[11] Illinois @ [4] Michigan Live Blog

Let’s get going!

The meet begins at 4:00 ET/1:00 PT.

If you’re a BTN Plus subscriber, you can watch the meet here. Scores are here.

Michigan comes in with an excellent ranking of #4, but with the teams above them all hitting (pretty much) this weekend, they’re going to need a score well into the 197s to hope to move up any higher. The Wolverines come in currently in a tie with Utah, who scored a 196.725 on Friday, so they’ll need better than that to retain the #4 spot. Illinois is currently right with teams like Arkansas, Penn State, and Oregon State in the bottom part of the top 10 (these teams in these spots!) and could jump ahead of some of them with just a regular hit today.

Sit back. We’ve got some time. Intros starting now.

Lauren Marinez clomping out in that boot. Sadness. Are we ever going to get to see some of these freshmen for Michigan in competition? No? Probably. I want India McPeak to get in on beam, but things have been going well, and I also don’t want them messing with a good thing.

Sachi Sugiyama told you to cheer for sticks. So you better do it.

Rotation 1- Michigan on vault, Illinois on bars
Michigan vault: 
1. Casanova – OK yfull – leg break in the air and a pretty large hop back.
2. Parker – yfull – also had a notable leg break in the air – took one medium step back and then another step to salute.
3. Brown – Some bent knees as she made contact, but legs together in the air, pretty large hop back. Haven’t brought the sticks yet. 
4. Chiarelli – Big big amplitude on her vault, best height so far – but another with a hop back and some small piking.
5. Artz – Strong distance on the yfull with legs together throughout – small amount of piking and a medium slide. They’re doing fine so far, but the landings could be more controlled. These aren’t tiny steps.
6 Sugiyama – very strong y1.5. Is she getting more distance than before or is it just the angle? Step forward as usual, but great in the air and best vault on the team in this rotation. 

Illinois bars:
1. Naleway – Solid shaposh with small leg break – nice bail and good finishing position on the full turn – stuck double back. Pretty clean start. They’ll take that any day.
2. Buchanan – Giant full (OK finish but perhaps late) to a lovely pak with legs together – toe shoot back to high bar – sticks the DLO. Another strong routine. This is Illinois’s best event, and it’s showing.
3. Lyons – first handstand was borderline – great piked jaeger with big height – shootover – shoot back to high bar – rises high on her DLO dismount – better than those before – small movement on landing. 
4. O’Connor – good first hs and finish on full – HIGH tkatchev (but toes) – clean on her transitions – very strong DLO with stick/near-stick. Best handstands of the group so far.
5. Kato – short on first hs – nice half turn – excellent high piked jaeger – small leg break on pak but still pretty – good final hs – lovely DLO in the air but landed a little short with a step forward.
6. Horth – hit first handstand and an excellent shaposh half – very high piked gienger  – hitting her handstands precisely – tuck full dismount is nice in the air with a small step back. Had to go back and watch this one again to see where they came up with 9.725. Still not sure. Anyone?

After 1: Michigan 49.125, Illinois 49.000
Michigan was fine on vault. A few form breaks early in the rotation, but the biggest reason they didn’t score higher was leaving so many landings on the table. No sticks, and quite a few of the competitors gave away .100 on landing. They are still in line for a good score, but this rotation can do better. Illinois is lovely on bars. Clean routines, mostly solid handstands, some huge releases and transitions. The early scores seemed slightly conservative, though not by a huge margin, but they were building.

In other news, Austin Sheppard is doing bars, so things are getting better.

Rotation 2 – Michigan on bars, Illinois on vault
Michigan bars:
1. Christopherson – clean Ray to start – solid bails with legs together – toe shoot – tuck full with a decent hop forward. 
2. Williams – good first hs – nice toe point on her jaeger – hits bail cleanly – one questionable handstand in there and just a small step on the DLO.
3. Artz – Good half turn into piked jaeger – short on the hs afterward – bail looks fine – huge height on her DLO with a smallish hop back. I think the judges are being stingier on handstands today than we usually see.
4. Sugiyama – excellent first hs and strong giant full – hits piked gienger – perfect leg form on the bail as well. These handstands are great – good form on tuck full dismount as well – small hop back. Great routine.
5. Brown – Love her line – huge Ray – hitting these handstands – another strong pak – half turn on low bar – back up – great form on DLO – flings out a little and a larger hop back.
6. Sheppard – We’ve missed you. hits first hs – strong full turn – huge taktchev as always – hits her straddle back well – squatty landing on her double front with a lunge, but great on the bars. She’s back. 

Illinois vault:
1. Foley – high yfull – knees bent and a hop back. 
2. Horth – Good body position on her full – not as much distance as some of the Michigan vaulters – pretty big step back.
3. Lyons – Some messy knees on that yfull and not nearly the height that we’ve seen from the other vaulters today – small hop.
4. Buchanan – Much bigger height than the others – off direction somewhat and a hop, but the dynamics were stronger.
5. O’Connor – Small leg separation on her block but another with strong dynamics – very good height  and distance – clean form in the air – small hop.
6. Kanchanalaveerat – Just because they needed a sixth vault – just a layout that was pretty piked and a hop forward.

After 2: Michigan 98.225, Illinois 97.775
Scoring on bars has been a little conservative today. Sugiyama was truly excellent, as were Brown and Sheppard, though they gave away more on the dismounts to account for their scores. This is a strong rotation and looks better with Sheppard back in. Brooke Parker also hit in exhibition, though had a couple short handstands. Illinois did not show the dynamics that Michigan did on most of their vaults (Buchanan and O’Connor are exceptions), which kept the scores down. They also didn’t bring the sticks today and had just the five competitors with 10.0 SVs.

Now Michigan goes to beam. Let’s keep this trend up from the first two meets.  

