The Week in Videos

Florida
Highlights

UCLA
Post-meet

A hard-hitting interview with Sam Peszek’s cue cards

Oklahoma
Taylor Spears on floor

LSU
Rheagan Courville’s 9.975 (2:23)

Georgia
Brittany Rogers beam

The Numbers: Week 1

We have no rankings this week because some of the teams are lazy or whatever and didn’t compete last weekend. This also gives the teams that performed well over the last couple of days a chance to screw it up before it counts. If there were rankings, our top 5 would have been as follows:

1. Michigan – 196.575
1. Florida – 196.575
3. Oklahoma – 196.450
4. UCLA – 196.150
5. LSU – 196.075

The first three teams should be pleased with the current course. Each had issues, but there was nothing of major concern for the first meet. The 4th and 5th teams both counted falls and still broke 196, which should seem like an accomplishment. However, the fall on bars for LSU doesn’t provide a ton of optimism for depth on their worst event, and UCLA looked depleted on every event, especially vault, where they don’t have a 4th routine right now, let alone the 7th and 8th options that good teams need.

Since there are no rankings, let’s take a deeper look at the scores for the teams from the preseason top 25 who were in action this week. Stats include all competition routines, not just the five counting scores.

National average by apparatus – Week 1
1. Vault – 9.784
2. Bars – 9.684
3. Beam – 9.649
4. Floor – 9.645

It’s no surprise that vault was by far the most successful event. Even though some high profile teams struggled or at least recorded their weakest scores there, vault sees far fewer falls than the other events, which primarily accounts for the significant advantage in score. In a bit of an upset, beam was actually higher scoring than floor for the top 25 teams, but the difference is too small to be significant.

Average routine score by team – Week 1
1. Michigan – 9.817
2. Florida – 9.775
3. Oklahoma – 9.747
4. UCLA – 9.742
5. LSU – 9.724

In spite of introducing the dropped scores into the numbers, the rankings remain identical to the top team scores. Even if we were to continue the rankings, Stanford and Georgia would be next, which also follows the results. Michigan comes out as the clear leader over Florida in these rankings because of much higher 6th scores, so I suppose Michigan wins the week in the tiebreak.

Average vault score by team – Week 1
1. Stanford – 9.850
2. Florida – 9.842
2. LSU – 9.842
4. Ohio State – 9.838
5. Georgia – 9.821

The team that vaulted only five people won the event. None of this dropped 9.725s slop.

Average bars score by team – Week 1
1. UCLA – 9.846
2. Florida – 9.829
3. Georgia – 9.821
4. Michigan – 9.796
5. Ohio State – 9.779

It’s positive news for Ohio State in the future that the team made two of the event leaderboards. They are going to be far better than that 194.600.

Average beam score by team – Week 1
1. Michigan – 9.838
2. Stanford – 9.804
3. LSU – 9.792
4. Denver – 9.725
5. Florida – 9.713

Denver had just one score over 9.800 and Florida had a fall, and yet both made the top 5. That’s the state of beam right now.

Average floor score by team – Week 1
1. Michigan – 9.846
2. Oklahoma – 9.829
3. LSU – 9.788
4. UCLA – 9.783
5. NC State – 9.754

LSU and UCLA both had falls from this group, but their 9.975s saved them. Plus, a lot of teams were in the 9.5s. Ouchie.

Worst rotation averages by team – Week 1
1. Ohio State floor – 9.404
2. Penn State beam – 9.458
3. LSU bars – 9.475
4. Oregon State bars – 9.479
5. Auburn beam – 9.483

Speaking of ouchie. 
 

Southern Utah @ UCLA Live Blog

UCLA in January. Oh, the long, strange beam rotations we’ve had. Part of the fun of watching the Bruins in January is that we know one of two things will happen: they will bring the beautiful gymnastics that have won them so many fans over the years, or they will be a disaster and provoke a satisfying Val interview after the meet. Either way we win.

In spite of how many routines they’ve lost from EHH, Gerber, and Frattone and the injury to Sam Peszek, I’m still vaguely optimistic about UCLA’s chances this season. Part of that is confidence in the coaching staff to bring along even a depleted group and the rest is confidence in the potential of the remaining gymnasts. Then, I look at this pre-Christmas intrasquad group. Take out Peszek, and there is reason for concern. It’s clear why Val thinks the team will have a slower start.

The three most important gymnasts for UCLA this season will be Mattie Larson, Lichelle Wong, and Peng Peng Lee. Obviously we won’t see Lee for a while, which makes Wong’s performances all the more vital. She must be fully recovered from her Achilles injury and finally competing up to her talent on bars and beam to make up for the lack of Lee. Larson should be the #2 AAer on this team without Peszek. She must be more than simply a mid-lineup factor in order for UCLA to have a chance this season.   

