At 16 years old, Hezly Rivera is the youngest U.S. Olympian at the 2024 Summer Games.
The New Jersey-born athlete secured her spot on the highly competitive women’s team courtesy of a gold medal-winning balance beam performance at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials in Minnesota last month.
Along with Biles, Rivera is part of a squad at this year’s Olympics that includes 2020 Tokyo veterans Suni Lee, Jordan Chiles, and Jade Carey.
Pretty darn impressive company for Hezly Rivera.
“It feels incredible — this doesn’t have to happen too often, so I’m very excited to be the youngest team member of the group,” Rivera told Good Morning America after qualifying for the team.
“I felt so happy and super excited because this is what I’ve been working for my whole life. So for it to finally come true is so exciting and so surreal.”
Rivera started her career at five years old, doing cartwheels around the house… just like so many toddlers around the globe.
She eventually moved to North Texas to work with legendary coach Valeri Liukin (father to 2008 Olympic gold medalist Nastia Liukin) at WOGA Gymnastics.
“My strengths that I bring to Team USA are my bars and my beam because I think my form sets me apart,” she previously told People Magazine, adding:
“I think I’m a very clean gymnast. I have some difficulty — obviously not the highest difficulty — but I’m working my way up there and I think that my execution really sets me apart.
Rivera has said she is training for the “vault, bars, beam and floor,” although she won’t know which events she’ll be competing in at the Olympics until almost the last second.
It’s clear this teenager will be ready for anything, however.
“I need to trust myself and trust my training, because my muscle memory is there and it’s very strong,” she also told GMA.
“I just have to do what I do in the gym.
“And I know everything will be perfect.”