[8] UCLA @ [4] Utah Live Blog

This week, Sam talks to Danusia. Now, I love hearing from Danusia. I’m a human being, after all. But honestly, the point of these videos is for us to hear from Miss Val. I want her to tell me that she doesn’t want to talk about beam because she’s not worried about beam.

The meet will be shown on the Pac-12 Network, and hopefully we won’t have any interminable women’s basketball to deal with, but you never know. We’ve already had quite the eventful little weekend for people who like having strong opinions on things (so, all gymnastics fans), and don’t expect it to end yet. These two teams helped invent being outraged about scoring.

Dear judges, please don’t treat Florida’s 49.875 on floor as a challenge.

 We’ve had a lot happen already today. LSU got back into the 197 picture at 197.175 with big showings on vault and floor, as is their tendency. Courville was very 9.9 and Hall got into the 9.9s on floor for the first time this season. Auburn also put up a significant 196.850, mimicking LSU by getting most of that value from vault and floor. I’ve been impressed by what I’ve seen from MJ Rott so far, and she could be that necessary third link with Atkinson and Guy to make Auburn a top 10 team.

Michigan did them one better by recording a 197.325 in their home opener. Floor arrived this week for 49.500, and most significantly, beam was a distinctly un-horrifying 49.250. The fall even came in the last position, so no one had time to jump out of their skin with worry. That 49.250 is the second-highest beam score for Michigan in the last four seasons.

I finally got to see a full meet for Oklahoma for the first time this season, as the Sooners went to Arizona and won 197.575-196.875. As for the scoring, I don’t even know anymore. High scores? Probably. Sure. But at this point . . . on a scale of 1 to 10 Floridas, it was like 6.5 Floridas. The best moment of the meet was the end of Taylor Spears’ bars routine, with the final perfect handstand and glorious stuck double arabian. And I’m starting to get on the Chayse Capps train. I see it, people. I understand the reasons for your idolatrous shrines. Floor was the weak event for the Sooners by far. Pretty much everyone had at least one poor pass, either bouncing way out of it or landing super short. Brewer was supposed to do the AA but went missing after bars. Do we know what happened to her?

Arizona had a scary moment when Jordan Williams peeled off the bars going for her double front dismount and almost dismounted right into the face of the mat girl who just got out of the way. The camera cut away immediately, but Williams stayed down for a while and looked hurt.

Even though it was the lowest-scoring event for Arizona, I was most pleased by their beam. It was a wobbleburger, but a few of the people in that rotation moved quite elegantly through their routines. Hey now, Arizona.

But now to UCLA and Utah. The meet will begin promptly at 9:30 ET/6:30 PT. Be there, or be unable to comment on the scores.

Phew. Amanda Borden is back this week. Otherwise, how would we know how wide the beam is? It’s eight inches, right? FOUR? Are you kidding me???

“Rowdy Red Rocks Rooters” – It’s alliteration night in Utah.
Hopefully a gymnastics meet will break out at some point during this ChristianMingle commercial. Important question: Is the Gabby Douglas Story going to be a ChristianMingle commercial?

Uh oh, Val has her glasses on. That must mean the lineup is changing.

Rotation 1- Utah on vault, UCLA on bars
Utah vault:
1. Tutka – leg break on the block on her yfull, but better control in landing than we have seen, small step back, some piking. 9.875. It’s the new 9.800.
2. Lofgren – Sticks her yfull, well done, some piking down and not the power/distance we will see from others. 9.900.
3. Damianova – Better power than Lofgren, fairly large hop back. 9.875.
4. Delaney – Great yfull, strong power, just a hop in place. I would say it would probably be a 9.900 in a vacuum, but it was stronger than Lofgren’s. 9.925.
5. Wilson – The usual huge Yfull, still a hop back though, and there is, as always, a small amount of piking. 9.925. Get that stick and she’ll be back in the 9.950-9.975 range consistently.
6. Dabritz – Sticks her 1.5 – an insignificant foot adjustment but basically a stick, so watch out for the score. They’ve been enthusiastic so far leading up to this, and it’s the strongest of the group. 9.975.  

UCLA bars: 
1. Courtney – leading off? Already a lineup change. DANUSIA HAS THE FLU! ALERT! THE WORLD IS OVER! toe one, strong shaposh, short handstand, bail, lots of toe-ons in this routine, stuck her tuck full – best dismount of the year for her. 9.750.
2. Craddock – Overbalances her first handstand and then falls on her tkatchev. Ruh Roh. Comes off again after her pak. An extremely rough routine. This score will be in the 1s.
3. Mossett – strong stalder shoot, lovely jaeger, hits her pak, a couple handstands here and there, again the major elbow bend on the stalder, fine double back. It’s a hit, so there’s that. 9.750. 
4. DeJesus – Very close on the gienger catch with crazy legs, handstands not as strong as last week, sort of step/salutes her tuck full with some low knee-chest action. 9.475. 
5. Sawa – Great Ray, strong toe-on, leg break on the bail, large step on the double pike dismount. Those bars were wobbling all over the place. 9.750.
6. Peszek – She looks so pissed waiting to go. Even her smile was pissed.great full turn and gienger, excellent bail, small hop on DLO. At least someone showed up today. 9.875.