Rotation 3 – Michigan on beam, Illinois on floor
Michigan beam:
1. Casanova – solid punch front to beat jump – she just looks a little tentative finishing these skills like the full turn, but very nice loso series. slightly crooked on switch side but hit securely – good straddle jump to back tuck – gainer pike with a bend at the hips to hold the stick.
2. Sugiyama – large correction on loso but she stays on – a little tight in switch side but hit – strong pike jump to back tuck – 2.5 dismount is very good with a small step. She pulled it back after the early mistake. 
3. Williams – Clean on her opening side aerial – hits full turn – pulls around split jump full – no real wobbles so far – just a slight check on her loso series – 1.5 dismount with some crossed legs and a step forward. Michigan keeps hitting beam.
4. Brown – love the extension in her legs – solid loso series – switch to split jump are hit and 180 – small correction before her side somi and another on landing it, but both tiny – aerial to beat jump – full turn – Good stick or stickish on the 2/1 dismount. Two or three very small checks -borderline if anything – but lovely form throughout.
5. Artz – Pike jump to straddle 3/4 is very nice – aerial and slightly slow connecting out of it but kept moving so it’s fine – full turn is nice – front toss is perfection – front 1.5 dismount with a stick. Great routine.
6. Chiarelli – strong bhs loso – beat jump then pauses – repeats into the straddle 3/4 and hits it – side aerial is confident and secure – full turn – round off to a stuck double back. It’s another hit beam rotation for Michigan. Look at this.

Illinois floor:
1. Naleway – hits double pike mount (flexed feet but secure enough) straddles to wolf for her dance elements – layout half to front layout middle pass – long pause before final pass – but everything is clean enough. No major issues. Love the front stepout out of her dismount.
2. Foley – double tuck with good form in the air – slides back though – punch rudi middle pass ismore secure – straddle jump full to wolf full – got them around well – 1.5 to a front tuck, another solid routine without big lift on the tumbling though. Just pulled that tuck around.
3. Horth – Rudi to straddle jump opening pass – front layout to front tuck middle pass – was that supposed to be two layouts? – switch ring – 1.5 to front tuck dismount.  Very similar to previous two routines in quality aside from that odd middle pass.
4. O’Connor – solid front through to double back opening pass – very secure double pike with medium chest position – as on vault, she shows her bigger power in this routine – rudi to finish – secure landings on her tumbling – and amplitude, should be easily the best score so far.
5. Buchanan – Solid double pike to start – switch side to straddle full – straddle looked a little short – 1.5 to layout – some bent knees in the 1.5 – lands short on her double tuck dismount with a stumble forward – that’s a shame because she can be a bigger score than that. 
6. No sixth floor worker.

Christopherson in exhibition for Michigan comes off on her loso series at the top.

After 3: Michigan 147.475, Illinois 146.525
Suddenly, Michigan has got this thing on beam. There were a few errors here and there, but the wobble from Sugiyama was the only time anyone looked like coming off the beam. Nicole Artz was beautiful and Chiarelli was solid. For Illinois, they were doing perfectly fine on floor, but then had an issue from Buchanan in the fifth spot for a lower score and then couldn’t put up a 6th competitor, so the score probably looks worse than the rotation was.

Rotation 4 – Michigan on floor, Illinois on beam
Michigan floor:
1. Williams – Lindsay would like us to shimmy with her. No thank you. I will not be doing that. Good form and landing position on opening double pike – 1.5 to layout middle pass goes right to the edge but stays in – and solid on the final double tuck as well. Pretty good chest position in these landings compared to some of the teams this weeked.
2. Brown – bounces a little landing her opening double pike – great high 1.5 into layout middle pass – good positions on her split elements as well, not cheating those – solid double tuck.
3. Parker – double arabian mount with a very large bounce forward – good contained form in the air, though – 1.5 through to 1.5 middle pass – good height on double pike, just a minor slide back – great power, just lacking control which will bring the score down.
4. Sugiyama – very secure landing on the pike full in – it is a staggered landing, but that happens on the piked full in – front full to layout middle pass – very solid double pike dismount – perfect landing and good chest position. Very well done.
5. Chiarelli – Tuck full looks great in the air – just lands a little short – 1.5 to layout is solid – switch side to straddle full are both hit – also a little short on her double pike with a hop forward. She can be stronger on those landings, but it will still be a solid score.
6. Artz – Another very good piked full in – she keeps her legs together on that unlike a lot of people – dance elements are clearly up to 180 as well – sticks the front layout to front full – she’s in “I want to breath but I have to smile” mode before the dismount – solid double pike. Should be another big score. She gives the least away in dance elements and securely landed all her passes.

Illinois beam:
1. O’Connor – press handstand to split mount – loso series looked solid but wobble moving out of it – small check on full turn – switch to straddle 1/4 – straddle jump to loso is secure – a few early breaks but solid after that – stuck gainer full.
2. Foley -fluid full turn – sloppy legs on bhs loso series and looked like she should be off line but she pulled it back with only a minimal correction – minor check on aerial – sticks gainer full.
3. Buchanan – standing loso is secure – straddle 3/4 is nice as well – full turn – bent knees on bhs loso series with a bend to the side – switch side is a little short – but sticks the 1.5 dismount very well.
4. Naleway -solid position on switch to straddle 1/4 – bhs loso series. Sloppy knees is a theme in this rotation – huge wobble on the full turn but stays on – solid aerial – straddle 3/4 is short of 180 – sticks her front full dismount.
5. Horth – nice full turn – smallish check on loso series – back leg looked a little short on switch – leg flies up on aerial as well – she has a pretty look on beam just seems tentative on these skills for small checks – sticks gainer full.
6. Kato – medium wobble on loso series, but her form is stronger than the rest of the team – another wobble on full turn – hits aerial – strong split jump to a pretty believable sheep jump. Sticks gainer pike. Two wobbles in there, but the most refined routine on the team.

FINAL: Michigan 196.850, Illinois 195.475
That performance is enough to keep them ahead of Utah in the rankings. Another really solid performances. There was nothing in that meet I would consider a major error, let alone a fall. A couple medium things, a couple small things. The main thing is that Michigan looks so much more prepared than some of the other teams we have seen struggling so far. They were vault landings away from hitting 197 today. We’re seeing a floor exhibition from McPeak now. She bounces out of bounds on her opening double back. Illinois did not have a poor performance, but they gave away a few too many tight errors on beam and then didn’t have enough top level routines on vault and floor to make up for some weaker performances.

Thanks for reading!

