In her first season at the senior level, she was a member of the silver-medal-winning American team at the 1991 World Championships, acting as the leadoff gymnast during compulsories and competing second in the lineup on all four events in team finals.Grivich was a contender for the 1992 Olympics, placing seventh in the all-around and third on balance beam and floor exercise at that year's national championships.
However, at the Olympic Trials, she placed eighth and did not qualify for the Olympic squad.
judges had deliberately underscored Grivich to keep the team from having too many Károlyi club gymnasts.Grivich retired from gymnastics after the Olympics.
In 1993, she switched her focus to diving.
After only two years in the sport, she earned a scholarship to the University of Houston.
She excelled in NCAA competition and hoped to eventually make the U.S.
Olympic team as a diver.Less than a month before her 20th birthday, Grivich was killed in a car accident on a Houston highway.
A scholarship with the Strake Jesuit Scholarship Fund was established in her name.
In addition, Grivich's diving club, Woodlands Diving Academy, used to hold an annual elite meet in her honor, the Hilary Grivich Memorial Invitational, before renaming it the "Laura Wilkinson Golden Invitational."