Chiles was thrilled and her podium ode to gold medalist Rebeca Andrade alongside Biles, who earned silver, went viral. It was the first Olympic podium in the sport’s history featuring three Black women.
But days later, Chiles’ triumph took an unprecedented and nightmarish turn as the results were overturned following an appeal by the Romanian federation. The Court of Arbitration for Sport determined Chiles’ inquiry had not been filed in time following her floor routines, and the medal was then awarded to Ana Barbosu.
Nearly two years later, the case remains in legal limbo with the American federation still fighting for Chiles to regain what it believes is rightfully hers.
For Chiles, it has been a devastating ordeal, and one that has played out in front of the world. She has been open about the emotional toll it has taken and some of the racist comments she has received online. But she has also resolved that the heartbreak would not diminish her joy.
“At the end of the day, if you allow yourself to look at yourself in the mirror and just be OK with what you’re going through in that moment, then you can kind of carry on with the rest of your life,” Chiles said when speaking generally about what she has learned over the past few years. “… Not everything is meant for you, not everything is meant to be in your possession, but at the end of the day, it’s life. You grow from it, you learn from it and you kind of just take every single thing and allow yourself to continue to write your story.”
Her positivity and grace in interviews and appearances earned her a slew of new fans. In 2025, she was one of four women to be on the cover of Sports Illustrated’s famed swimsuit issue (former LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne was also given the honor) and she was named one of Time Magazine’s Women of the Year. She released her memoir, “I’m That Girl,” in 2025.
Following a stellar return season, in which she helped lead the Bruins to a surprise runner-up finish in the 2025 team competition and earned another individual title on bars, Chiles was asked to appear on the upcoming season of “Dancing with the Stars.”
She was excited about the opportunity and determined to make it work while also participating in preseason practices and activities with her teammates. Because of previous elite and post-Olympic “Gold Over America” tour commitments, she had never been able to be on campus for preseason in her first three years, and she wanted to be a part of it during her senior season.
“I think having a team that understood what my passion was and what I was trying to do, being able to be on ‘Dancing with the Stars’ and school and all of these things, made it all possible,” Chiles said. “Everything was still very team oriented. I tried to support as much as I could during preseason, and they were supporting me as well. The girls came to shows and got to really enjoy the moments with me.”
McDonald was simultaneously thrilled and slightly skeptical when Chiles and her mom, Gina, approached her about the idea, but was quickly convinced. It didn’t hurt that the show filmed just 15 minutes away from UCLA.
“Both Jordan and her mom said the producers would work around her schedule, and then I thought, ‘Well, if anyone can do all of this, it’s Jordan,'” McDonald said. “She handled it all beautifully.”
Chiles made it all the way to the show’s finale with her partner, Ezra Sosa. They ultimately finished in third but the run, and a viral freestyle dance, made Chiles a mainstream and social media star.
Behind the scenes, she balanced as many team practices and events as she could, as well as online coursework for her African American studies major. Her days were long, often involving leaving her apartment around 9 a.m. and getting back after 9 p.m. She made it look easy, but she admitted it was stressful and exhausting.
“It was fun and I really enjoyed all of it. Would I do it again? Probably not,” she said.
Chiles later clarified that she would do all of it again — just not at the same time.
6:42
Game On: The Floor Party
BJ Das uses her prior experience dancing with Miley Cyrus and Avril Lavigne to come up with UCLA’s stunning floor routines.
By the time the season came around in January, Chiles was excited to finally focus on gymnastics. UCLA was ranked as the preseason No. 4, and with a crop of talented and heavily recruited freshmen, Chiles was ready to take on even more of a leadership role.
This season, she has been nothing short of prolific. Chiles has earned eight perfect 10.0 scores on the season and had a streak of five straight meets earning the mark. She arrives in Fort Worth as the top-ranked floor performer in the nation and the No. 2-ranked all-arounder. She is in the top four on every event. The Bruins have an 18-2 record, losing to just Oklahoma and LSU in the Sprouts Farmers Market Collegiate Quad in January. The team rolled through the rest of the season, including all of their conference competition, undefeated.
Chiles is quick to credit her teammates for their success.