Friday Live Blog – UCLA @ Utah, Florida @ Alabama

Friday, January 23

7:00 ET/4:00 PT – Western Michigan @ Kent State (Scores) (Stream)
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – Central Michigan @ Ball State (Scores)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – Florida @ Alabama (Scores) (ESPN3
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – UCLA @ Utah (Scores) (Pac-12 Network)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – SEMO, TWU @ Oklahoma (Scores)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – Arkansas @ Auburn (Scores) (ESPN3)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – Lindenwood @ Northern Illinois (Scores) (CSL)
8:30 ET/5:30 PT – Missouri @ LSU (Scores) (ESPN3)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Southern Utah @ Boise State (Scores)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Utah State @ BYU (Scores) (BYUtv)
10:00 ET/7:00 PT – UC Davis @ Sacramento State (Scores) (Stream)

UCLA, Utah, Florida, Alabama, Oklahoma, LSU, Arkansas, and Auburn all going at the same time. What more could you want? Them all going separately so you could watch each of them? I know. Me too.

I’ll be here to start blogging at 8:00 ET/5:00 PT. As I mentioned yesterday, I’ll be doing a live blog for UCLA/Utah followed by a not-live blog for Florida/Alabama. It should be a good one.

Stay tuned!

Lineup notes for Alabama: Kayla Williams has been moved to the leadoff position on beam. Lauren Beers and Katie Bailey are also in on floor. No Brannan on floor tonight. For Florida, Fassbender is back in on beam instead of Dancose-Giambattisto.

In Utah’s tentative lineups, Tutka is supposed to be coming back on floor (important step), and Partyka is supposed to come in on vault, and I also approve of that. UCLA also has tentative lineups out, but like that does any good. There will be 16 changes in the next 10 minutes anyway. But for now, the news is no Peng on vault this week. Peszek is back in the AA, which had to be expected.

Does the Pac-12 Network always show the exact same program before gymnastics? I’ve seen this same football play already a thousand times this year.

“The two most successful programs in the history of collegiate gymnastics.” What measurement are we using for that? How does Suzanne feel about that proclamation?

We’re profiling the Dabritz/Peszek AA showdown now. Georgia Dabritz in the AA. It’s like bizarro gymnastics.

Is “One attempt per competitor” really necessary as part of the rules? Obviously.

Rotation 1 – Utah on vault, UCLA on bars
Utah vault:
1. Lewis – no Partyka after all – yfull, nice form and distance, quite clean, medium bounce back. 9.825.
2. Rowe – yfull – could use a little bit more height, but similar landing to Lewis – good distance and smallish bounce back. 9.875. It’s going to be one of those days.
3. Hughes – 1.5 – hits it – knees are quite bent and comes in a little short with a step back. 9.825. 
4. Delaney – full – great height and distance as always – strong form – medium hop to the side. 9.900.
5. Wilson – full – Just meh but her standards – piking and comes in short, fighting for the stick – bends to try to hold it. 9.900. BAHAHAHAHAHA. This score.
6. Dabritz – full this time – given up on the 1.5? Great form in the air, bounce in place – medium feet apart on landing. 9.950.

UCLA bars:
1. Francis – slight arch on first hs, hits shaposh small leg break, excellent shoot back to high bar, late on giant full turn but sticks the double pike. Nice start. 9.825. 
2. Honest – She just Shayla-ed her mount! Back up now, close on tkatchev catch and has to muscle out of it – toes flexed on most skills but some good handstands – large lunge forward on dismount. Shame. 8.750.
3. Mossett – does well to hit her 1/2 turn to jaeger – hits her toes on the bar swinging through! Close on pak and can’t cast out of it. Early disaster for UCLA. Tuck full dismount – low and hop forward. Oh, UCLA. 8.525. Counting an 8.525. They’re basically out it already.
4. DeJesus – good first hs, very late giant full, particularly crazy legs on the gienger – hits bail – low on tuck full and hop forward. Not her strongest. 9.725. 
5. Peng – Jim says UCLA has been a mess so far. Night of honesty. Great on the bhardwaj and shaposh 1/2 this time – nearly sticks her DLO with just a small shuffle. Lovely stuff. 9.900.
6. Peszek – a little tight on first hs – GREAT giant full turn and gienger – solid pak – hitting all the subsequent handstands – one of her best DLOs in the air – not as flung out – looks like a small shuffle on landing.  9.900.

Utah hit that vault rotation. They can be better in the landings. They gave up quite a bit. And some of the scores were silly. 9.900 is too high for Wilson piking and bending to hold the landing like that. They did all they needed to do, though, since UCLA already had a ghoulish nightmare of horrors on bars. Counting an 8.750 and just a 48.100 for the rotation. That’s a ridiculous score. Peng and Peszek were strong, but it didn’t matter at that point. What is happening?

After 1: Utah 49.450, UCLA 48.100

In other news, Scaman got a 10 this week. She’s always in the running for it with a stick because her full is crazy good. 49.575 for Oklahoma’s vault.

“Georgia Dabritz used to be just a bars specialist.” When?

No Grips Dabritz counter is on. We’re at two so far, and the rotation hasn’t started. 

Rotation 2 – UCLA on vault, Utah on bars
Utah bars:
1. Hughes – nice half turn – tkatchev is high but seems a little close – short on following hs – hits bail – nice on the last hs – stucks tuck full with staggered landing. 9.775.
2. Wilson – short on first hs – pulls around her giant full – a little wonky – gienger to shootover have improved over the years – still close on the gienger – tuck full dismount as well – hop back. 9.725.
3. Rowe – solid giant full – tkatchev is fine – clean on bail – no major issues so far and hitting handstands well enough – whippy on the DLO with a leg break in the second salto – hop forward. 9.750.
4. Lopez – late on giant full – hits tkatchev – slightly short on bail it appeared – stronger form on DLO – small hop forward. 9.850.
5. Lothrop – food first hs – hits jaeger – more precise in the handstands – not much amplitude on the DLO but a near-stick – small, small hop. 9.900.
6. Dabritz – love that the comaneci is back – weird leg break on the 1/2 turn, hits jaeger – NO GRIPS MENTION – hs look fine – small hop to the side on dismount. 9.875.

UCLA vault:
1. Honest – Solid enough yfull – some piking – medium on height and distance – step back. 9.800.
2. Cipra – Good form – legs glued together throughout – medium hop back – some piking at the end. 9.825. 
3. Irvin – She can stick – landed off to the side and a little staggered, but she held onto the landing. 9.900. 
4. Bynum – Good form on the yhalf – not a lot of distance and a step forward, which would be the major deductions. 9.850. 
5. Peszek – “Nothing matters to Sam.” I think that’s not what you mean. Exceptional power and distance, but one of her bigger hops back. In other news, I want Dom’s shirt. 9.900. 
6. Williams – yfull – comes in short this time and staggered – piking and a step forward. Wonky is the theme of this rotation. A little more sideways than is normal. 9.775.