Southern Utah is also a team. Let’s find out about them together.

The meet begins at 5:00 ET/2:00 PT and may be viewed here


For UCLA, I’m looking for a hit beam rotation, six bars workers who belong and who can conceivably be at least 9.850 at some point, the degree of Mattie’s contribution, and how close the freshmen are to deserving lineup spots on their good events. Anything over 196 will be fine. If UCLA records the high score of the week (they would need a 196.600), it will be accomplished on the back of Zamarripa. I’d love to see her with a bit faster start than last year when she was still recovering.

The pre-meet festivities will be lengthy as always. 2:00 really means 8:25.

UCLA intros time. Peszek with her big boot. Sad. Looking forward to seeing Danusia compete for the first time in NCAA. She’s going to need to be one of my new favorites.

Rotation 1:
Glad that Sam Peszek is helping with the broadcast. Alyssa Pritchett is in the vault lineup and Baer is going 5th. This is the new normal (?) Oh dear. Sam is already pretending that her injury is making the team better. Good girl. Stay on message.

Sawa in for Pritchett now on vault suddenly? According to the new lineup. Always changes for UCLA after the warmup.

UCLA vault: McDonald, Sawa, Wong, Courtney, Baer, Zamarripa

McDonald – UCLA – VT – Yfull, a bit of bent legs and a hop back. Fine. (9.750)

Amor – SUU – UB – good jaeger, misses handstand on low bar, but the difficulty is there. Larger step forward on the DLO. (9.675)

Sawa – UCLA – VT – extremely low and very little flight, hop forward. Not great.  (9.600)

Bernier – SUU – UB -short on handstands, leg separation on the girenger, otherwise clean, 2/1 dismount with a hop. (9.775)

Wong – UCLA – VT – horrible vault, missed her block and got no distance or height. Hand down. UCLA is starting quite poorly in this meet. (9.475- apparently the hand only brushed or didn’t touch at all, but I kind of think it did.)

Jaworski – SUU – UB – good between the bars gienger, big leg separation on the bail hs, step back on the tuck full dismount. (9.625)

Courntey – UCLA – VT – Better than anything we’ve seen so far, obviously. Not her absolute best, step backward, but fine. (9.875 – maybe a bit of a pity score there, but it was a good vault)

Anyone else lose the feed? Apparently yes, everyone did. Talk amongst yourselves about how poorly UCLA was vaulting there. Armijo got a 9.725 on bars.

Baer – UCLA – VT – needs more height, hop back, her usual 9.800 (9.800)

Chernoch – SUU – UB – very low jaeger, pak, the handstands aren’t there, a bit flippy on the DLO with a step back. (9.775)

Zamarripa – UCLA – VT – She needs about an 11. Does her yhalf on, half off, which is going to score a bit lower for her right now. Very piked and a hop back. Shouldn’t be a huge score, but she’s Vanessa. (9.825)

Click – SUU – UB – clearly the best of the group, methodical on the inverted giants, hop forward after the double tuck dismount. (9.850)

Pritchett will do exhibition after she was taken out of the lineup after the warmup. We can see why. Very low amplitude on yfull and a thousand steps out. Kennedy will do a bars exhibitoion for SUU, missing every handstand by a lot. Bynum also doing exhibition on vault, just a Y layout so that she can do something, I guess. Participation award exhibition.

After 1 Rotation: UCLA 48.850, SUU 48.800
What a dire vault rotation that was. I know you lost some routines, but come on. McDonald was the same as she was in exhibition last year, but now she has to be in the lineup. Sawa wasn’t ready, and Wong missed her vault totally (which happens to her too often). For now, the choice for Zamarripa’s vault is clearly lowering the team score by about a tenth. They’re really feeling that none of these healthy freshmen are vaulters.

Rotation 2:
UCLA to bars. Improvement is necessary. I wonder what kind of handstands we’re going to see.

UCLA bars: Francis, Courtney, Wong, De Jesus, Larson, Zamarripa.

I bit surprised to see Sophina on bars. I haven’t seen a bars routine from her in such a long time. OK Mattie, you need this start to the season to be special.

Divino – SUU – VT – Y full, very low, step forward, similar to Sawa’s. (9.500)

Francis – UCLA – UB – this is not as much her event, shaposh with a leg separation, near stick on the double pike dismount. Good routine, form breaks certainly, but she has improved on this event. (9.775 – fair, good start)

Armijo – SUU – VT – round off full, back tuck, love to see that but a lack of amplitude and a step back.

Courtney – UCLA – UB – good shaposh to bail hs, slightly past on one handstand but no bit deal, still no same bar release, good tuck full dismount. This rotation is looking better. (9.825)

Kennedy – SUU – VT – handspring tuck half – good vault, should be their best so far, low chest and a hop to the side. (9.675 – I think it was better than that.)