UCLA was slopsville on bars. Just a lot of messy gymnastics, added to the fact that they didn’t get nearly the kind of scoring they have received the last couple weeks at home, and the total is rough. Utah had strong landings for the most part, but the judges were definitely feeling good at the beginning of that rotation. I would say there’s not enough separation in those scores to reward the stronger vaults comparatively, but Utah at least showed up in the first rotation.

Utah 49.600, UCLA 48.625
Val is protesting the bars scores. You go, Val. Love a protest. Olivia Courtney’s score goes up .025. Oh, that’ll do a lot.

Rotation 2 – UCLA on vault, Utah on bars
Utah bars:
1. Hughes – Looked a little close on her tkatchev catch, but it was fine, hop on the tuck full dismount, and a little knee face like DeJesus. 9.825. 
2. Wilson – Some floppy leg separations on both her gienger and her overshoot, handstands looked OK, hop back on the tuck full. 9.900. No. How was that routine stronger than Peszek’s? 
3. Hansen – Fine jaeger, small leg break on the pak, half turn on low bar looked a little better than usual, very squatty on tuck full dismount with a large lunge back. 9.800.
4. Lothrop – Gets her jaeger, strong bail, last handstand looked a tad short, sticks DLO. Should be a quite good score. The biggest issue is the amplitude in her bars work, but that often is not factored into the deductions. She doesn’t rise up on the jaeger or the DLO compared with the really strong incarnations of those skills. 9.925.
5. Damianova – Leg sep on the shaposh, gets bail, perhaps a small adjustment in the feet on the double back, but the form on her double back is excellent just like on floor. 9.925.
6. Dabritz – Good first handstand, catcher her jaeger, very nice bail, hop back on the tuck full. Probably the best of their rotation, so let’s see what happens. 9.950.

UCLA vault:
1. Cipra – nice power on her yfull to open, hop back. 9.850. 
2. Bynum – Yhalf, short landing with a step back, she hasn’t really hit this yet. It’s always short or over. 9.850.
3. Sawa – Going third? Short on her yfull landing, weakest for her on the year so far, doesn’t really give away a step but has to fight not to do so. 9.800.
4. Courtney – Going fourth? Usual Yfull, but with a large step back, also her weakest of the year. 9.800. 
5. Pinches – still a work in progress on the yfull, not a ton of distance, some piking and a hop. 9.800.
6. Mossett – Great height on her yfull, but a large hop back. They are not there with the landings at all today. 9.750.

After 2: Utah 99.125, UCLA 97.725

Not UCLA’s day. They’re sloppy, not landing well, and not remotely the team we have seen for the first two weeks. Really all Utah has to do at this point is hit. They’re looking much better than UCLA today. It’s not really a contest so far. 

Syd Sawa is telling us about her alien floor and performing and selling. The UCLA watchwords. Cory is crazy dancing in Val’s face, and she’s just saying, “Stop it. Stop it. Stop it.” over and over again. Best part of the meet for UCLA so far. That’s how this has gone. 

Rotation 3 – Utah on beam, UCLA on floor:
Utah beam: 
1. Lothrop – takes a big wobble opening on beam, and another small check on the loso series. Minorly short on switch. Strong and high 1.5 dismount. 9.800.
2. Rowe – wobble on her full turn, hits her loso series, switch side was strong, solid front toss, short on her 1.5 with a large lunge back. Some moments of legs here and there as well, but she’ll compete beam for them for a long time. 9.825.
3. Hughes – FYI Breanna, I’ve already had four beam falls on my fantasy lineup this week, so I’d prefer a hit from you, but you know, no big deal. Hits loso series, large wobble on her side aerial to hold onto it somehow (what did I just say?), step forward on 1.5 dismount. 9.750.
4. Wilson – Only the smallest of corrections on her layouts series, switch doesn’t hit 180, short on her popa and comes off the beam, no way to save. Excellent 1.5 to finish. 9.350. 
5. Delaney – Interesting situation for her now after the fall. Nice loso series, hits her tuck full leap, pretty work, wobble on gainer loso, hop on gainer full. Oh girl, if you’re going to do a gainer full you need to stick it. But I’m glad she’s making this rotation because she has a nice look on beam. 9.850. 
6. Lofgren – Small correction on side somi, hits stag, nowhere close on her loso and comes off, so this just became a little bit of a meet – or would have if it had been closer to begin with. Oh, Utah, you just can’t get through without counting a fall can you? 9.325.  
 
UCLA floor:
1. Mossett – y spin, good height on her double back but may have gone OOB or just saved it, needed a little more control on that landing. Layouts middle pass. Dance elements look very nice. Short landing on double pike with a step forward. Eh. 9.800.
2. DeJesus – Double pike to open, could be higher, same with double tuck, but both landed securely. Sophina’s hips just had a conversation with me. It was enlightening. 1.5 to front layout dismount is well done. Good routine. Judge chatter. 9.825. (One judge gave it a 9.750, not sure what her deal was.)
3. Cipra – Really strong double pike, 1.5 to front layout could have some better legs on the layout. I still really like this routine, but even the choreographic performances seen flatter for UCLA than at home – which is expected but shouldn’t happen. A little locked and short on the final double pike, but strong, gives away little. Rushed on split full at the end potentially, but not too much weaker than her routine from last week. 9.875.
4. Bynum – Bounces out of her DLO and goes right OOB, a little stumble on her double back landing. Everything’s just kind of worse than it has been. So many more mistakes that destroy the score. 9.675.
5. Courtney – OK, someone needs to hit a real routine one of these times, UCLA. Slides with the back foot on the double arabian but mostly controlled, lovely middle pass into loso, could question the splits, but I do that for everyone who isn’t Rheagan Courville, hits double pike dismount. 9.900.
6. Sawa – really strong double back to open, and quite secure on the double pike as well, 1.5 to half to stag is hit as well. That was basically identical to last week, so this will be a good comparison of scoring between home and road. 9.925.     