UCLA gains a tenth on Utah! Only a billion more points to go.
After 2: Utah 98.600, UCLA 97.375

More 10s for Oklahoma. Dowell on bars this time. We’ll need some video happening. 198 WATCH.

How do we feel about reporting people’s GPAs on the broadcast? Not a fan. I have traumatic memories of a biology teacher that used to make everyone announce their grades on each test in front of the whole class, and so any public reporting of academic results makes me squeamish.

Rotation 3 – Utah on beam, UCLA on floor
Utah beam:
1. Wilson – solid on her two losos series – very short back leg on switch split – fine straddle – full turn – very short on split jump as well – 1.5 dismount – medium hop forward. 9.725.
2. Dabritz – Here we go – pretty full turn – clean on the loso series – she still looks nervous as hell but she’s getting it – switch 1/2 is not exactly fully to split – step back – good switch – straddle 1/4 is OK – hop back on double full – another hit beam for Dabritz. New world.
3. Lee – Did she just wobble on choreography? – Also secure on her two losos series – switch and straddle 1/4 are strong – hits side aerial – good double full. She’s such an important addition to this lineup. 9.900.
4. Stover – strong aerial – does well not to give away a wobble – hits bhs loso series with Amanda Spinner level distance between her legs – good switch to straddle 1/4 – solid front toss – round off gainer full – stuck with legs apart. Her best of the year so far. 9.850. 
5. Rowe – switch to straddle 1/4 – Off the beam on her three series – just totally missed and landed on her hip there – comes back with a solid front toss – 1.5 dismount hop forward -9.050.
6. Lothrop – switch side 1/2 to start – hits it better than her switch side, which still amazes me – loso series is secure – switch side now – a little crooked it appeared – switch to straddle 1/4 – 1.5 dismount hop forward. They’re all hopping forward on these 1.5s. 9.825. 

UCLA floor:
1. Pinches -opens with a solid double back – small slide – 1.5 to double full is strong as well – completes the turns on her wolf jumps – secure on the double pike dismount – chest position. “Last year we didn’t see her compete on this event.” False. 9.800.
2. Gerber – solid double tuck mount – (all these double tuck mounts) – I enjoy this routine though – clean through layout and pike in the middle pass – lovely switch ring – chest basically on the ground on her double pike but not much movement on the landing. 9.825. 
3. Francis – whip to double tuck is a shorter landing this week – low and a hop forward – 2.5 middle pass – splits are excellent, which sets this routine apart – she’s also performing it better each time – secure landing on double tuck but also very, very low chest. 9.850. 
4. Bynum – (in for Hall) – short on her DLO with a bounce forward – front tuck through to solid double back – that was nicely done – second double tuck is a little squatty but better on the chest position.She almost snagged Val’s necklace when hugging her and was SCARED to death about it. 9.850.
5. Cipra – Tuck full landing was very solid – still low chest but more secure than previous weeks – clean 1.5 to layout – good switch ring as well – UCLA doesn’t tend to cheat those as much as other teams – landed the double pike this week as well. The team is thrilled. 9.850.
6. Peszek – She just totally had trouble getting into her starting pose. We all saw it, Sam. Good DLO – came in a little shorter than usual but not weak – 1.5 to layout middle pass is great – switch rign to split full – so much better chest position on the double pike but does bounce back. 9.875.

This meet would have been really exciting if UCLA had not melted down on bars in the first rotation. As it is, the whole thing has been pretty anticlimactic. I probably should have watched the Florida/Alabama meet live, but that’s the way things go.

Solid beam rotation for Utah, which shows the improvement over last season. Lee was clearly the class of that rotation, which showed up in the scores.A hit floor rotation for UCLA but no one’s best. So many tumbling passes landed with the head basically on the ground.

Oklahoma fell off the pace a little bit on beam but still looks good for a 198 with a strong floor rotation. 

After 3: Utah 147.725, UCLA 146.625

Rotation 4 – Utah on floor, UCLA on beam
Utah floor:
1. Hughes – Solid double tuck (it’s the day of the double tuck mounts) small bounce – clean 1.5 to layout but drags her foot forward on the landing – 2.5 dismount -pretends she meant to step way out of it. 9.800.
2. Lewis – good split full – wolf full – strong and secure double pike – layout to layout full is also clean – this tumbling is nice so far – UCLA chest on her double tuck – but a strong hit routine. Keep this one in the lineup.
3. Tutka -Strong full in as usual – back where she left off, did well to keep in in bounds – punch rudi second pass is also secure – straddle full wolf full – dismount is double tuck – just didn’t have enough for that pass yet – very short and a stumble forward with multiple steps. 9.600. 
4. Lothrop – tuck full is solid – low and a small slide back – strong 1.5 to layout – also secure on the double pike – just a solid routine all-around. Should get a good score because Utah – good position landing the dismount as well.
5.
6.

UCLA beam:
1. Gerber – strong full turn – clean aerial as well – long pause before series – bhs loso is fine – not much correction – switch to split – does well not to wobble on the side somi since she landed with her chest a little forward – 1.5 dismount step forward. Good. Leg form and split positions were a highlight compared to some of the Utah routines. 9.675. Did she miss SV? Not sure what the deal was there. 
2. Craddock – full turn – aerial looked like it would be fine but then kept wobbling and kept wobbling – tries again and does almost the same thing – no acro series in this routine – side aerial to front handspring she attempts to add to get her series – another wobble – side aerial to full dismount – huge step to the side. Another disaster routine for UCLA. 9.125. 
3. DeJesus – Strong aerial – major wobble on loso series as the leg flies up – small pause on her dance element combo but should be OK – front toss is secure – confident L turn – front full dismount with a hop forward. OK, but did have the big wobble. “Clean routine,” says Amanda. Except for the big wobble. UCLA filing a hundred inquiries about this rotation scoring. 9.425. Hm hm hm. 
4. Francis – Excellent side aerial – excellent aerial to bhs as well – great switch to split to wolf – y spin is hit – into dismount now – has to pause a little bit after the aerial and lands her full quite low this time but sticks it. Well done. On replay – it did look like a foot slipped after the aerial and she did amazingly well to still do the dismount. 9.800.
5. Lee – great lift on her switch to split combo – excellent – does her bhs to layout 2 feet and is off to the side and comes off the beam. Disaster rotation in another disaster meet – slightly short on her front tuck with a step back – hits double turn – strong double full dismount. Let’s just pretend this meet never happened.
6.

