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Just over two years ago, Jordan Chiles was on beach with her friends doing a “pretend Sports Illustrated Swimsuit” photoshoot.
“Watch,” the U.S. gymnast recalled telling her friends in an interview with The Post. “One day, I’m going to be a Sports Illustrated model.”
Chiles, 23, traveled to Boca Raton Fla. earlier this fall for her first photoshoot as a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit athlete for the magazine’s 2025 issue as that dream became a reality.
“I actually manifested Sports Illustrated about two and a half years ago when I was on a girls’ trip with my friends,” Chiles recalled while discussing her partnership with Bath & Body Works. “… [My friend] was just like, ‘Are you serious?’ And I said, ‘watch.’”
The SI moment came after Chiles’ incredible summer winning gold in the team event at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
She was also at the center of a scoring controversy, which resulted in her being stripped of her bronze medal she got in the floor exercise final at the Summer Games.
The offer from Sports Illustrated — an email passed along from her publicist that “literally made me cry and melt” — was just what Chiles needed to embrace her beauty on a path to self discovery.
“I got the email from my publicist and I had to reread it.. and I was like, there’s no way that this is happening,” Chiles said. “This is a full circle moment… I was switching in and out of swimsuits, taking photos in the sand, in the water, doing all these crazy things, and it was just — I was happy for myself.
“I think in that moment I was finally able to be like, ‘Okay, Jordan, you can let everything go and give this moment your all. And I was just very proud of myself.
“I literally remember running in the sand with one of the swimsuits on, and I yelled to my mom and I said, ‘Mom, I made it!’ That felt like a moment that I made it in the world. This was something that I’ve always wanted to do. So it was emotional, but also very, it was a cool experience.”
Chiles’ photoshoot took place at The Boca Raton Hotel, where she posed in a cut-out blue swimsuit and donned stunning long hair.
Along with Chiles, Sports Illustrated Swimsuit revealed nine other athletes who will be featured in next year’s magazine, including sprinter Gabby Thomas, gymnast Suni Lee, golfer Nelly Korda, skier Eileen Gu, swimmer Ali Truwit, surfer Caroline Marks, WNBA player Cameron Brink, heptathlete Anna Hall and race car driver Toni Breidinger.
Despite many things being thrown her way this year, Chiles was said she’s proud of herself for “standing my ground and not doubting [myself].”
Chiles perked up and smiled when asked what the is the biggest lesson she will take from this year into 2025.
“I think the biggest thing is understanding that no matter what, I’m always going to be Chiles and nobody can take that away from me — and that I can be okay and understand, look, things can get thrown at me, but I’m going to come back harder and use that fire to fuel myself to be the stronger person that I am today,” said Chiles, who took a Zoom interview with The Post during a car ride in New York to promote Bath & Body Works’ annual Candle Day.
“And going into 2025 — it’s like, okay, look, 2024 happened like this, what else can be thrown at me at this rate? I’ve just been living life, right?… I am enjoying my life, and I think that’s something that I kind of shied away from when I was younger. I’m happy that I can say I enjoyed 2024, I enjoyed my 23-year-old self during this timeframe. So I can’t wait to see what life holds for me as a 24-year-old. But I am proud of myself for standing my ground and not doubting or seeing I failed with things that I very much accomplished throughout my life.”
Chiles has had whirlwind year.
She took a break from social media following the medal controversy at the Summer Games.
On Aug. 5, Chiles received an original score of 13.666 in the floor finals, which put her in fifth place. Her score was then increased to 13.766 — which moved to third place beating out Romanian gymnasts Ana Bărbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voinea for the bronze — after Team USA argued that the judges didn’t count one of her skills.
Romanian officials then contested the judges’ decision, and said Team USA submitted its inquiry too late — and on Aug. 10, the Court of Arbitration for Sport reinstated Chiles’ original score, which put her back in fifth place and stripped her of her bronze medal.
USA Gymnastics said in a statement on Aug. 12 that it would “pursue every possible avenue and appeal process” for Chiles.
In September, Chiles’ lawyers filed an appeal with the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland, arguing that the “procedures leading to the CAS panel’s decision were fundamentally unfair,” according to TODAY.com
Chiles didn’t slow down after the Paris Olympics.
She emerged in late August with an announcement that she joined Simone Biles’ Gold Over America Tour.
In September, Chiles threw out the first pitch at a Mets game, raised the flag during pregame at a Seahawks game, did an ad campaign with Milani makeup and walked in her first show at New York Fashion Week.
The next month, she sat courtside at a Rockets game, secured her first keynote speaking engagement and was was named a Power 100 honoree in the category of Leaders In Sports by Ebony Magazine.
“Honestly, I’ve been enjoying every experience that I’ve had,” Chiles said. “I can definitely tell you some weeks are overwhelming and some aren’t… I continued my path. I continued everything that I wanted to do. I didn’t quit. I didn’t doubt myself. I stood my ground. I did everything that I did in those moments to be the person I am today.
“Right now, I am just enjoying life. Are there things that you wish you could fix? Yes, a hundred percent. But as of right now, I can’t go back on those things. Those things can just kind of be there. And so right now, just being in this moment, I definitely can say I’m proud of myself.”
Chiles vowed to tell her truth in her memoir, entitled “I’m That Girl,” that will be released in spring 2025.
“It’s telling my story, it’s telling the truth about a lot of thing. It’s telling things that people just made up are very false,” Chiles said. “And I think having this ability to just give my story, I’m the one who’s living in it, and I want everybody to understand that this is all about love. It’s about resilience. It’s about things that I went through as a child, as a teenager, as an adult, and I want you guys to understand that I’m human as much as you are. Just because I had a sport attached to me doesn’t mean that things that happened weren’t easy.”
Chiles went on to explain why she was nervous at first to ask her best friend, Biles to write the foreword of her book.
“She’s somebody who’s close to me, but she’s also a public figure herself, so she doesn’t have to do anything just because we’re friends,” Chiles said of Biles. “She doesn’t have to do those types of things. And also it can be extremely personal as well. I don’t want her to think just because you’re my best friend, you got to do something, right? That’s just not right.
“But I am happy that she was able to write it for me and she was supporting me in this. I had a keynote that I did for the very first time recently, and she texted me and she was like, ‘I am beyond proud of you that you were able to do your first keynote.’ … She was like, ‘I’m so proud of you.’ And honestly, that was just amazing.