Wong – UCLA – UB – She needs to be a contrtibutor here, I’m interested in what dismount she has, good hs t start, nice jaeger (toes), strong bail hs, this is better composition thn last year. Great DLO. Yes, this is the routine she’s needed for four years. Good job. (9.900)

Bernier – SUU – VT – ro full as well with a back tuck, low but fine. (9.750)

De Jesus – UCLA – UB – missed a first handstand, big leg break on the gienger, another slightly short handstand, not a super solid routine. Step back on tuck full. Probably lowest score yet. (9.900 – preposterous, do my eyes not work? Tell me if I’m insane.)

Amor – SUU – VT – Yfull, good in the air, but low landing and a notable step. Should be in line with the other scores.

Larson – UCLA – UB – good bail hs, low tkatchev as always but hit, slight hop in place on the DLO. It was better than De Jesus’s routine, so if that’s any indication . . . (9.875)

They’re all remarking with amazement about a vault I didn’t see. Show us what is happening.

Zamarripa – UCLA – UB – handstands great as always, I don’t like the clear hip out of shaposh, minor leg separation on the bail hs as always, good tkatchev, huge stumble on the DLO, otherwise it would have been a great score. (9.800)

Exhibition Yfull for SUU, looked good – should have been in the lineup.  They showed us the interesting vault, just a brush on the table instead of a block is what they were talking about.

De Jesus and Wong win bars. I need to see the De Jesus routine again because I feel like I’m taking crazy pills. I would have given it a 9.750. Craddock does an OK exhibtion with a very late giant full turn. Great hs front pike in exhibition for SUU. Their exhibitions are better than their competition routines.

After 2 Rotations: UCLA 98.150, SUU 97.400 
There is plenty to say about the judging of that bars rotation, but it was clearly a massive improvement over vault for UCLA. The freshmen can contribute here (which was one of my major questions). Zamarripa, Larson, and Wong all can be regularly 9.9s if they continue as they are.

Rotation 3:

UCLA beam: Baer, Wong, Francis, De Jesus, Larson, Zamarripa
This is the lineup I was hoping for on this event, more or less. Good scoring potential here, but also are they going to hit? I have some serious concerns about that. Sam Peszek is shilling for Adidas, etc.
Darren’s pronunciation of Alyssa is driving me crazy as always.

Baer – UCLA – BB – good switch side, right on, that’s her best skill, a bit uncertain on the side somi but balances it out well, popa with a little shuffle but well done, this is a great leadoff, but let’s watch the dismount. A little off line on her loso to dismount but stick with staggered feet. Good start. (9.775)

Jaworski – SUU – FX – lands her 2.5 punch front OOB, but no flag. OK. front layout + front layout full. We have no music, but I thinks that’s an issue with the broadcast not the arena. stumble out of the front full. (9.625)

Wong – UCLA – BB – tentative in her leaps but great psoitions, I wouldn’t credit her aerial + bhs connection but she tried to fake it, wobble on switch side, very nervous routine, wobble on full turn, sits 1.5 dismount. Probably shouldn’t have fallen. Not a good routine.(9.275)

Trejo – SUU – FX – double back mount, more confident in the tumbling than the first rotuine, barely gets her front tuck around out of the dismount. Yes, Allison, you could tell she was underrotated. (9.700)

Francis – UCLA – BB – tough situation to start a beam career, but this is what she does. minor wobble on leaps to start. Good aerial +bhs connection. Hits a little bit of a tentaive L turn. She’s capable of more difficulty that I’d like to see eventually. Good lift on her loso + back full dismount. Solid job. (9.800)

Armijo – SUU – FX – Good rudi on the mount, if only we could actually hear the music. Very low on her tuck front full on the dismount, not sure if it was supposed to be tucked or if she just had to save it. Very low. (9.675)

De Jesus – UCLA – BB – good aerial + bhs + loso with a minor wobble at the end, another bobble, this is a nervy routine (.050 on every acro skill) but she’s getting through it. Front handspring into a front 1.5 tuck dismount, which is unusual but not necessarily the most elegant dismount. (9.800)

Click – SUU – FX – front 1.5 to loso mount, lands the loso completely OOB. And I was so ready to congratulate her loso, bounces forward out of the second pass. Deductions abound in this routine. Front layout + front tuck full, another bounce forward out of it.