SORRY about the delay. Computer problems. I’ll be back in service in a second, but suffice to say Dabritz had a strong floor with a step to the side on her triple full, Peszek was pretty much perfect on beam, and then Wilson had a weak floor routine with awkward landings and an OOB.

Final: Utah 196.725, UCLA 194.725
It was on OK meet for Utah. A hit, but still too many mistakes. They were saved in the score by those big vault numbers at the very beginning. For UCLA, let’s just pretend that one never happened. Nothing particularly memorable about that performance in the good ways. Sam Peszek wins the AA. That’s a plus?

In other news, Oklahoma got a 197.850 for the biggest score of the year so far. Would have been higher if not for counting an OOB from Capps on floor.

Short break, and then we’ll do Florida and Alabama OK?

I’ve already been checking the scores because please. Like I could stand not knowing what happened, but I’m still interested in seeing how it played out.

FLORIDA vs. ALABAMA
 “Those Gator-chomping gals from the swamp” sounds like a very different show. Ultimate bragging rights? This isn’t the championship.

In other news, Bridget Sloan is injured. WHA???? I didn’t know!

Looks like someone got the notes about the picture for “Courtney’s Keys” being from 2003 for no reason.

Alabama vault:
McNeer comes in a little short with a step forward, which is a shame. She had been sticking the last two weeks. Brannan some piking, not as much distance as others and a small hop back. 9.900 is high for that. Bailey does get excellent amplitude on her half, and good form with a pretty large step forward. Clark does a brilliant vault with great amplitude and form – it’s definitely on the 9.950 side and not the 10 side, but it’s very good. Beers looked strong in the air but was just a little short with a lean and a step. Williams ran through her vault, which I had heard about. At least she didn’t Kramarenko it. They do have three chances. Remember that time Monique De La Torre took 1800 runs and her vault still counted? Once she goes, running even harder than normal, comes in a little short on her 1.5 with a step back. Perfect in the air. 

Florida bars:
Baker‘s ray is truly excellent. She has to muscle up the handstands after the shoot a little bit and had a big cowboy on her double front with the step, but that was not bad. Boyce is a bars worker now, apparently. Strong shaposh to bail combo. Should have been a good score, but the three thousand steps landing the DLO didn’t help. BDG mostly did her usual routine but arched a handstand and took a hop back on the DLO. Still probably would have gone 9.850 in Florida, though right? Caquatto catches her ray close, but everything else looked normal. Hunter arched on her bail and did well to pull it back, but that’s where her deductions come from. Weird errors for Florida tonight. McMurtry doing her dismount with a bars routine around it. Just shorter on some of her handstands than last week.

Rotation 1: Alabama 49.500, Florida 48.950. Scores for Alabama were charitable in that rotation. It was good, but it wasn’t 49.500. Florida had too many mistakes like arched handstands and non-stuck dismounts to expect a much better score, though I was surprised to see so many of those in the 9.7s. Really apparent how much they’re missing Sloan/Macko/Alaina right now.

In other meets, LSU is on pace to go well over 197.

Florida vault:
Wang has a clean yfull with small piking and a hop in place. 9.900 means both teams are getting the same benefit of scores. Spicer performs a good full with solid distance and a medium hop back. Caquatto got zero block on her vault, extremely short and a lunge forward. What is up with you today, girl? Kupets just said the word “horse” in an octave higher than I think exists. Baker would have been excellent with her form, height, and distance but bounced a million feet back. Hunter excellent 1.5 with a step. So let’s talk about how a judge gave that a 10 because, you know, she stepped. McMurtry same vault as last week, but not stuck this time. Brilliant, though, Actually two steps, so it could have been a 9.900, but great.     

Alabama bars:
Brannan has a high jaeger and great toe point and strong on the handstands, just whips her DLO around a little with a pikey second salto and a step. McNeer’s ray is quite nice – just a short handstand or two and fights to hold onto the stick on the DLO. Bailey doing her new routine, which I think is a big improvement. The full out is strong, and it gets rid of the giant full, which was an issue before. Just two steps on the dismount brings this one down. A Sims also brings back the comaneci and follow that up with a weiler 1/2. Points for composition. No points for the crazy leg form on that DLO. Jetter had great handstands but broke leg form on her bail and was close on her ray. She did work out the dismount this week for a stick, though, so that was big. Beers – the leg separations could be not so pronounced on the shaposh to bail and she was very late on the half turn, and then I’m so glad the camera cut away as she landed.   

LSU gets a huge floor score to finish with a 197.350. Their best of the season so far.

After 2: Alabama 98.725, Florida 98.450
Florida’s final two vaults were the best routines of the meet so far, but overall it’s clear both teams are getting the same benefit of the scoring. Alabama gave away fewer major issues on bars. Their problems were more in the leg form department than the arched handstands and steps department, so that accounts for the lead so far.

Alabama beam:
Did you know the beam is four inches wide? I’m excited for this rotation. They’re putting Kayla Williams up first now and she has a wobble on her huge switch side to start and is squatty on her front tuck, then covers a step on her loso series by pretending it was choreography. Also a step on dismount, so 9.850 is too high for that. Bailey is next, and I’m still obsessed with her L turn. Secure acro and a stuck dismount, Excellent routine. McNeer is very pretty on beam when she’s not wobbling, which she wasn’t today. Great splits and clean leg form, stuck 1.5. Great. Beers had a check on the side somi, but everything else was very solid until a step back on dismount. Kupets even dropped a “calm confidence” on us. Clark was excellent on her acro throughout the routine, just a check here and there and a step on dismount. A Sims is lovely as always, but did have a small check on her aerial. Her straddle jump is just awesome. Unfortunately she had a big lunge forward on her double tuck.    

