In 1973, Davydova won her first international tournament. In 1974 she became a member of the
USSR junior squad. At the 1975 USSR Junior Championships Davydova finished 3rd AA and won golds on
vault and
bars. Following her success here she became a member of the senior squad. In March 1976 Davydova achieved second place all-around at the USSR championships, in her first try as a senior. She also won the gold on bars and a silver on
floor. At the inaugural American Cup, Davydova performed a side somersault on the
beam, the first woman ever to do so. However, she only received third place AA. At the USSR Cup Davydova tied for sixth place AA – and won bronze on vault, only 0.025 behind world vault champion
Olga Korbut – but only the top five and one gymnast in ninth place were chosen for the
Soviet Olympic team. In August, Davydova won the
Antibes tournament in France. In addition, she won gold on the vault, and silvers on beam, bars, and floor. At the Riga International she scored the highest per-routine score in the competition (9.75 on vault), and won silver in the AA competition. She dominated event finals, winning three gold (beam, vault, bars) and a bronze on floor. In October, she was made a member of the USSR gymnastics display team, which visited the UK. She subsequently performed her beam routine on the
Blue Peter show. In December 1976, Davydova finished third AA at the Chunichi Cup in Japan, and won a gold on vault and a bronze on floor at the Tokyo Cup. She was the only woman in the competition to perform a front somersault vault. She also tied for first AA with Kische and Kraker of East Germany. In 1977 Davydova again won the gold medal on bars at the USSR Cup, scoring a perfect 10. In September 1977 Davydova appeared on the front cover of a new magazine with an emphasis on young gymnasts, entitled
Gymnastics World. She was one of the four "Mighty Mites" featured in that issue. She was also a member of the USSR Display Team, along with Kim, Korbut, Grosdova, Filatova and Gorbik that performed in Great Britain. Davydova suffered a serious injury when a bone detached itself from her knee. The injury could have been a career-ender, but she recovered. In 1978, Gennady Korshunov and his wife were invited to coach gymnastics in
Leningrad. Davydova and her family moved along with the Korshunov family. She achieved a silver AA at the Spartakiade of
Russian Federation Sports Schools meet, and bronze AA at the USSR Cup, being the top scorer on both beam and bars. Shortly after, Davydova won the AA title at the prestigious
Chunichi Cup in Japan defeating
Maxi Gnauck. Her win by 0.55 points remains the joint third-highest margin of victory in the competition's 34-year history. She also won gold on the bars and vault at the
Tokyo Cup. As a result, she was chosen to be a member of the USSR team at the
World Championships at
Strasbourg in France. However, on the day of competition she was named as an alternate, and unable to compete. At the 1979 Coca-Cola International in England, Davydova won a gold on floor and but lost gold on bars, after her coach blocked the line of vision of one of the judges, and she suffered the mandatory 0.3 deduction. She finished second AA at the Simo Sappien memorial tournament in Finland. Davydova was unable to attend the
1979 World Championships in
Fort Worth, U.S., because of
influenza. At the
World University Games in Mexico she won team gold, bronze AA, and a silver medal on floor and bronze on vault. In 1979
Olga Korbut named Davydova,
Stella Zakharova, and
Natalia Shaposhnikova as the three most promising young gymnasts.
1980 Olympic Games At the 1980
Moscow News Tournament Davydova performed a full-on, full off vault. that had had only ever been done before by Olga Korbut. Davydova won a gold and 3 silver at the Moscow News Tournament. At the 1980 USSR Championships in April in Kiev Davydova won gold on vault- unveiling her unique vault full twist on, front somi off, scoring a 10 – and finished 3rd AA. The Soviet Olympic gymnastics team was to be chosen after the USSR Cup competition. Davydova had finished joint 6th at the 1976 USSR Cup but that turned out to be insufficient to be placed on the team. Davydova won the all-around and scored a 10 on floor. Davydova subsequently was named to the Olympic team. At the Olympics Davydova qualified for the all-around, vault and beam finals. The Soviet team won team gold and Davydova went on to win the all-around gold medal, and silver on the balance beam.
Post-Olympics On 3 July 1981 in
Montreux, the 100th anniversary celebration of the
International Gymnastics Federation took place. Davydova was invited to perform her floor exercise. In August Davydova won the tournament in
Giresum, Turkey. She won the AA title and was top scorer on vault, bars, floor and joint top scorer on beam. She scored 10's on bars and floor. At the 1981 USSR Championships, Davydova won the All-Around title plus golds on floor and vault and bronze on bars. She also participated in the
1981 workd championships, her last major international event. The USSR won team gold. Davydova suffered a serious neck injury in pre-competition warm up but still finished 3rd in the all-around with a fall and was the only gymnast from any nation to make all 4 event finals. She won silver on floor and bronze on bars. Davydova remained on the Soviet display team until 1984 but retired from competitive gymnastics in late 1982. She was competing on vault at the Rome gymnastics Grand Prix in 82 when she injured her ankle. She didn't want to finish Elite competition gymnastics and talked of defending her Olympic title in L.A. but it became obvious as time went on that her body could no longer stand the pounding of intense workouts. ==After retirement==