Team USA Diver Alison Gibson Speaks Out After Painful Dive Gone Awry Earns Her 0.0 Score: 'I Fought with Everything I Had'

Mar. 15, 2025

Alison Gibson on Aug. 7.Photo:Adam Pretty/Getty

Alison Gibson of Team United States competes in the Women’s 3m Springboard Preliminaries on day twelve of the Olympic Games Paris 2024

Adam Pretty/Getty

Team USA diver Alison Gibson is leaving theParis Olympicswith some bruised feet — but with her pride still intact.

Gibson, 25, shocked the crowd at the women’s 3-meter springboard competition on Wednesday, Aug. 7 when her first dive in the preliminary round went horribly awry and she ended up slamming her feet on the springboard while mid-somersault.

The failed dive prompted an audible gasp from the crowd, and earned Gibson a score of 0.0. But despite the gaffe, she carried on, and ultimately finished her remaining four dives, finishing 28th of 28 athletes.

Ina lengthy Instagram postshared the next day, Gibson said that in 15 years of diving, “this has never happened to me.”

“My feet were bleeding, my heels were painfully bruised from hitting the board, and everybody on the pool deck thought I was going to scratch. But I didn’t scratch. I kept my chin up and I kept fighting until the end of that event,” she said in a voiceover. “This was far from the outcome I wanted, but I fought with everything I had to represent my country as well as I could and I’m proud of that.”

Gibson said that while it might seem like her dive was “an embarrassing failure” to those on the outside, she saw it as anything but, and hoped that her perseverance would inspire others to keep going “even when you fall short.”

Alison Gibson reacts after her 3-meter springboard preliminary dive earned a 0.0 on Aug. 7.Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Alison Gibson of Team United States reacts after competing in the Women’s 3m Springboard Preliminaries on day twelve of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Aquatics Centre on August 07, 2024 in Paris, France.

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Gibson made her Olympics debut in Tokyo in 2021, but finished in last place in the event. Though she briefly retired for two years, telling theAustin American-Statesmanthat Tokyo was a “gut-wrenching experience,” she ultimately came out of retirement in the summer of 2023 to give Paris a go.

source: people.com