Larson – UCLA – BB – lovely flexibility on mount, major break on her her dance elements but she holds on, good amplitude on loso. Nowhere close on front aerial, has to come off. UCLA couldn’t really get through the first meet without counting a beam fall, could they? gainer back pike dismount, unexpected. (9.175)

Amor – SUU – FX – fine double pike to start, first one we’ve seen from SUU, front layout + front full, slightly underrotated but just a step to control it, low chest on double back dismount but fine. (9.800) 

Zamarripa – UCLA – BB – Already counting a fall, can’t count two. Beautfiful on the Onodi, minor pause in her aerial, loso connection but nothing real. No significant deductions here, good double full dismount with minor movement. Should be the best score of the rotation. Clearly the class of the beam group in both form and confidence. (9.875)

Chernoch – SUU – FX – major bounce out of rudi on the mount, a lot of slightly underrotated layouts in these middle passes. Tuck front 1.5 on the dismount, not around all the way and a step to the side.

Sawa will exhibition on beam, slight wobbles on dance, bhs full has a little trouble but completes the skill and stays on, stuck 1.5 dismount. We’ll probably see her on this event this year. Fall for SUU in exhibition. Craddock also doing exhibition, wobble on front aerial, methodical work but nice form overall, gainer full dismount which we never see from UCLA. Solid. 

After 3 Rotations: UCLA 146.675, SUU 145.900
Not a dire beam rotation in terms of future potential. This group will be good at some point. Wong and Larson were clearly tentative, Mattie looking almost resigned, but Francis and De Jesus will be important additions to the lineup.

As long as UCLA doesn’t count any more falls, they will win, which shouldn’t even really have been an issue. SUU on pace for a good score, though. For a bid to make Regionals, this is a keeper. 

UCLA floor: Francis, McDonald, De Jesus, Pritchett, Courtney, Zamarripa. Looking forward to seeing Danusia and Sophina. Interesting that McDonald made this lineup, otherwise it’s about what we expected. Hopefully Larson can come in at some point, but who knows these days?

Rotation 4:

Trejo – SUU – BB – some minor wobbles here and there but a hit routine, 1.5 dismount with a step forward. (9.750)

No Francis now? Boo.

McDonald – UCLA – FX – jams the double pike landing a bit and bounces out of it, I like this routine overall, and it should score pretty well. Rudi dismount is fine, just like everything about this routine. May not make the lineup eventually, but it’s fine for now. (9.850)

Jaworski – SUU – BB – wobble on her ro + loso, not really hitting these dance elements, similar step forward on her 1.5. (9.675)

Bynum – UCLA – FX – It’s like the walk-on brigade today. Why did she exhibition vault with a nothing if she was ready on floor? Fine double pike to start – good power in her tumbling. This is an unremarkable routine choreographically, and completely misses her double tuck dismount. Hands down. (9.225)

Kennedy – SUU – BB – major wobble on full turn, not really hitting her positions on dance, but it was a good fr. aerial + fr. aerial. Best 1.5 dismount so far. (9.800)

De Jesus – UCLA – FX -a little low on the double pike, I wish we could hear the music because this routine is a strong one, good double tuck, sloppy on her dance skills, 1.5 + layout dismount. Good hit. (9.825)

Chernoch – SUU – BB – good L turn, no problems with loso series, doesn’t hit the position on her straddle, another who is much more comfortable with her acro, good 1.5. (9.775)

Prtichett – UCLA – FX – Usual tuck full mount, 1.5 to layout is strong, slight bounce out of the double pike. That should be similar to that 9.850s she put up last year. (9.900)

Click – SUU – BB – they’re all very confident in these routines, minor wobbles but none of the tentativeness UCLA had in some routines, nice front to one foot, sticks gainer full. (9.875)

Courtney – UCLA – FX – perfect double arabian, one of the best she’s done, love that 1.5 + front .5 + layout. What is this choregraphy? Not necessarily in a bad way, just . . . so there’s that. Hits double tuck as well. Better than Pritchett’s 9.900. (9.925)

Armijo – SUU – BB – nice attitude turn, comes off on a side aerial, but they won’t have to count it.

Zamarripa – UCLA – FX – She can get them to 196 with a good hit, slightly low on the double pike landing, which she didn’t really need to be. No other problems in the routine at all, so I expect another big score that should help UCLA to that 196 level. Another 9.9? Survived floor. (9.975 – let’s not get carried away, OK judges? Are we good?)

Final Score: UCLA 196.150 SUU 194.875

The final three rotations for UCLA were about what I expected. They will be disappointed by the beam fall, but I would be more disappointed by that vault rotation, which looked too sparse to be getting on with. Multiple people still need to come in on that event for it to be anywhere near the level of the better teams (or even the average teams). There were the usual charitable UCLA home scores that I’m sure will provoke discussion, but I’m just pleased we didn’t see a full meet that followed the quality of that vault rotation.