“This team has fought for everything we’ve achieved,” she said. “I remember one meet there were six or seven people out sick, and knowing we had people that were able to step right up in those positions meant everything.”
But it hasn’t been just the wins — Chiles has an incredible 48 event titles on the year — or the show-stopping, made-for-the-internet floor routines that have defined Chiles’ final year. Averaging nearly 9,000 fans for home meets at Pauley Pavilion, the Bruins helped break attendance records at nearly every road meet this season as well. McDonald believes most of that was because of Chiles.
“She brought so many new eyes this year to NCAA gymnastics,” McDonald said. “So many ‘Dancing with the Stars’ fans would show up to see her do her gymnastics, wherever we went. It’s been so cool to be a part of this journey and see the impact she’s made on this sport.”
In March, at a meet at Stanford, a record number of fans were in the crowd, marking the program’s first sellout since 2019. Chiles put the spotlight to good use as she danced along and cheered during the floor routine of Barbosu, now a freshman for the Cardinal. After the meet, the pair — who tied for fourth that day with a 9.9 score — embraced and posed for photos. McDonald said she believed there were nerves on both sides going into the competition, but Chiles’ actions exemplified who she is.
“It just showed so much leadership, so much sportsmanship, and really what NCAA gymnastics is all about,” McDonald said. “To let her guard down and be able to celebrate [Barbosu], and vice versa, and then be in each other’s corners when the world probably couldn’t see how that was possible, it was just a special moment.
“And I couldn’t help but crack up because I didn’t even know Jordan knew her floor routine, but of course she does.”
TWO SUNDAYS AGO, Chiles took a deep breath and appeared to wipe away tears as she stood with UCLA associate head coach and team choreographer BJ Das.
Competing as the last gymnast of the night at the NCAA regional finals in Corvallis, Oregon, the Bruins’ season — and her collegiate career — was potentially on the line. She knew what the moment meant. She briefly motioned her hands together like a heart before she stood in her opening position. She breathed again, and then she was ready.
For the next 90 seconds, Chiles did what she has become known for. She wowed the crowd with a high-spirited and high-flying routine, set to a medley of music from Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson and others. A smile spread across her face as soon as she stuck her opening double layout tumbling pass.
Before the routine was over, Chiles was crying, and she put her head in her hands as soon as she had completed her final pose. When her score — another perfect 10.0 — was announced, she rocked back and forth while sitting on the floor before falling backward and lying on her back, overcome with emotion. The tears continued as she stood up to celebrate with her teammates.
Chiles hadn’t just extended the team’s season and her own, she had given the Bruins their first NCAA regional title in seven years.
Scoring a perfect �� on the last routine of the night to win UCLA’s first NCAA Regional title in seven years is why Jordan Chiles is that girl!
That is 8 perfect 10s this year and 19 in the amazing career of @ChilesJordan! pic.twitter.com/9nXnQ0mH3Q
– UCLA Gymnastics (@uclagymnastics) April 6, 2026
She then ran over to the Minnesota team, which had also qualified for nationals, to congratulate them. Chiles’ teammates followed and the two Big Ten Conference foes celebrated their accomplishment together.
The late-meet heroics, spontaneous camaraderie, and the unfiltered joy of it all was perhaps the perfect encapsulation of Chiles’ NCAA career.
“She’s just a very special human being,” McDonald said. “Everything she does, not just gymnastics, is done at an elite level and with such passion. She encourages and inspires everyone around her. … There’s not going to be another Jordan Chiles, or anyone quite like her, probably ever, but her impact on this sport will be felt for a very long time.”
Chiles will now have to bring all of that energy and flawless gymnastics to Fort Worth. Beyond that, she is unsure of what her future holds. She is on track to complete her undergraduate degree in 2027 and is committed to that, but she is uncertain about returning to elite gymnastics or pursuing other opportunities. She is waiting to have a gut feeling to guide her but simply hasn’t had it (or the time for it) yet.
For now, Chiles, the queen of the multitask, remains focused solely on winning the national championship with her team and enjoying every moment of the experience. She wants nothing more than to bring the trophy back to Westwood and give her college career the perfect ending. She predicted there will be “a lot of tears” if the team is successful.