Utah was not great on beam there, which would have opened the door if the meet were closer going in or if Utah weren’t going to floor and UCLA to the nasty beam. Falls for Utah, plus the others all had wobbles and issues, so no one really hit a clean, inspiring routine. UCLA started to get it together a little bit in those floor routines, but still some issues with tumbling control and OOBs.

After 3: Utah 147.700, UCLA 147.050
So yeah, not that close. UCLA desperately needs to solve a problem like beam right now, though. Danusia has recovered from the flu suddenly to warm up on beam. I’m pretty sure her transverse aerial can cure the flu, so that makes sense.

Rotation 4 – Utah on floor, UCLA on beam
Utah floor:
1. Lofgren – Secure double pike to start, split full wasn’t there, finishes her whip double full very early but pikes a little to control it, rudi to loso is good. That’s much better than what we were seeing from her at the end of last year. 9.800. I haven’t seen her do floor since those 9.6s, so I’m pleased.
2. Delaney – Powerful tuck full to open, strong layout to front full, came into this rotation at the last minute, botches her double back final pass with a big stumble bounce back – had a good one going until then. 9.700.
3. Wilson – Huge DLO, pikes it in a little in the second salto but good landing, front layout front full middle pass, low on double tuck dismount but a solid routine. 9.875.  
4. Dabritz – Amazing stick on the pike full in. That’s ridiculous. This is the best floor routine I have seen her do. Sticks the triple full as well. Crazy. That would definitely have received a 10 at Florida yesterday, for what it’s worth, but so would everything. Couldn’t really see the dance elements to judge, but very well done in that tumbling. 9.975.
5. Tutka – Bounces out of her tuck full pretty significantly, great pop into the split jump on her middle pass – that’s how directly connected dance elements are supposed to look – strong double tuck to finish, so really just the very uncontrolled mount holding her back there. 9.825.
6. Damianova – Great double back to start, and another secure and clean floor routine for Utah. Only a couple issues here and there in this rotation, but strong skill performances overall.    


UCLA beam:
1. Craddock – her opening full turn is always the best part of her routine, breaks in the hips on her front walkover to front handspring, fine side aerial, rushed through that split jump a little, small hop on layout full dismount. She’s getting there, slowly but surely. 9.775.
2. Mossett – tentative on that full turn, lovely ring jump, pauses in her aerial to bhs connection but OK. It’s strong, but still can get more fluid and comfortable in performing this as a routine instead of a set of disconnected skills, hop in place on gainer pike. 9.775.
3. DeJesus – Hasn’t hit beam yet this year, strong walkover to bhs loso this time, but then comes in way low on her front toss and squats it with a big stumble, step on the front full. It begins again. 9.725.
4. Francis – Fourth? These lineups are all over the place tonight. I like it. Nice walkover to bhs, switch split is lovely, does a third dance element just in case, y spin is secure, this has been great so far, just the dismount. Sticks it again! Three times in a row. Excellent routine. Danusia Francis just cured the flu. 9.950.
5. Cipra – Major break on the loso, but she stayed on this week, so it’s progress. Another major break on the split full. She could be so great on this event, but she just doesn’t have the consistency yet. This will be one of the Val projects. Switch split is nice, but pretty much everything else had deductions. Good double full with small step. 9.600.
6. Sawa – Good switch, break at the hips on her side aerial. Everyone except Danusia struggling on beam again this week. She just came off on her series and it looked like she was dismounting. The announcer even said her name like she was done. Weird. No idea what happened there, looked like a Russian gymnast at podium training, just coming off because the bhs was weird? Rough beam again.

The story of this meet is a simple one. UCLA showed up for one event, Utah showed up for three, and that’s why they won. UCLA’s vault problems looked meet-specific. They haven’t looked remotely like that at home, but the beam is still a major issue worth lamenting. Five people had significant issues in that rotation, and it’s not the first time. They’re like my fantasy team on beam. UCLA always has a bad road meet each season. Usually it’s a 194, so if this is their bad road meet, that’s OK. But it was bad. It was like Danusia’s beam routine sitting on a golden throne as the queen, Sawa’s floor sitting next to her on a slightly lower pedestal as the royal vizier, and then everyone else was just a peasant hoping to be granted the honor of glimpsing the royal personage – and it wasn’t happening. 

Utah had some very nice routines and some sloppy ones, but the nice ones outweighed the sloppiness. Dabritz’s floor was the clear highlight of the meet. Scoring was too enthusiastic in the first two rotations for the quality of routines shown – on bars in particular, which accounts for a bit of the “You just went over 197 while counting a fall,” but that’s nothing new, here or everywhere. I’ve already filled my Caring-About-High-Scoring Meter for the weekend after Florida, so it just is what it is. Beam is still a problem. It’s three weeks without breaking 9.850 now, which is a concern that shouldn’t be ignored in the glow of a 197.