Florida floor:
Boyce starts for the Gators. Commentators talk about “doubters” who thought she wouldn’t make lineups. BUT WHO WOULD THINK THAT?!?! Her usual routine, some piking and unclean legs on her twisting skills. Fassbender. I’m not completely sold on her in this lineup. Uh oh. I’m being a “doubter.” She had a nice double pike middle pass, but she is short of split on her split full. Wang has the dropped score in this rotation because of a bouncy layout half middle pass and a very short double pike dismount. Baker‘s piked double arabian. That’s all. She did have a stumble landing it, though. Her double pike was brilliant. Maybe a little too high bouncing into her straddle jump on the dismount and struggled to control landing it. Hunter had a total Kytra routine. Not distinguishable from her 10s. And it got a 9.975. And this is actually my favorite routine she has done, as her choreo is usually secondary. Or tertiary. Cindy Lou Caquatto anchoring as always. A little short on her front tuck out of her mount again this week, but not nearly as bad as last time. She has gotten some gymternet grief for this routine, but I have to say … this music is my nightmare.

Big recovery beam rotation for Alabama. That’s much more the quality we expect, and it means Florida was not able to pick up any ground during a rotation when they should have been able to. Hunter was obviously the highlight of Florida’s floor since everyone else had at least minor mistakes on one or more passes.

After 3: Alabama 148.050, Florida 147.800

Alabama floor:
Bailey does an excellent job on her front tuck to 2.5 with a stick. Having a sign with solely someone’s first name on it in Times New Roman really is the no frills approach. Great routine. A Sims had a big lunge back on her double pike and some iffy legs on her 1.5. C Sims next and has such a floaty DLO, but she does pull it in low each time I have seen it so far. Clark has become a real member of this floor lineup now. She was slightly bouncy on her double pike, but the double tuck dismount was excellent. Beers up next, and her DLO is also extremely strong. She bounced a little on the middle pass and her switch ring is pretty NCAA. What was Frost holding in the background? It looked like a life preserver. Frost to finish, the DLO was fine even if she came in a little short, and then a front full into a barely pulled around front tuck. Hits dismount. Done.

Florida beam:
Baker starts for Florida and falls on her wolf turn, which is bizarre and I will classify as punishment for performing a wolf turn in the first place. No. I will not let it go. At least she didn’t buzz right off the beam like a top like Skinner that time. Spicer had a fairly significant wobble on her series and looked pretty tight but had no other significant errors. Rigor mortis choreography. McMurtry is third and has an excellent and high punch front, but had a strange wobble on her full turn, though the 2.5 dismount was great if off to the side. Boyce now on beam, fluid and secure is her tendency on beam, thought the switch split landing looked a little awkward. No real issues at all, though. Fassbender was not in the lineup last week after a fall in the first meet, but now she’s here – several medium wobbles in here. Tentative aerials with the leg up. And an NCAA sheep, but that’s nothing new. Hunter anchors, and her series is a delight as usual – though she did have a small wobble just standing there before her dismount and a pretty big hop back on the double tuck. 

Big recovery meet for Alabama to pull out the meet and have the steadier performance overall. Florida had to count those 9.7s on bars and beam, and they can’t afford that against a hitting Alabama. Big win for the Tide.

Final: Alabama 197.400, Florida 196.800.

DONE.

Except one more thing. GO AHEAD ON Auburn! 197.025. That’s the Auburn I expected to see this year. 

The Weekend Ahead – January 23rd-26th

Get ready because Friday is a big one. All the top 4 teams, and 6 of the top 8 teams, will be in action at the exact same time. I’m already tired about it. I mean excited. But I really mean tired.

Oklahoma and Florida enter the weekend tied for the top spot in the nation after Florida recorded a national high of 197.200 last weekend while Oklahoma’s first week lead dissipated during an uncharacteristically 9.4 beam rotation. Neither team seems more likely than the other to grab the #1 ranking after this weekend, and LSU, Michigan, and Utah are all within striking distance if things happen to go south for both of them.

Even though everything in the world is happening at once (not an exaggeration), the big grudge matches on Friday will be UCLA/Utah and Florida/Alabama, and for both of those meets, I’m just not pretending they could go either way to make it more interesting for myself. They really could. Here’s my plan: Rather than having 18 panic attacks while trying to watch every routine from both of these meets at the same time like I’m a malfunctioning robot, I’m going to blog about UCLA/Utah as it’s live, and record Florida/Alabama and then watch and write about it after UCLA/Utah. Deal? Deal. 

First, Utah/UCLA. As is always the case when UCLA and Utah square off at the beginning of the season like this, Utah comes in looking like the steadier team. The Utes have two hits meets in two weeks under their belt, while UCLA has those four falls from Monday under their belt. The key to a Utah victory will be exactly that. Stay steady, hit those routines, be the more consistent team, and let Dabritz do her thing. Utah, however, is still vulnerable to 9.825itis, so they’re going to need stronger supporting scores than they’ve been getting so far to defeat a hit meet from UCLA.

The most important rotation for the Bruins will be beam. UCLA should be phenomenal on that event, which we saw flashes of on Monday, and if they hit beam to their capabilities, they can open up a major lead on Utah solely with that apparatus. Of course, hitting beam like beasts doesn’t amount to much when you’re counting a fall on floor and botching dismounts. Hint hint. There’s no reason for that to be happening. Maybe they can use the inspiration of Katelyn Ohashi’s commitment to get through the whole three passes this week.

As for Alabama, this is a pressure meet. It was always going to be a pressure meet because they have not lost in Tuscaloosa since that infamous February 2009 clash with LSU, but this new-look Alabama team is the underdog against the reigning co-champion. That pressure is only compounded after last weekend’s shock loss and beam implosion against Arkansas. Is it bad that I kind of can’t wait for Alabama’s beam rotation tomorrow? All eyes will be on that. I know it’s only January, but it’s an important rotation. Hit, and they basically erase the Arkansas disaster. Miss, and their beam rotation is a thing. No one wants their beam to be a thing. The only step after thing is full-on balance beam situation. The horror.  