But, as much as she wants it, Chiles doesn’t believe her standing in the sport needs a national championship for validation, nor is it what she would ultimately be remembered for.
“The legacy I hope I leave isn’t just in my gymnastics,” Chiles said. “I can flip all day long, but I don’t think there’s anything I would be more proud of than being remembered for the personality I brought into the sport, and the way I could bring in the crowd and make them feel.
“I want people to remember me as being authentic to myself every time I stepped onto the competition floor, and the girl that took photos with them, signed autographs, stayed after meets and made jokes, and was just truly who she was.”
Sports
PSL 11: Waseem, Khuzaima released from Karachi Kings squad
KARACHI: Muhammad Waseem and Khuzaima bin Tanveer have been released from the Karachi Kings squad for the remainder of PSL 11 due to national duty commitments.
According to the franchise, both players have been called up for national assignments, making them unavailable for the rest of the tournament.
To strengthen their squad, the 2020 champions have signed England’s explosive opener Jason Roy as United Arab Emirates (UAE) counterpart Muhammad Waseem’s replacement.
Roy, known for his aggressive batting style and vast T20 experience around the world, is expected to add firepower to the Kings’ top order.
“Welcoming England’s destructive opener Jason Roy to the [Kings Squad]. He joins the squad as a replacement for Muhammad Waseem,” the Kings captioned the post.
The franchise added that a replacement for Khuzaima bin Tanveer will be announced in due course.
Meanwhile, Roy’s addition would bolster the Kings’ arsenal as the 35-year-old brings a wealth of experience from playing in the marquee league, having featured in 38 matches across six seasons for Lahore Qalandars and Quetta Gladiators.
In his glittering PSL career, Roy has 1260 runs at an encouraging average of 36.00 and a hefty strike rate of 146.51 with the help of two centuries and eight fifties.
He also holds the record of the highest individual score, 145 not out, ever recorded in the marquee league, which came for the Gladiators against Peshawar Zalmi in the 2023 edition.
Updated squad of Karachi Kings for PSL 11
David Warner (c), Hasan Ali, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Khushdil Shah, Saad Baig, Moeen Ali, Azam Khan, Salman Ali Agha, Shahid Aziz, Mir Hamza, Adam Zampa, Hamza Sohail, Aqib Ilyas, Jason Roy, Haroon Arshad, Reeza Hendricks, Ihsanullah and Rizwanullah.
Sports
Breaking down the offseason for Michigan, Arizona, UConn, Illinois, Duke
The NCAA tournament ended just eight days ago — and in that time, the entire college basketball landscape has changed. More than 2,000 players are in the transfer portal, and a flurry of commitments over the weekend has jump-started the roster-building process for plenty of teams.
Some are further ahead than others, and that also applies to the four teams that were playing in Indianapolis just more than a week ago.
Michigan, UConn, Arizona and Illinois have all lost players to the transfer portal since the season ended, and three of those programs have already added replacements.
How are each of the national semifinalists — and one team that came heartbreakingly close — faring in their quests to rebuild and get back to the Final Four?
All information as of April 14
Players leaving: Starters Yaxel Lendeborg and Nimari Burnett are both out of eligibility, as are Roddy Gayle Jr. and Will Tschetter. End-of-bench players Winters Grady and Malick Kordel entered the portal. L.J. Cason and incoming freshman Lincoln Cosby are likely to redshirt as they recover from injuries.
Players staying or coming in: The reigning national champions began their reload during halftime of their Final Four win over Arizona, when five-star guard Brandon McCoy Jr. announced his commitment. Dusty May then made quick work in the portal, landing a commitment from Tennessee transfer J.P. Estrella a couple of days after the title game. In addition to McCoy, Michigan is also bringing in ESPN 100 recruits Quinn Costello and Joseph Hartman. The Wolverines also agreed to deals to keep guards Elliot Cadeau and Trey McKenney in Ann Arbor.
Players in limbo: Much of Michigan’s frontcourt work will depend on the NBA draft decisions of Morez Johnson Jr. and Aday Mara. A dominant late-season surge propelled Mara into the late lottery range of ESPN’s last big board update, while Johnson is projected as a late first-rounder.