Final Score: Utah 197.125, UCLA 195.875

Friday Meets – Georgia @ Florida Live Blog

A quick programming note: because of preposterous weather, the Auburn and LSU meet has been moved to tomorrow at 1pm CT.

Friday – 1/24/14
6:30 ET/3:30 PT – Brown @ [18] Rutgers
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [6] Georgia @ [3] Florida (Scores) (Video – school subscription)
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [22] Kent State @ Western Michigan
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [25] Cal @ [23] Arizona State (Scores) (Video)
7:30 ET/4:30 PT – [20] Kentucky @ Missouri (Scores) (Video – all-access)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [9] Nebraska @ Iowa (Video – all-access)
8:30 ET/5:30 PT – [10] Arkansas @ [7] Alabama (Scores) (Video)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Southern Utah @ [15] Boise State (Scores)
10:00 ET/7:00 PT – [21] Washington @ Seattle Pacific (Scores) (Video)

Current top 10:

Check in beginning at 7:00 ET/4:00 PT for the anticipated Georgia and Florida clash.

Until then, talk amongst yourselves regarding whether the 10.000 barrier will fall this weekend.We have some prime candidates.

Of note, Macko is back in the floor lineup for Florida instead of Colussi-Pelaez, who competed last week. Georgia’s lineup remains intact from last weekend’s meets.

Kaylan Earls is a senior? Heavens. When did that happen? Florida’s intros happening now. There are some mascots and some signs and some children, so sit back. It’ll be a while. I’m excited for some huge gymnastics and am equally excited to see what the judges do with that huge gymnastics.

Judges are taking control of their events now (finally).

Rotation 1: Florida on vault, Georgia on bars
Florida vault:
1. B Caquatto – yfull, good power, small hop back, a little down – but just a very little bit. 9.875. 
2. Spicer – yfull, not the power/height of Caquatto and a larger bounce back. A little piking as well. OK. 9.825. 
3. M Caquatto – Fine yfull but not her best, didn’t get quite the pop and distance I think she can, bounce back. 9.825. 
4. Johnson – Same for Alaina, looked like she didn’t get her usual power and came in short in the landing with a step forward. 9.775. 
5. Sloan – That’s a bit more like it. Strong yfull, but she did step back, and we know she can stick this vault. 9.925. 
6. Hunter -Her 1.5 is excellent as always, but she does land a little short this time with a hop back, so it won’t be her best score either. 9.900.

Georgia bars:
1. Jay – Overbalances first handstand a tad and saves, a few bits of leg form here and there, markelov is solid, stuck tuck full. Started a little sloppy but the end was nice. 9.850.
2. Hires -good first hs, clean piked jaeger, perhaps a little short in bail handstand but it’s tough from the angle, excellent stick on DLO. Pretty. 9.850.
3. Brown -Tkatchev is brilliant, hits pak, still a lot of handstands in the composition of this routine, but she mostly hits them, a little low chested on dismount with a step. 9.875
4. Cheek -Good tkatchev, clean in the handstands, pretty routine and a stuck DLO. From this perspective, looks like she should easily keep up the 9.9 streak. 9.975. Well now, it was good, but wow. 
5. Rogers -Pretty stalder and stalder tkatchev, just holds onto the stick on her tuck full dismount, leans over to save it. Looked very clean from this angle in the routine itself. 9.950. 
6. Davis – Tkatchev is pretty as always, hits bail well, this looks identical to last Monday’s routine in every way, including the stuck DLO. Let’s see what the judges do with that one. 9.950.

Well, I was wondering about the scores. The answer is that they are crazy humongous, and humongous for both teams. Florida did not have a particularly strong vault rotation and is lucky to escape with a 49.350. Both Macko and Johnson did not get the power and distance on their vaults we would expect, with Alaina landing pretty short. Sloan and Hunter both vaulted well but both can land much better than that. Georgia looked very good on bars. The scores were willing to go into the stratosphere for them when they didn’t have to, certainly, and it’s a bit tough to judge handstands from this angle so I’ll leave that topic, but the dismounts and almost all of the releases looked excellent. They’re setting it up for some big Florida scores if the Gators hit bars as well as they can.

After 1: Georgia 49.600, Florida 49.350. 

Rotation 2: Florida on bars, Georgia on vault
Florida bars:
1. BDG -Nice shaposh, clean bail,definitely hitting this routine, big DLO with a pretty large step back and the splayed legs in the second salto.
2. Hunter – missed beginning, hitting strong handstands at the end and sticks her tuck full. 9.900.
3. B Caquatto – Amazing toe-on tkatchev, the handstand on the bail is well done – maybe some leg break on it in flight though, sticks DLO. Excellent routine. 9.950. 
4. Sloan – Another great toe-on tkatchev, bail is lovely, she was probably in line for something close to a 10 for this routine but has to land her DLO short and take a step forward. 9.875. 
5. M Caquatto – Excellent shaposh (with legs actually together, unlike most NCAA gymnasts) bail and tkatchev are excellent, and ditto Bridget Sloan with the great routine going until the step on the dismount. 9.875.
6. Johnson – Best of the crop of amazing Rays on this team, small leg break on bail handstand which is all I see so far, and then pretty flingy on her DLO and a step back. They had to stick more of these dismounts to get the bars score they needed. Come on, final three! 9.850.