Florida comes in having proven that they’ll be fine without Bridget Sloan for the next month and a half or so. Of course, they would be better with her, but they have the backup routines to be competitive. But, there are still some lineups to work out. I’m not sold on all the replacements yet, and there were some areas last weekend where they looked fairly vulnerable, another fall on beam, counting a 9.700 on floor. Let’s see how the lineups shake out this time in a big clash. Coaches always talk about how they don’t pay attention to their opponents, which is true because they don’t have to (and is also why having a coaches poll in gymnastics is bizarre), but no one likes to lose. Except for SEC teams according to Courtney Kupets. Grudge matches like Florida/Alabama and UCLA/Utah are when we see the real lineups come out to play, so I’m very interested in who’s in and who’s out when it really comes down to it for all these teams.


This is the OK one, not the bad one.

On Saturday, Georgia is hosting Kentucky, and if you thought Alabama had a beam implosion last weekend, may I direct your attention to Monday’s Georgia performance, which was a 47.400 and historically disastrous. Everyone struggled. 9.5s were the good scores. As Alabama must come back and erase that memory this weekend, so must Georgia. Those beam and floor lineups need to get together and say, “Who’s in charge here?” and it needs to be someone.

On Sunday, Michigan will host Illinois in a Big 10 clash. Michigan is pretty much always and forever the favorite in this meet, and that’s reinforced by their strong start to the season. The Wolverines have cleared the first hurdle, proving that they have full lineups of competitive routines (and as long as no one gets hurt, they have them). Now, it’s on to phase 2, how many 9.9s do you have? We know there’s Nicole Artz’s floor and Sachi Sugiyama’s vault, but who else can get that kind of score consistently each week? Illinois also comes in looking good after breaking the 196 barrier at home last weekend, with Sunny Kato nailing it on bars and beam for 9.9s, but to score the upset, they’re probably going to need real help or a magic wand to get rid of those early-lineup 9.725s.

Oregon State against Stanford on Monday should be very competitive. It’s another that could go either way. Stanford has the bigger possible scores. There are many more 9.9s on Stanford than on Oregon State, but they have not proven that they have full lineups of hit routines yet. Half of their rotations have been sub-49 this season, and they are still barely cobbling together six people and throwing out some gymnasts who probably shouldn’t be back in lineups yet. Oregon State hasn’t had any of those same implosions or major fall-counting rotations yet, but they’re also more likely to get stuck in the 9.800s. They don’t have an Ebee Price to show up and get a 9.950.

But in the most important news of the weekend, I forgot to update my fantasy lineup this week, which is terrible. I fear I’m going to be leaving some scores on the table this time. 

Here is the weekend’s schedule for the top 25 teams. As always, the full schedule can be found at the link at the top.

Top 25 Schedule

Friday – 1/23/15

8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [1] Florida @ [7] Alabama
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [8] UCLA @ [4] Utah
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – SEMO, TWU @ [1] Oklahoma
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – [12] Arkansas @ [19] Auburn
8:30 ET/5:30 PT – Missouri @ [3] LSU
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – [23] Southern Utah @ Boise State

Saturday – 1/24/15

1:00 ET/10:00 PT – [6] Nebraska, Brockport, Southern Connecticut @ Rutgers 
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – [14] Kentucky @ [10] Georgia
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – Minnesota @ [20] Michigan State
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – Iowa @ [20] Ohio State
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – Maryland @ [13] Penn State
4:00 ET/1:00 PT – Pittsburgh @ [25] New Hampshire
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – [22] Arizona @ [18] Washington

Sunday – 1/25/15

2:00 ET/11:00 PT – [23] Iowa State, [25] George Washington @ West Virginia

4:00 ET/1:00 PT – [11] Illinois @ [4] Michigan
5:00 ET/2:00 PT – [15] Denver, Arizona State, San Jose State @ [17] Cal 

Monday – 1/26/15
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – [9] Oregon State @ [16] Stanford

[22] Arizona @ [8] UCLA Live Blog

Do this again, please.

The meet will begin at 4:00 ET/1:00 PT on the Pac-12 Network.

Scores
For UCLA, I’m hoping primarily to see some progress made on the floor landings over last week. And if Danusia hits beam, that would be nice too. For Arizona, I’m mildly obsessed with their tkatchevs and their beam routines but still uncertain about how competitive they can be on vault and floor given the injuries, so this will be a test.

Amanda Borden is off today. Jim and Amanda Two are doing the commentary and telling us how amazing Peng is. Obviously.

A few changes to UCLA’s vault lineup, of course, with Irvin coming into the order.

Rotation 1 – UCLA on vault, Arizona on bars
UCLA vault:
1. Honest -Not as strong as last week, OK, a little iffy in the feet and knees and a larger lunge back on yfull. 9.825.
2. Cipra – Good height, small amount of piking, comes in a little short and hops forward, but not too problematic. 9.850.
3. Lee – Well, it was gorgeous in the air, but they left their landings at OSU so far – comes in very low with a large lunge forward. 9.750
4. Irvin – (no Bynum today?) – Really nice power on her full, and a stuck landing – well that’s a debut – looked perhaps a little staggered or leg separation on the stick. 9.850. 
5. Peszek – Excellent full – noticeably stronger in the form and distance over the others – weaker landing than last week – medium hop back – 9.875.
6. Williams – Great amplitude on her yfull – fairly good chest position on landing, minor piking and a hop back.9.850

Arizona bars:
1. Howard – Good first hhs, a little close on piked jaeger, leg break on the bail, double back dismount is stuck, legs apart. Fine, but some breaks. 9.800.
2. Felix-Terrazas – fine on the giant full – nice height on the tkatcehv, slightly floppy down on the bail – giant full into the double back – hands down on the dismount. “A little too much momentum.” 9.250.
3. Mills – handstands looked a little short – good giant full – some floppy legs in the gienger and the bail handstand is short of hs – pretty good half in half out, though – small step but controlled dismount.9.825.
4. Laub – arches first hs – not as much height as usual on her tkatchev, bail is clean in the legs – last hs was borderline – nice double layout – (small leg separation in the air) but overall good form and landing. 9.825. 
5. Flores – short on first hs but good finish on the giant ful – piked on her bail handstand with a leg separation – tkatchev was just OK this time – DLO 1/1 dismount – loses the form on the second salto as most everyone does. Lunge back. 9.775. 
6. Ortiz – hip circle – gigantic tkatchev – excellent – that’s silly big – the rest is solid – giant full – double back dismount with a step. Solid. 9.825.

