Q&A: Olympian Shannon Miller on gymnastics journey, cancer battle, being a sports parent


It was a question Shannon Miller faced at times during her career, from the first moments her parents took her to Jerry Clavier’s gym located five minutes from her family home in Edmond, Oklahoma, to just before every event at the Atlanta Summer Games in 1996.

Do you truly enjoy gymnastics?

The answer was always a resounding “yes.”

“You’ve done the work,” her coach, Steve Nunno, would tell her in 1996 as she and her Magnificent Seven teammates held the expectations of the United States and the world. “Now go have some fun.”

Miller was quiet in public and exhibited an intensely serious approach to her sport. The world learned more about her as a person in early 2011 and in the ensuing years after doctors found a baseball-sized cyst on her left ovary. She was not only jolted by the diagnosis, but the idea that she had almost canceled her routine checkup at age 33 that would lead to its discovery.

Olympic gold medalist Shannon Miller on the red carpet at the 2019 ESPYS.

“I do think there is this feeling of being invincible, like you just got your whole life ahead of you and you’re so focused on all of these other things going on around you that, a lot of times, your health takes a back seat,” Miller says. “That’s why I really talk often about the importance of early detection, not just for 50 and over, but we’ve got to get those regular exams, even when you’re in your early 20s and you’re off to college and your parents aren’t making those checkups for you anymore, we have to take that and we have to keep that going because it really could end up helping save your life.”

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