Floor was the strongest event for UCLA, and I was particularly pleased with Courtney because that was one of if not the best routine she has done. I’d love to see Francis and Larson go, but otherwise this rotation is in a healthy position, along with bars and beam (probably).  

Oklahoma @ Georgia Live Blog

As is always the case in the first week of the season, this is a meet of question marks. No question mark looms larger than Georgia’s new head coach, Danna Durante. It is the nature of the Georgia gymnastics program that Durante’s behavior in her first meet will be dissected to a preposterous degree. Her every bit of body language will be recorded and scrutinized, all leading to the inevitable conclusion that she is not Suzanne, and the results of this meet will be used to make sweeping, likely unfounded statements about the future path of the program. (By me? How dare you?) After Jay Clark’s first meet, when Georgia scored a low 195 to sneak past Stanford, the shouts of his inadequacy began and didn’t really stop until he was removed two and a half years later.

In today’s meet, falls won’t be conclusive or even particularly significant for me. It’s early. I’m more interested in lineups and team usage. Which gymnasts are in favor? Jay Clark gave Noel Couch a significant role, including anchoring floor. Does Durante feel the same way about her? Is Brittany Rogers ready? How much is Shayla being used (and in what positions)? Regardless of concerns about Shayla’s consistency, this team needs her. They won’t be successful if they bury her and simply anticipate this will be another year of the same. She needs to be deep on three events. 

For Oklahoma, freshman success will be necessary on the power events, so watch for Scaman and Kmieciak and their scores on vault and floor. They will be integral in taking Oklahoma out of the era of the Yhalf. Also, keep an eye on the first three workers on bars. Who is stepping in to take those open positions, and are they up to par?

This should be a delightful meet, and even though it is the first week of the season, it’s the kind of meet Oklahoma needs to be winning to raise its national standing and continue the argument that this team is title relevant.

The meets begins at 4:00 ET/1:00 PT, and follow here for live comments. If you subscribe, you can watch the meet on All-Access here.

Lineups
Georgia
VT: Davis, Persinger, Cheek, Rogers, Hires, Jay
UB: Cheek, Hires, Tanella, Rogers, Worley, Davis
BB: Cheek, Hires, Rogers, Tanella, Worley, Earls
FX: Earls, Tanella, Hires, Persinger, Worley, Jay

Oklahoma
VT: Brewer, Spears, Kmieciak, Mooring, Olson, Scaman
UB: Clark, Brewer, Kmieciak, Scaman, Olson, Spears
BB: Kmieciak, Alexander, Olson, Brewer, Mooring, Spears
FX: Albright, Kmieciak, Brewer, Spears, Olson, Scaman

I’m pleased to see that Rogers is already in on three events and that Shayla is deep in the lineup on all her events. Noel Couch is nowhere to be seen. That’s probably a result of an injury, but there’s no telling the severity right now. Watch out for Tanella. When was the last time she competed three events? She made no lineups last season except for her last-minute substitute disaster on bars at Championships.

Four AAers for Oklahoma. Scaman is already anchoring two events (as is Jay for Georgia), and Kmieciak is showing all four routines. Their performances will be key, especially on bars where neither is as proven as on vault and floor.

Meet Judges  (Top)
 Event  Number  Name  Rating
 Vault  Judge 1  Gwyned Bius  National
 Judge 2  Augusta Lipsey  National
 Bars  Judge 1  Carole Ide  Brevet
 Judge 2  Jay Miller  National
 Beam  Judge 1  Carole Ide  Brevet
 Judge 2  Gwyned Bius  National
 Floor  Judge 1  Augusta Lipsey  National
 Judge 2  Jay Miller  National

Coverage has started, so the meet is soon to begin. Get ready. We’re meeting Danna who’s telling us about energy and being relaxed.

Scores here if you haven’t already found them. Kevin telling us about the schedule. Georgia really does have one of the toughest schedules this year, probably second to Alabama.

But what if I don’t want to commit to the G? Is that like a drug? I’m feeling a lot of peer pressure right now. You can’t make me do anything I don’t want to do.

Warmups now. Hand injury for Noel Couch, but it’s not season threatening. Kevin thinks she’ll be an anchor in most places. She won’t. She’s a perfect early-lineup worker on three events.