Georgia vault:
1. Davis – yfull is excellent and stuck, as it usually is, even looked to be a bit more distance this week, but it’s often relative to angle and stadium. 9.875.
2. Broussard – yfull looked fine in the air, but she bounced out of it quite a ways. 9.800.
3. Hires – Pretty low and crunched in her yfull landing, which we saw a few times in her mid-season vaults last year. Not her strongest. 9.800.
4. Jay – She also lands her yfull a little short, just like Florida was doing. What’s up with this vault today? Not her best. 9.800 
5. Cheek – Didn’t stick her yfull this time with a step, so neither team vaulting quite like we have seen so far today. 9.925
6. Rogers – Probably the best landing of this back half of the rotation, just a small hop for her. Great power. 9.900.

After 2: Georgia 98.900, Florida 98.800.
Anyone’s game at this point. Neither team vaulted particularly well. I saw a lot of short landings for both teams and not as many sticks as we have been seeing. The scores are fine, of course, but I expected to see a crop of more powerful vaults, even if the landings were a little January. It could have been better.

Florida looked just as strong as, perhaps a bit stronger than, Georgia did on the bars themselves, but the lack of sticks from Sloan, Macko, and Johnson account for the difference in the team scores right now. All three could easily have been in the 9.9s, and the team needs them to be.

Rotation 3: Florida on beam, Georgia on floor
Moment of truth for Georgia in this rotation. If they can keep pace after floor, then they really are in this meet.

Florida beam:
1. Spicer – missed. 9.500.
2. Johnson – Just a minor correction in the middle of her walkover + bhs series but keeps it going, leaps look excellent, full turn, sticks her side aerial to layout full. Strong routine. 9.825. Hm, I thought it was very nice.
3. Boyce – connects walkover to bhs well. It’s a perfectly fine, solid routine, as it has been for a few weeks, switch leap could have some questions asked about it, step back on the gainer full. 9.800. 
4. Hunter – Small correction on the punch front mount, wobble on her loso that almost looked like shades of Super Six. I don’t like when she wobbles on that skill because I want to compliment its impressive amplitude. Gets it together for the dismount with a stick on the double back. 9.900. Hm, she had a small wobble on the mount and a fairly significant one on the series, but sticking a double back will do that for you.
5. Sloan – Excellent opening bhs + loso, good control in her aerial to scale, making it look not as teetering as when most perform it. Leaps are excellent, as is full turn, side aerial has a small correction, hops her feet together on the double full. Nice. 9.900.
6. M Caquatto – Oh, Macko. Wobbling on choreography is a big no no. Strong loso, another who has to make a small adjustment on her series, in between the aerial and swingdown, it’s just a little unexpectedly tight and tentative, but nothing major here. Stuck gainer full. 9.950. Or that. OK. Would they have given her a 10 if not for a wobble on her dance? 

Georgia floor:
1. Earls – Rudi + bhs + loso mount is hit, low on the double pike with a lunge back, didn’t get a ton of height on that, secure double back with that low chest monster again. 9.825. 
2. Hires – Small lack of control on her double pike mount but fine overall, second straddle jump looked slightly wonky, pulls around her front layout after the front full, double back dismount looked like she might struggle to get it around to her feet but she did, low chest landing. 9.850.
3. Reynolds – Hits rudi + loso, low in the double pike with a step forward, straddle jumps, 1.5 + layout is the dismount (possible stumble – ill-timed buffer there). 9.775.
4. Box – Strong double pike to start, wolf jump to straddle, a little squatted in her double tuck landing, 1.5 to layout to finish. Places to take deductions but strongest floor routine for them so far. 9.900.
5. Rogers – This routine is choreographically my bread and butter, large lunge out of 2.5 mount, holds  onto her 1.5 + layout that looked like it might have been short but she doesn’t budge. Low chest in the double pike dismount. 9.875.
6. Jay – Double tuck to open is fine – no complaints, wolf full + straddle full, 1.5+layout+ stag is executed well, this is their best floor routine, so let’s watch where the score goes after Box got a 9.900. Secure double pike. Good routine. 9.900 as well. OK. 

We’re seeing some exos now, BDG on beam – has to redo her series, she has some pretty qualities on beam but I don’t see this coming into the lineup. Are we ever going to see Colussi-Pelaez in this lineup? Persinger is exoing on floor with some Parkettes hair. Get into my life immediately, Sarah Persinger. Punch front into a short double back. She’s not quite ready yet in all this tumbling. 

Scores were forgiving for both teams in that rotation.
After 3: Georgia 148.250, Florida 148.175
Anything can happen still. Eeek. This is exciting, people. In a close meet, the edge always goes to the home team ending on floor.

I thought Florida looked tentative in that beam rotation, wobbles where we don’t expect to see wobbles, corrections here and there. Scores gave them the benefit. It was a perfectly nice rotation, nothing problematic by any means, but not what we will expect to see moving forward. Georgia also got some benefit of the doubt in those floor routines, especially in terms of the chest position, which I don’t think was taken as much as it could have been. Also a couple landing issues in the front half of the lineup.

