Swim and Dive vs Iowa-SB 6164

Honors & Awards

  • 1996 Summer Olympian
  • Gold Medal, 100 Breaststroke, 1996 European Championships
  • Three Letters (1997, 1998, 1999)

    Junior (1998-99)
    Terrie Miller amassed seven first-place finishes throughout the dual season of her final year. She worked to help on the 1999 NCAA Championships 13th-place honorable-mention All-America 200 medley relay team, where they swam a 1:42.28 for a season record. She individually swam in the 100 breaststroke (22nd, 1:03.40) and the 200 breaststroke (28th, 2:18.20). At the Big 12 Championships, Miller reached a duo of silver medals in the backstroke events, where she hit times of 1:02.97 in the 100 breast and 2:16.71 in the 200 breast. She was also on the second-place conference 400 medley relay conference team that notched a 3:45.45. 

    Sophomore (1997-98)
    Miller improved steadily during the season after suffering a broken collarbone that hampered her training and productivity throughout the summer months. At the conference championships, she was a member of the second-place, school-record setting 200 medley relay team (1:41.21). She also finished in fifth in the 100 breast (1:03.91f, 1:03.83p), ninth in the 200 breast (2:20.02, season best), and 23rd in the 50 free (24.85, season best). At nationals, she aided in the 200 medley relay to an 11th-place finish (1:41.90), swam the second leg on the 18th-place 400 medley relay (3:45.79) and finished 30th in the 100 breast (1:04.73). Her top dual finish came in the 100 breast (1:07.20) against Missouri.

    Freshman (1996-97)
    A Norwegian Olympic Team member, Miller joined NU for the second semester and made an immediate impact. At her first collegiate national championships, she earned honorable-mention All-America honors for her work on the 400 medley relay (3:43.54). Individually, she posted a 56th-place finish in the 50 free (23.70). Before Nationals, Miller recorded two top-three finishes and a seventh-place showing for the conference champion Huskers at the Big 12's. She added a silver conference medal to her collection in the 100 breaststroke (1:01.89, tenth NU all-time) and finished in seventh-place in the 50 freestyle (23.68, career best).

    Before Nebraska 
    Miller was ranked first in the world in the 100-meter breast (short course) in 1996. She finished 20th in the 100 breast (1:11.09) for Norway at the 1996 Olympic Games. She also finished in third in the 50-meter breaststroke at the European National Meet in 1995.

    Personal
    Miller was born on March 10, 1978, to Harriet Gladhaug and Norman Miller.