Rotation 1:

Davis – UGA – VT – Very low landing and a step to the side. Won’t be a large score. (9.625)

Clark – OU – UB – a couple of late handstands and a hop forward on the double tuck. Just OK. (9.725)

Persinger – UGA – VT – much better than Davis, good distance, a little legs and piking, solid landing. Pleasant vault. It’s what we should expect from her, and she can improve on it. (9.825)

Ward (They said Brewer?, it all goes so fast) – OU – UB -she works methodically, but everything is pretty precise, another dismount of just a double tuck but it’s stuck. This is a strong early lineup routine but won’t be a major score. (9.800)

Cheek – UGA – VT – a single step back on the Yfull. She can do better, but this is a good January vault. A little direction issue as well. (9.825)

Kmieciak – OU – UB – Fall on the Tkatchev to start the routine. Tough start to her NCAA career, but this is not her strongest event. Close on shoot to high bar, struggle in handstand, hits tuck full dismount. (9.200)

Rogers – UGA – VT – Good lift in her Yfull, step back, but she opens out of it better than the others so far in this lineup. This will be 9.9s once the landing comes. (9.850)

Scaman – OU – UB – Misses first handstand by a little, nice jaeger and bail hs, only problem is the handstands, near stick on the tuck full. Good hit, I’m happy with that routine. (9.875)

Hires – UGA – VT – Great stick. She doesn’t quite have the lift and distance as Rogers, but the landing was much stronger. Good form overall. Little to critique there. (9.925)

Olson – OU – UB – Great between the bars deltchev – a little break of form but I love the difficulty. One missed hs and a hop on the DLO full. Good routine but can be more refined as the season goes. (9.875)

Jay – UGA – VT – She goes for the 1.5, and I’m pleased to see it. A little step forward and some bent legs, but this will be a great anchor for them. (9.875)

Spears – OU – UB – nice first handstand, good height on jaeger but a little close. As a team they all need to continue working on these handstands, hop forward on the double arabian. Every single one of them missed the last handstand before the dismount. (9.875)

After 1 Rotation: Georgia 49.300, Oklahoma 49.150

Good first rotation. There’s much work to do for both teams, but Oklahoma seems to be in a healthy position on bars. I was pleased by the end of the Oklahoma rotation, with three routines that can be 9.9s once the handstands come. Hires and Jay were the class of the Georgia rotation as expected, and Rogers will get there. Rogers has the biggest flight, so she may have the highest scoring potential in a month or two. Davis didn’t look quite ready yet. When Couch is ready, I’d expect her to come in for Davis at the moment, but there may be a difficult decision to make there later.

Kevin Copp just got the crazy giggles about how terrible he is at advertising things. What is happening? I’m happy to see Hires and Cheek on bars as they both looked strong in intrasquads. Vault is the most important event for Oklahoma to show their development.

Rotation 2: 

Spears – OU – VT – Good Yfull (important upgrade for her) to leadoff. (9.775)

Cheek – UGA – UB – nice tkatchev, a little leg separation in a giant full, but otherwise this is a hit. Big distance on the DLO with a stuck (or near stuck) landing. Strong leadoff. (9.850)

Kmieciak – OU – VT – missed (9.850)

Hires – UGA – UB – a little lacking in amplitude on the jaeger and a little form on the bail hs, minor step on the DLO. Not as strong as Cheek’s routine, but she has improved on this event and she could potentially make the lineup as we go on. (9.825 – a bit high perhaps)

Mooring – OU – VT – Yhalf, major hop forward and a little lacking in dynamics, but it’s fine. (9.800)

Tanella – UGA – UB – good jaeger, she’s rushing this a bit and completing her straddles up to handstand late, hop after the double tuck. Since it’s just a double tuck, she needs to be sticking every time, but this is her usual 9.775-9.800 routine that we’ve come to expect. (9.775)

Olson – OU – VT – Yfull, we’re cutting to these very late. (9.675)

Rogers – UGA – UB – Love her jaeger, you can see the elite refinement in this routine. Flings that tuck full really far. Swims a little bit trying to stick and takes a step. (9.800 – it will be higher soon)

Scaman – OU – VT – 1.5 looked very good in the air but she took a major step forward. She needs to work on the landing, but it will come. (9.800)

Worley – UGA – UB -good on bail hs, nice tkatchev, clean overall, but let’s watch this dismount. Better on the DLO, with just a hop forward. They’re clearly working on that dismount, finally. She’s increasing her scoring potential. (9.800)

Price – OU – VT – she has to vault because Brewer has been removed. Just a handspring front pike – step forward. (9.625)

Davis – UGA – UB – lovely tkatchev as always, hits bail hs, handstands are the best so far, doesn’t really stick the tuck full but tries to pretend. Should be the best score so far. (9.875 – fair)

Jay is going to exhibition on bars. I was wondering about seeing her here. Leg separation on the shaposh, no shushunova, sticks tuck full. She should be in this lineup soon. This was better than most of the competition routines. (9.825)

After two rotations: Georgia 98.450, Oklahoma 98.050

Overall, I think the scores were appropriate and reflected the kind of January gymnastics we saw. It was all very 9.800. It’s nice to see Shayla looking more confident on her bars dismount. It may not be a nervous wreck soon, and she will have a higher ceiling if that DLO continues to improve. It was better but still needs work. I was not particularly impressed with Oklahoma’s vaulting, but they had a lineup change, which hurt them. Scaman will be a 9.9 when the landing comes. Olson must do better. She’s near anchor level at her best. Some of the amplitude is still not competitive with the best teams.