Rotation 4: Florida on floor, Georgia on beam
Florida floor:
1. Boyce – front double full mount, a little stumbly out of it?, just stays in bounds on her 1.5 + layout, short on the landing of it but holds on with a small correction, rudi is OK to finish, but there were issues. 9.875.
2. M Caquatto – OK, let’s make sure this isn’t as scary as last time. A little under on the front double full landing but just a tiny adjustment corrects it, front full + front pike is very good, music is a little too big for the choreo, 1.5 to layout dismount is hit. She’s not quite there on the tumbling yet, but it’s a big improvement, obviously. 9.950. Oh, heavens. 
3. Spicer – Hits pike full mount, it’s a staggered landing but well done. Hit front full + pike comfortably, a little short on her split full 180, low chest on the double pike but a hit routine. 9.975. We’ll need to discuss this.
4. Sloan – Sticks her front double full, very minor argument on the split full for her as well, but it obviously won’t matter, slightly low in double pike, 1.5 to front layout is excellent to finish in a very well-performed routine. Let’s see what they do with it. Probably a 12. 10.000. Well, we saw it coming. She has done better floor routines. Better than Macko’s and Spicer’s, so where else to go?
5. Hunter – Double layout is tremendous as we would all expect, as is the middle pass, hits her straddles, let’s see if she can get this dismount, pretty strong open double back but a small slide back out of it. If she doesn’t get a 10 but Bridget does, she’ll be pissed. 10.000. I am actually kind of thrilled because of how much uproar there will be about this. It’s like Christmas to me. Oh, the beautiful outrage.
6. B Caquatto – front double full mount to front tuck, hits her rudi to split jump, it’s a lovely routine but that’s kind of academic now, sticks the double pike dismount. A really nice routine for her that will get overlooked. 9.950.

Georgia beam:
1. Broussard – Way short on her loso and she comes off the beam, no way to save that one. The rest of the routine was quite nice, as often happens, but they’ll have to fight to stay in this now. 9.150.
2. Reynolds – Just saves her front tuck, one foot was off and she stumbles but hangs on, cannot hang onto the loso after it though, so this score will be even lower than Broussard’s. Georgia not handling this tight road position so far in this rotation.
3. Box – Wobbles on her loso series but stays on, otherwise looks secure through the switch and the straddle 3/4, clean aerial, low on her 1.5 dismount with a hop, but at least it’s a hit. 9.800. 
4. Rogers – lovely splits, small adjustment on her loso series it looked like she didn’t have to take. Can’t hang onto her bhs 3/4 to stag and falls onto the beam, but gets right back up. Uh oh. Bhs 1/1 into dismount is solid. 9.800. -Note to those asking, she covered it really well, so you’d have to know her routine to know that she basically fell because she just rested with her chest on the beam for a second and then got back up.
5. Cheek – Does an excellent loso during the 10 celebration. Well done on the focus there. Big wobble on her side aerial, but otherwise a strong showing. Hangs onto the stick on her gainer full. 9.800
6. Earls – Hits her two layouts series, switch to straddle 1/4 is good, small correction on side aerial, but this is their best beam routine of the rotation. Sticks her double back. Oh, at least give Georgia a bone at this point. 

Florida just got a 49.875 on floor. A 49.875 PEOPLE. 
Final score: Florida 198.050, Georgia 196.700

I probably should be switching over to the Alabama meet like a good fan, but I need to compose some thoughts about this. The scoring was sort of playfully high before the final rotation, but that floor score was pretty frustrating. And here’s why: those were some excellent floor routines. Beautiful routines that deserve high scores, 9.9s certainly for Sloan, Hunter, and Bridgey. But now we’re not talking about how beautiful and well-executed those routines were; we are picking them apart because the scores were too enthusiastic. It’s a case of the judges taking the attention away from the gymnasts and bringing it onto themselves, when the attention should be paid to the gymnasts. No one should notice the judges. They should disappear. And here they clearly haven’t.

This has been coming for a couple weekends. The scores have been high, high, high. This was a very good floor rotation for Florida, but they can do better. Everyone in this floor rotation can perform a stronger routine than they just did. The judges have not allowed them room to do any better, which is the problem. We’ve peaked in January in terms of score, and now there’s nowhere left to go.

OK, I’ll probably have more thoughts later, but I’ll turn my attention to Alabama and Arkansas. Alabama has a pretty big lead after the first rotation with a 49.300 on vault. Milliner is back, but Demeo led the scoring with a 9.925.

We’re now seeing Demeo on bars, I saw one missed handstand and a strong DLO to finish, and Arkansas had a low yfull with a large step.

Bailey – UB – pretty jaeger, has to muscle up her handstand after the shoot to high bar, but sticks her double back in a strong routine.

Canizaro – VT – Stronger than I’ve seen from her most of the time, low chest in yfull landing and a small step.

Sims – UB – leg separation in her clear hip, and on the DLO with a step. That may be just how her legs go because the calves were apart throughout.

Williams – VT – Good distance on her yhalf, step forward and a little crunched in the knees on landing

Jacob – UB – Nice Ray, and her final handstand looked better than it has in the past – an area where she has had problems. Best I’ve seen from her this year on bars. 9.900

Wellick – VT – Great power on her yfull -stick or a near-stick.  Really strong vault. 9.875.