Work to do: May also clearly wants some additional perimeter pop: The Wolverines hosted Wake Forest transfer Juke Harris, one of the elite scorers in the portal, for a visit this past weekend. Harris left the visit without committing and then met with both North Carolina and Tennessee.
Dan Hurley has set a remarkable standard at UConn, going to three Final Fours in four years, including two national championships. How will he get the Huskies back there next season?
Players leaving: Program legend Alex Karaban and NCAA tournament star Tarris Reed are both gone, while Malachi Smith is a senior. UConn was also hit by the transfer portal, with former McDonald’s All American Eric Reibe opting to depart despite likely filling Reed’s shoes next season on a full-time basis.
Players staying or coming in: On the plus side, Silas Demary Jr. announced on Tuesday that he’s coming back to UConn, and there is no reason to believe Solo Ball won’t follow, so the two can again start alongside each other in the backcourt. Two-way sixth man Jayden Ross is also back, and the Huskies bring in a pair of top-50 wings in Colben Landrew and Junior County.
Players in limbo: Braylon Mullins is a projected first-round pick, but Hurley has spoken publicly about the program’s attempts to keep him in Storrs for another season. Veteran forward Jaylin Stewart is also yet to announce his next move.
Work to do: The focus of UConn’s portal efforts is the frontcourt. There is a long list of targets for the Huskies, including Syracuse transfer Donnie Freeman and Seton Hall transfer Najai Hines. Saint Mary’s transfer Paulius Murauskas was one to watch, but Louisville and Arizona State have made the two-time All-WCC selection a priority and could have the edge. UConn has also been linked with Moustapha Thiam (Cincinnati) and Andrew McKeever (Saint Mary’s).
Arizona had a roller-coaster finish to the season, reaching the program’s first Final Four since 2001, fending off North Carolina to keep Tommy Lloyd in Tucson — and then losing big to Michigan in the national semifinals.
Players leaving: Big 12 Player of the Year Jaden Bradley, Tobe Awaka and Anthony Dell’Orso are seniors, while Brayden Burries has played himself into lottery projections. The only rotation player to hit the portal was freshman Dwayne Aristode.
Players staying or coming in: The only rotation player that seems guaranteed to return is Ivan Kharchenkov, who emerged as one of the best two-way freshmen in the Big 12. Top-five recruit Caleb Holt will slot into the starting lineup immediately, and they also have top-50 recruit Cameron Holmes.
Players in limbo: Lloyd now awaits the stay-or-go decisions from Koa Peat and Motiejus Krivas. Both were projected in the 20s of ESPN’s most recent big board but could potentially boost their stock with another year at Arizona.
Work to do: Arizona’s portal priority was a point guard. Oregon transfer Jackson Shelstad was atop the Wildcats’ board, but he committed to Louisville. The Wildcats quickly pivoted and landed a pair of freshman transfers on Monday evening: Derek Dixon (North Carolina) and JJ Mandaquit (Washington). They’re also pursuing Kansas transfer Bryson Tiller, who is expected to visit Tucson this week; the Wildcats will need to conduct some frontcourt business regardless of Peat’s and Krivas’ decisions.
Brad Underwood has found a formula that works, and it centers around size defensively and skill offensively — in an incredibly efficient offensive system.
Players leaving: Keaton Wagler has announced he’s heading to the NBA draft, while starting guard Kylan Boswell and reserve forward Ben Humrichous are out of eligibility. Seldom-used Mihailo Petrovic and Toni Bilic, who enrolled at the semester break and didn’t play in a game, are the only players to enter the transfer portal so far.
Players staying or coming in: The frontcourt is in good shape with starters Tomislav Ivisic and David Mirkovic both likely to return, along with backup Zvonimir Ivisic. Shooter Jake Davis is also back, while incoming freshman Lucas Morillo is a top-60 recruit and can play a depth role on the perimeter.
Players in limbo: The Illini await Andrej Stojakovic‘s decision about his future. Stojakovic could turn pro or enter the transfer portal; he was the team’s second-leading scorer this past season but came off the bench for the final 11 games.
