Current:Home > ContactHow Volleyball Player Avery Skinner Is Approaching the 2028 LA Olympics After Silver Medal Win -Quantum Capital Pro
How Volleyball Player Avery Skinner Is Approaching the 2028 LA Olympics After Silver Medal Win
View
Date:2025-04-15 09:18:47
It's been a whirlwind week for Avery Skinner.
Just hours before the 2024 Paris Olympics Closing Ceremony Aug. 11, the athlete, along with her Team USA women's volleyball squad, won the silver medal, coming in second to Italy.
"It really is mind-blowing," Avery told E! News in an exclusive interview. "It's something that, of course, everybody wants coming into the Olympics, but the competition is just so intense."
Although Team USA lost in the gold medal match, it was a bittersweet moment, given that Avery—who plays for Italian Series A1 professional team Chieri—is friends with a few players on the opposing side of the net.
"In that final match, I had two of my teammates from last season and they'll be my teammates again this next season," the 25-year-old noted. "So it was really cool to share that moment."
And even though the Paris Games just wrapped, excitement is already building for the 2028 LA Olympics. As for Avery, the daughter of Rebecca Skinner and former NBA player Brian Skinner, she's taking her thriving career one step at a time.
"It is definitely a weird mindset, thinking so far in advance, because so much does happen in four years," the Texas native explained. "My career is still pretty young, and so that's something that I am looking for in the future."
"I'm going to play in Italy next year and take it year by year," she added, "with what my professional season looks like, what the national team season looks like."
Avery, who played four years of volleyball at the University of Kentucky and a fifth at Baylor as a graduate transfer, is excited for the LA Games, whether she's watching or playing in them.
Ultimately, she said, "It's definitely something that I see myself working towards in the next four years."
And it's possible she'll have her sister, fellow volleyball player Madisen Skinner, by her side.
And now that Avery has made her Olympic debut, she's offering some advice to athletes aspiring to make the 2028 Games.
"Something that's provided me the most joy in this journey, " she told E!, "is just not focusing on the end result, not focusing on I'm going to make this roster, because then it becomes the end all, be all."
For Avery, who majored in speech-language pathology in college and hopes to pursue a career in that field in the future, it's about enjoying the journey.
"Even if you don't get to that end goal, I feel like I've grown immensely as a person," Avery shared. "And to me, that's what's going to last a lot longer than all of this."
Catch up on the biggest 2024 Paris Olympics highlights on Peacock any time.veryGood! (389)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Videos show flames from engine of plane that returned to Houston airport after takeoff
- Three-time Stanley Cup champ Jonathan Toews taking time off this season to 'fully heal'
- 6th person dies in Pennsylvania house explosion; victims named, blast under investigation
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Kellie Pickler Shares “Beautiful Lesson” Learned From Late Husband Kyle Jacobs
- Colorado fugitive takes plea deal in connection with dramatic Vegas Strip casino standoff
- Family of pregnant mother of 3 fatally shot by police in Denver suburb sues
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- 'Blue Beetle' director brings DC's first Latino superhero to life: 'We never get this chance'
Ranking
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- ‘Blue Beetle’ director Ángel Manuel Soto says the DC film is a ‘love letter to our ancestors’
- This week on Sunday Morning: By Design (August 20)
- Some Maui wildfire survivors hid in the ocean. Others ran from flames. Here's what it was like to escape.
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Kansas City Superfan ‘ChiefsAholic’ charged with stealing almost $700,000 in bank heists
- Loved ones frantically search for DC-area attorney Jared Shadded, last seen at Seattle Airbnb
- How to prepare for hurricane season, according to weather experts
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Authorities investigating threats to grand jurors who indicted Trump in Georgia
Pentagon review calls for reforms to reverse spike in sexual misconduct at military academies
Execution set for Florida man convicted of killing two women he met at beach bars in 1996
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Watch: Cubs' Christopher Morel rips jersey off rounding bases in epic walk-off celebration
Watch: Antonio Gates gets emotional after surprise Chargers Hall of Fame induction
Paramount decides it won’t sell majority stake in BET Media Group, source tells AP