Jetter – UB – Hits Ray, clean bail and stalder shoot, hops forward on her double front, but pretty good. Could have been in 9.9 contention with a stick.

Grable – VT – Marry me. Round off 1/2 on pike half and a stick to go with it. Excellent vault. 9.950. Deserved 

Clark takes a fall on her tkatchev. Wasn’t expecting that one, but they won’t need her score since they already have a 49.300, which is all they really need at this point. Grable sends Arkansas to a 49.175 on vault to erase counting a lower score in the first position. Beers performs a good exhibition on bars with a step back on her double front that should be in contention for the lineup.

After 2: Alabama 98.600, Arkansas 97.925 
Watching the people in the crowd dance. It’s just so upsetting.


Rotation 3: Alabama on beam, Arkansas on floor
Milliner – BB – Clean walkover, switch split looks good, right on with the loso series, she has turned into a very reliable leadoff. Hits front toss, maybe off to the side a little on double full but stuck. Very good routine.  9.875.

Zumwalde – FX – Very low on whip to double pike mount with a lunge forward. Love that we’re seeing a whip to double pike though. Just pulls around the layout on her middle pass, not quite there on her straddle 1/2, rudi dismount is low with a hop to the side. Won’t be a big score.

DeMeo – BB – GAGE front handspring mount is good, hits walkover and whipped layout, definitely solid on her acro this week, splits are excellent, just the dismount left, small hop on the double pike. Another really strong routine. 9.900  

Dillard – FX – Pulls around double pike mount but low with a lunge back, 1.5 + layout middle pass is solid, and other than the mount it was a pretty clean routine. They’ll be fine counting that.

Bailey – BB – Haven’t we outlawed being “this girl is on fire” on beam yet? Hits her loso series and side aerial, a little tighter than Milliner or Demeo, but she didn’t give away much until her tuck jump 1/1, with a pretty big wobble. Hop on double full dismount.

Nelson – FX – Pretty good double pike to open, small staggery stumble, this is the first gymnastics I’ve seen from her in NCAA competition, and she has potential. I’m liking what I’m seeing. Controlled double back dismount.

Sims – BB – Fine walkover to split jump to open, good clean knees in her loso series – like to see that. Switch split hits 180. Lots of talent on beam, but does windmill on her straddle 1/4 so gives away a bit more than she might have, and then a short double back dismount with a large lunge – but still, the potential is there in heaps.

Elswick – FX – Strong, high double pike to start, and hits her 1.5 + layout, that wolf full looked a little under wolfy. That was like a wolf cub. Low chest on the double back dismount, but a good routine.

Clark – BB – A little under on her loso series but does well to not give away a wobble, front toss. Strong full turn. Really nice and high on the 1.5 dismount with a stick. Good finish.

Wellick – FX – A little bouncy on her double pike mount but it was nice and high. A little slide on her front full in the middle pass but stays in bounds, low on the double tuck dismount with a lunge forward. Won’t be a big score, but a solid performance.

Jacob – BB – Looked like perhaps the smallest of corrections after her switch, layouts were excellent. Her barani is her barani. Love it. Holds onto the stick on the 1.5 with a little arm wiggle. 9.925.

Grable – FX – She basically goes completely out of frame on her mount. It was so good we didn’t see any of it except for a secure landing. Her loso on the middle pass gets me every time. Strong double pike. Barely needs to be said that it was the best floor routine for the team.

Alright, I can’t stick around for the final rotation, so that’s it for me, but I hope you enjoy it as well as talking about all the days 10s. See you back here tomorrow!  

The Weekend Ahead – January 24th-26th

The Oklahoma Sooners remain #1 in the country for a second week but bled much of their lead with a mid-196 at the last meet, so the top spot is in a moderate amount of jeopardy entering this weekend. LSU is the closest contender, and if the Tigers outscore the Sooners by .325 or more this weekend, they will jump ahead. Other teams also have outside shots at #1, but LSU’s margin the most attainable. That #3-#9 section with Florida, Utah, Michigan, Georgia, Alabama, UCLA, and Nebraska is so tightly packed so early in the season that these teams could end up in any order come Monday.

Be sure to be on point with the punctuality tomorrow because the showcase meet, Georgia visiting Florida, begins at 7:00 ET. There’s no dawdling around refreshing scores from some ratty little tri-meet meet to start the day this week; it’s action-packed, right from the start. I expect this home opener to be Florida’s breakout meet where the big scores begin flying for the whole team at the same time, and while Georgia is just coming off the second-highest team score in the country, beating Florida in Florida is another issue. If the Gym Dogs are going to keep things interesting, they’ll need to do it through the landings (sticking more vaults, controlling more floor passes) and deliver the same ridiculous bars rotation from Monday.    

Later in the day, LSU is hosting Auburn and looking for the kind of score that could push them past Oklahoma. To do that, the control of the floor tumbling will have to be far stronger than it was last week. At the same time, Alabama will be trying to rebound from last week’s flatline of 9.7s and will hope to have full lineups out there that can recapture some of the controlled power we saw in their season opener. 

http://www.soonersports.com/mediaPortal/embed.swf

Disappointing realization of the week: Kelly Garrison’s married name is not, in fact, Kelly Garrison-Thunderbird. That’s a shame.