It’s interesting that Worley is not anchoring beam, but I assume they’re trying to protect Earls in that final position. The goal here for Georgia will be to get through beam with those same 9.800s we saw on bars. This is about finding a group of six to compete because there are open slots to be sure. I’m not expecting 9.9s.

Rotation 3:

Cheek – UGA – BB – good full turn, minor wobble on the three series, a little methodical/tight here. Switch side is strong, small wobble on aerial cartwheel, dance elements are the stronger part of the routine for her. Sticks a slightly staggered gainer full. Good start. (9.800)

Albright – OU – FX – front double full with slight lack of control but fine, second pass is strong, the choreography is so KJ. Perhaps plays a little better on a smaller scale, but it looks fun. A little bouncy out of the rudi. Fine routine. (9.775)

Hires – UGA – BB – Huge break on her layout, layout series and falls. No way to hang onto that as hard as she tried. Stumbles on choreography, oh dear, so very tight. Clean gainer full, but overall a miss on a routine that is not particularly complex. (8.975)

Kmieciak – OU – FX – good height on double pike, that’s the kind of amplitude they need from these frehsmen, gets her second pass around – from this angle it looked like she went into that front pike awkwardly but pulled it around with no problem. Good rudi to end. The power on the later passes needs to match the mount, though. (9.775)

Rogers – UGA – BB – LOVE that back handspring 3/4. It’s a great signature piece. This is a clean, confident routine, back handspring full to immediate layout full dismount. Good ingenuity, but I wonder about the connection. There was a definite pause. (9.750)

 Mooring – OU – FX – a little crossed legs on the mount but fine, a low chest on the double pike but strong landing to finish out the routine. Acceptable 9.800-level performance. Nothing perfect, nothing wrong. (9.850)

Tanella – UGA – BB – breaks her walkover/bhs connection with a wobble, gets the connection later on the side somi, though. Step on the gainer full dismount. This is another 9.7-ish performance from her. (9.725)

Spears – OU – FX – Love the choregraphy at the beginning of this one. Front double full to mount, cleanest, most refined routine from OU so far, very expressive performance with good line, bounces out of the rudi, but that’s the only notable deduction. (9.850)

Worley – UGA – BB – hits sheep jump, one of the few NCAA gymnasts who should be doing a sheep, his loso series – good full twisting bhs. Still the weakest part of the routine is the gainer full – stuck but slightly piked with a low chest landing, which there’s really no excuse for on a simple dismount. (9.900) Improve the dismount and she can get her 10. 

Olson – OU – FX – good dbl pike, this supposed to be one of those fun routines, which never appeal to me as much because I don’t know what fun is. A little bent legs on the front layout in the middle pass. She commits to this routine totally, so no complaints from me with the choreo because it’s not an “I’m having fun, right?” routine. Oklahoma should trim the deficit after this rotation. Good job. (9.850)

Earls – UGA – BB – great loso, loso series, she’s looking confident here, no problems so far. I was a bit worried about her in the anchor position because she struggled going up after a fall at Championships, but this is good. A big step back after double tuck dismount, but that’s all. (9.800)

Scaman – OU – FX – huge DLO with a somewhat low landing, but nothing problematic. I love a loso out of a middle pass, so she gets points from me. Good lift, dismounts with a hit double tuck. Great routine, needs a little work on landing positions, but I’m being picky. (9.875)

Breazeal is doing exhibition on beam, lifts well into her loso, very methodical work (that’s the nice way of saying unfortunately slow), doesn’t quite hit that switch split, low landing on the full dismount, but a good routine.   

After three rotations: Georgia 147.425, Oklahoma 147.250. This could go either way still.

I was pleased overall with Georgia on beam. Worley, Earls, Cheek, and Rogers all looked good with little bits that can be improved here and there. Hires was the weak link and looked very unsure of herself. Tanella is just a 9.7 at this point. Oklahoma looked strong on floor with a few routines that could go into 9.9s with time. Spears was the clear standout for me with a lovely routine, but Scaman will be a good anchor. 

They’re making us miss Kat Ding now with a montage. As if we needed help. This meet could use some Kat Ding, but it has been exciting. It looks like we’ll get a few more mid-196s from these two. Normally when meets are close, you favor the home team/team on floor going into the last rotation, but Oklahoma is such a strong beam team that it erases some of that usual advantage. This could get close.