Work to do: Underwood began his backcourt reload during Final Four week by landing former Wake Forest signee and top-30 recruit Quentin Coleman and continued it with Sunday’s addition of Providence transfer Stefan Vaaks, an Estonia native who emerged as one of the surprise freshmen in the country this past season. Next on the list is Wisconsin transfer John Blackwell, an All-Big Ten selection who had 31 points against the Illini in the Big Ten tournament. The Illini are battling Duke, UCLA and Louisville for the high-scoring guard.
Duke was not a Final Four team, but the Blue Devils came within a 35-foot Braylon Mullins 3-pointer of getting there. They’re also facing a fascinating reload, so let’s take a quick look at them too.
Players leaving: Cameron Boozer will be a top-five pick in the NBA draft, so he’s gone. Maliq Brown is out of eligibility. And Nikolas Khamenia and Darren Harris entered the transfer portal. Outside of that, nothing appears set in stone.
Players staying or coming in: Caleb Foster and Cayden Boozer are both trending toward a return, and Jon Scheyer is bringing in the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class, led by three top-25 recruits: high-ceiling forward Cameron Williams, point guard Deron Rippey Jr. and shooter Bryson Howard.
Players in limbo: Isaiah Evans has moved up draft boards and is well inside the first round, while Dame Sarr and Patrick Ngongba were in the second round of ESPN’s most recent big board. There’s some optimism that both Sarr and Ngbonga will return to Durham.
Work to do: So what does Duke need? The top priority is a high-scoring perimeter player and the top target is Wisconsin’s John Blackwell, the best guard in the portal. The Blue Devils are also expected to be a main contender for Santa Clara transfer Allen Graves if he withdraws from the NBA draft. Even if Ngongba comes back, Duke needs another big man, and the Blue Devils are hoping Indiana didn’t close a deal with Alabama transfer Aiden Sherrell. They’ve also been linked to Cincinnati transfer Thiam.
Sports
PSL 11: Peshawar Zalmi win toss, opt to field first against Quetta Gladiators
Peshawar Zalmi won the toss and elected to bowl first against Quetta Gladiators in the 23rd match of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) 11 at Karachi’s National Bank Stadium on Wednesday.
The two sides have met 26 times, with Zalmi holding a narrow edge with 13 wins, while the Gladiators have secured 12 victories, and one match ended in no result.
Playing XI
Peshawar Zalmi: Babar Azam (c), Mohammad Haris, Kusal Mendis (wk), Farhan Yousuf, Michael Bracewell, Iftikhar Ahmed, Abdul Samad, Aeron Hardie, Sufiyan Muqeem, Mohammad Basit Ali, and Ali Raza.
Quetta Gladiators: Shamyl Hussain, Saud Shakeel (c), Rilee Rossouw, Hassan Nawaz, Khawaja Nafay (wk), Tom Curran, Jahandad Khan, Ahsan Ali, Alzarri Joseph, Abrar Ahmed, and Usman Tariq.
Head-to-head
Traditional rivals Zalmi and Gladiators have come face-to-face 26 times since the advent of the marquee league.
The 2017 champions dominate the head-to-head record with 13 victories, closely followed by the previous edition’s runners-up, who have 12 triumphs to their name.
Their last meeting came in the landmark 10th edition of the marquee league, which saw the 2019 champions registering a thumping 64-run victory.
- Matches: 26
- Peshawar Zalmi: 13
- Quetta Gladiators: 12
- No Result: 1
Form Guide
The two teams enter the fixture with contrasting momentum as Zalmi are unbeaten after playing six matches, winning five, while their match against Islamabad United was abandoned due to rain in Lahore. The 2017 champions, as a result, sit at the summit of the standings with nine points.
Gladiators, on the other hand, started their campaign with a narrow 14-run defeat at the hands of Karachi Kings before registering their first victory over Hyderabad Kingsmen in the subsequent fixture.
The 2019 champions failed to stretch their winning run and succumbed to back-to-back defeats at the hands of Islamabad United and Multan Sultans, respectively, until eventually thumping RawalPindiz by 61 runs.
Peshawar Zalmi: W, W, W, W, NR (most recent first)
Quetta Gladiators: W, L, L, W, L
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