We also have a fancy little Saturday for ourselves this weekend with Michigan and Oklahoma both in early action. This is Oklahoma’s road debut, so I’ll be watching to see how their routines are interpreted outside of Norman and whether any of that bumpiness from last weekend filters into this week. Michigan is also quietly making an assault on the rankings, scoring a 196.800 last weekend for a performance that was just sort of fine by their standards. Sampson definitely arrived in that meet, but if the Wolverines can get a high 196 even when Natalie Beilstein is just sort of 9.800ish and they’re counting a 9.5 on beam, 197s seem exceptionally attainable.  

In night action, UCLA and Utah square off in what I’m currently calling “The Rumble Where Everyone Gets an 11,” but I’ll hold off bestowing that title until after the meet, just in case. Maybe I’ll be surprised. It has happened before. Both of these teams need to stop counting falls, like now, so that’s the main focus of this meet. Normally I would be saying things like, “If they can get a 49.400 on bars, then it means that the other team blah, blah, blah,” but no. Just hit beam. Please.



Top 25 Schedule

Friday – 1/24/14
6:30 ET/3:30 PT – Brown @ [18] Rutgers
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [6] Georgia @ [3] Florida
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [22] Kent State @ Western Michigan
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [25] Cal @ [23] Arizona State
7:30 ET/4:30 PT – [20] Kentucky @ Missouri
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [14] Auburn @ [2] LSU
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [9] Nebraska @ Iowa
8:30 ET/5:30 PT – [10] Arkansas @ [7] Alabama
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Southern Utah @ [15] Boise State
10:00 ET/7:00 PT – [21] Washington @ Seattle Pacific

Saturday – 1/25/14
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – [23] Ohio State @ [5] Michigan
6:00 ET/3:00 PT – [1] Oklahoma @ [17] Arizona
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [11] Illinois @ [13] Minnesota
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – Air Force @ [18] Denver
9:30 ET/6:30 PT – [8] UCLA @ [4] Utah
10:00 ET/7:00 PT – Iowa State @ [16] Oregon State

Sunday – 1/26/14
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – [12] Stanford, San Jose State, Utah State @ UC Davis

The Land of 9.9s

It’s all about the 9.9s. To win a national title, it usually takes about 50% of routines receiving 9.900 or greater. Last year in Super Six, Florida scored 9.9+ in 58% of routines, and they needed every bit of it after beam. We’re quite some distance from Nationals right now, but many teams appear well on their way to vacationing in the land of 9.9s already. 

In fact, over the first two real weekends of the season, the 9.9s have been flying. So, for this week’s quick look at statistics, I checked out some of the destinations of those 9.9 flights. Which teams are getting the most 9.9s, how many are they getting, and how does that compare with precedent? 

I limited this to the current top fourteen teams because they are the ones that have been putting up a measurable number of 9.9s. After that it’s more like . . . one. For each team, I took the number of routines scoring at least 9.900 as a percentage of the total routines competed.

% of routines scoring 9.900 or greater
1. UCLA [8] – 31%
2. Oklahoma [1] – 29%
3. Florida [3] – 25%
3. Utah [4] – 25%
5. Georgia [6] – 24%
6. LSU [2] – 23%
7. Minnesota [13] – 17%
7. Michigan [5] – 17%
9. Alabama [7] – 15%
10. Nebraska [9] – 13%  
10. Auburn [14] – 13%
12. Stanford [12] – 11%
13. Arkansas [10] – 8%
13. Illinois [11] – 8%
AVERAGE: 18%

It’s worth noting that both of the top two teams in this table have yet to compete away, which is clearly a significant factor in the results. UCLA and Minnesota have noticeably outperformed their current rankings in the 9.9 table, and usually when a team does that it means they are on track to improve that ranking soon as they get rid of the nasty little low numbers bringing the team score down for the time being.

After just two weeks, when routines (and particularly landings) are usually still a little ragged, the top fourteen teams are already recording an average of 18% of routines in the 9.9+ range. Last year during Nationals, that number was 24.5% for the twelve teams present, which is not that far ahead. And it’s only January.

As a point of reference, here are the same teams’ numbers from the same point last season. (The same point is judged by number of meets, so this is Georgia’s % after four meets, but Oklahoma’s % after two meets, to mimic the current sample from this year.)

% of routines scoring 9.900 or greater (2013)
1. UCLA – 27%
2. Alabama – 25%
3. Florida – 21%
4. LSU – 19%
4. Nebraska – 19%
6. Georgia – 17%
7. Michigan – 15%
8. Utah – 8%
8. Stanford – 8%
10. Oklahoma – 6%
11. Minnesota – 4%
12. Arkansas – 2%
12. Auburn – 2%
12. Illinois – 2%
AVERAGE: 12%

Only Alabama and Nebraska had a higher % of 9.9s at this point last season. Every other team has increased the number this year, some quite significantly. Interestingly, UCLA led the pack at that point as well, and also started last season with two consecutive home meets. The overall jump in average is also significant, from 12% to 18% of routines receiving 9.9s at this point in the season. In raw numbers, that’s 47 more routines scoring 9.9 across fourteen teams in two (or three) weeks.