Caitlyn Jenner introduced herself to the world on the July 2015 cover of Vanity Fair. In the accompanying story, Jenner revealed her lifelong battle with gender dysphoria and subsequent gender transition to writer Buzz Bissinger. Twice, the Olympic decathlete mentioned the gold medal she won in the 1976 games in Montreal.

“After [Bruce] Jenner woke up the next morning, he walked past the grand piano into the bathroom. He was naked. The gold medal was around his neck. He looked at himself in the mirror. The grand diversion of winning the decathlon was finished. Everything would change. Nothing had changed. He didn’t see a hunk. He didn’t see success. Instead of reveling in the accomplishment, he diminished it in his mind because he had done it, the stupid little boy with dyslexia. The little boy who knew he had been born a girl and was now just trying to put one over on the rest of the world. ‘Now what do I do?’ he said to himself.”

The next time we hear about Jenner’s medal, it’s in a much better place—as is she. At the end of Bissinger’s profile, he writes, “The gold medal for winning the decathlon, which Caitlyn had left in the safe in the home in Hidden Hills where she and Kris had lived, had finally been retrieved. It was on the table in front of her.” The medal appears in a photograph, taken by Annie Leibovitz, that accompanied the story. Bissinger continues, quoting Jenner, “‘That was a good day,’ she said as she touched the medal. Then her eyes rimmed red and her voice grew soft. ‘But the last couple of days were better.’”

Now, it seems Jenner will again celebrate her Olympic victory, and with another magazine cover. A source tells Us Weekly that Jenner will be featured on a cover of Sports Illustrated this summer. She’ll be wearing “nothing but an American flag and her Olympic medal.” The cover will commemorate the 40th anniversary of Jenner’s victory at the Montreal games, and it will be the first time she’s posed with her medal since the Vanity Fair photo shoot.

In August 2015, Jenner answered questions from fans about her gold medal, which she called her “most-prized possession.” Despite its sentimental value, she kept it hidden in her makeup drawer so that her kids wouldn’t use it as a measure of success against which they felt they had to hold themselves. “I didn’t want them to constantly compare their own achievements to my time in the Olympics, so I haven’t displayed my medal,” Jenner told a fan.

Now that all of her children have grown up and moved out of the house, Jenner said it might be time to hang the medal up. It might be getting a major appearance on the cover of Sports Illustrated first. Vanity Fair has reached out to the magazine for comment and will update this story when we hear back.