For the person who asked about leos, I’m colorblind, so I usually try to refrain from commenting on leos to avoid embarrassing myself. No hideousness is what I can tell you.

Rotation 4:

Kmieciak – OU – BB – hits loso series, Kevin Copp just gave Carole Ide a shout out. I can see why she’s been assigned the leadoff spot, very confident work. Sticks double tuck with a bit of a low chest. Not a packed routine, but perfect for a leadoff with a difficult dismount. (9.850)

Earls – UGA – FX – Good double pike to start, bounces out of the 1.5 front a little on the second pass. Good double tuck. Should be a strong 9.800 leadoff. (9.850)

Alexander – OU – BB – she looked absolutely great here in the preseason, great split and straddle positions, good aerial + back tuck, no wobbles at all so far, great elegance and flexibility, gainer back tuck dismount but hops back when trying to salute. Good work. (9.800)

Tanella – UGA – FX – hits double pike, goes close to the line on the second pass but stays in. I can’t really take this routine, but she’s hitting. Ugh, miming a phone call. Sound effects and miming are my floor pet peeves. Front layout+rudi to end. Hit. (9.825)   

Olson – OU – BB – wonderful layout series, right on, wobble on front aerial, aeiral cartwheel to full dismount – stuck. Confident routine again, as we always expect. (9.850)

Hires – UGA – FX – This music is so familiar – what is it from? Low on the double pike and steps out of it – everyone is going for a layout + rudi today, a little pose-y and slow in the choreography, falls on double tuck dismount. She has looked off all day after vault. 

Clark – OU – BB – great beam choreography as always. We’ll have to find out what happened to Brewer, hopefully nothing serious. Sheep jump is fine, hits the side somi, eeeeee completely misses her foot on the dismount and lands it to her back but looks to be okay. Scary but no lasting damage. (8.875)

Persinger – UGA – FX – very low on the double tuck with big step forward, drops her foot on the leg-up double turn, but the idea and beginning were nice. Extremely low on double pike and just avoids a fall. She looks unready to compete. She doesn’t have these passes ready yet. Good illusion. Hits rudi dismount. This will be a very low score that has to count. (9.375)

Mooring – OU – BB – good loso series, uncharacteristic wobble on front aerial, hits 1.5 dismount. It was a little tentative overall, but a good hit for going after a bad fall. (9.825)

Worley – UGA – FX -bounces out of double pike but good amplitude and good to see her competing it. The landings aren’t quite there yet, but it’s important to have her healthy enough to compete this event. Bounces out of every pass. It didn’t look like she went OOB but it’s not a great angle to judge and the flag went up (?). Will be a lower score. (9.775 is too high, but she didn’t get the OOB deduction after all, which is the correct decision).

Spears – OU – BB – can comfirm the win with a hit, great Onodi+swing down, perfect on aerial walkover, she’s proving herself a strong heir to Ferguson here. Minor hop on gainer full dismount is the only issue. (9.875)

Jay – UGA – FX – Big bounce out of double tuck on the mount. Nearly goes OOB on the middle pass but stays in, traveled very far on that front tuck out of the pass, falls on the double pike dismount. Frankly, they look completely unprepared to compete on this event after a long meet. Endurance. Earls was the only one who brought it. (9.175)

Oklahoma finishes with a 49.200 on beam, which is appropriate and will go higher as we progress. Albright doing an exhibition on beam, good aerial, she looks more prepared than Clark and perhaps should have come in for Brewer instead, and as I say that she has a major wobble on the series. So there’s that. Good side somi. Good 1.5 dismount.

Final Scores: Oklahoma 196.450, Georgia 195.425 All-Around winner is Taylor Spears with a 39.375.

This was everything we would expect until Georgia threw the meet away on floor. These weren’t random falls. The meet could have gone either way before that. Oklahoma looked like their 9.875 selves on three events with a slightly disappointing vault rotation. The challenge for Oklahoma now will be finding those 9.9s. They had none in this meet, and that is one of the major concerns after the graduation of Megan Ferguson. Most of the weaker routines did come from people who were filling in for Brewer and wouldn’t otherwise have competed, and we’ll still have to find out what happened to her. 

For Georgia, vault was pleasing, bars and beam can come along, and floor needs a ton of work. The positive is that we did see the makings of a 197 team. Rogers and Jay will need time, but they both should be competing at least three events every week for high scores. I’d like to see some experimentation with the beam and floor lineups because I’m not sold on all of these competitors, but that’s what January is for. There is nothing dire about this performance, but some of those routines looked very December.

In the debut competition, Durante did beat Jay Clark by a few tenths, but I anticipate some criticisms of the team’s readiness based on floor.

Thanks for reading. I’ll be back tomorrow for UCLA/Southern Utah at 5:00 ET/2:00 PT.