After 1: UCLA 49.250, Arizona 49.050
The scoring was laxer for UCLA on vault this week than last week, but the performance was also clearly weaker. They did not bring the sticks this time out and couldn’t expect to go much higher. I praised Arizona’s tkatchevs at the top, but other than Ortiz (whose is amazing) the rest were a little flat. No big issues in the five counting routines for Arizona, but sloppy legs and a couple weak bails kept the scores medium.

With all these commercial breaks, and then jumping back in to say nothing, the Pac-12 Network always makes the warmup period feel 85 hours long. 

Val is yelling about something. Yesssss. Just stay on that. We need a dedicated “Val yelling at peasants” cam at these meets.

Rotation 2 – UCLA on bars, Arizona on vault
UCLA bars:
1. Francis -Nice shaposh, clean back to the bail, good amplitude on shoot, a little short on giant full and then flings out her double pike with a larger lunge back. Not her best at the end but lovely before that. 9.775.
2. Meraz – Arches her handstand on her toe circle, no chance to save it – comes off. Short on her bail handstand as she gets it back. Missing the handstands to follow – sticks the DLO, though. 
3. Honest – good first handstand, super high tkatchev, needs to work on the foot form – flexed on all these skills, fine straddle back – she missed about couple handstands here – step back on tuck full. 9.825 (One judge went 9.9. Come on).
4. DeJesus – nice finish on the giant full – still with the legs on the gienger – a little bit of an angle on the bail handstand – tuck full dismount with knee-chest landing – step back.”She is a funny one,” Amanda says about Val. “She likes the spotlight,” says Jim. Um, yeah. 9.850.
5. Lee – Get this. lovely in the legs as always , beautiful on the bhardwaj but misses her toe going for the shaposh half, has to redo and try again and then misses the catch. Ugh. This is like the opposite meet of last week for Peng – short DLO dismount with lunge. Disaster. Counting a fall now.
6. Peszek – She needs a 1000.00 for this routine. good first hs and finish on the giant full – that’s how you do a gienger! Perfect bail – into the dismount – sticks the DLO. Great routine. Let’s see what they do with this. 9.975. Saved the rotation as much as she could.

Arizona vault:
1. Felix-Terrazas – Has solid height on her yfull, some leg break, not much distance, and a bounce forward, but fine for someone who hasn’t done much vaulting. 9.725.
2. Cindric – A little flatter off the table but better distance, medium-sized step back. 9.750. 
3. Sisler – Pikes her yfull pretty significantly, not a big block – quite close to the table – hops back.9.700. Jim thought it should be higher. Because why?
4. Laub – Buckles as she lands her yfull but saves it with a large lunge forward.
5. Edwards – Best height on the team so far on her yfull – near-stick with a small hop back. Some piking in the air and a leg break on her block, though. 9.750. 
6. Flores – Solid on the yhalf, hop forward – a little flat like most of the team and crazy legs on the table, but fine.

After 2: UCLA 97.950, Arizona 97.725
UCLA actually managed to extend the lead in spite of counting a fall. Peszek was brilliant. Identical routine to the 10 she got last year. Disappointing about Peng. That would have been a great rotation score if she had hit, but her routine has much more risk than anyone else is trying. Arizona was average on vault, but the lack of block on many of those vaults was evident coming after UCLA.

After those falls on bars, Val has stopped dancing to music that doesn’t exist. Val: “Girl issues at 18 do not change.” What is this essay about listening and feelings she’s giving us? I really hope the question was about vault landings or something.

I feel like I could probably hit a beam routine if Dom talked to me right before it.

New lineup on beam this week for UCLA.

Rotation 3: UCLA on beam, Arizona on floor
UCLA beam: 
1. Gerber -tight on full turn but no wobble, pretty aerial, she can be lovely here when she’s not nervous, smallest check on loso series, switch to split is solid, hits the side somi – that was Aisha-identical. 1.5 dismount with a step forward – that was the only real mistake in the routine, though. Good start. 9.800.
2. Craddock -pretty full turn, aerial with smallish pause to bhs – it’s a better solution than the fake series she was doing, but she did pause – also another pause between the switch and split. side aerial to a pikey layout full dismount. No major errors, just some nervous pauses in there. 9.800.
3. DeJesus -Good aerial – better on her loso series than last week, just small shuffle – OK switch and solid split to follow – very minor balance adjustment on front toss – another smaller correction on L turn – sticks the front full dismount. That should score well. 9.825. 
4. Francis – We see the highlight of her fall from last week. Get it this time. Side aerial to aerial to back handspring is lovely – good to get the bhs into the combination because there was a pause after the side aerial. Switch and splits are perfect to 180. Lovely. Does her y spin wonderfully, so respect, even if it is rushed. I don’t care when it’s a y spin. Dismount – nailed it this time. Yes, there’s a pause before it and she lands chest down, but whatevs. Perfection. 9.925. 
5. Lee – Homma flares (that’s right, I said flares) – beautiful and wonderful, lovely switch to split, balks on what she was supposed to do and just does a bhs – goes again and does the bhs to layout 2 feet – excellent – punch front is strong with no cowboy this time (NOTE) – gets her double turn as well. Double full dismount with a fairly large step back. Not as strong as last week, but she hit it. 9.850. 
6. Peszek – back with a full! Leg up to balance but she hit – excellent aerial to bhs loso series – switch to split to straddle – middle split was iffy but the whole thing was solid. Double full dismount, sticks it (basically) a little staggered. I’m glad everyone else hit so that we got to see the tuck full. Her leg flew up and I love that she tried to cover it by pretending she was doing a back full to scale. Lol. 9.950. Methinks someone got a little difficulty bonus there.

Arizona floor:
1. Cindric – a little low on double pike mount, wolf full to split full looked fine, front full to pike is nice as well – Note: If you start out composed and lovely in your routine, it’s not a rule that you have to “break it down” after the second pass, but everyone does. It’s not in the code. OK dismount, low on the final layout but pulled it around. 9.700.
2. Howard – lunges back out of her double pike, looks good in the straddles – just layout as the middle pass, which shouldn’t count, 1.5 dismount. Hit routine. No real mistakes. Just form on passes. 9.800.
3. Felix-Terrazas – also bounces back out of her double pike a little – the straddle elements were short – whips around the layout out of that 1.5, didn’t think she could get that around but she pulled it through. finishes double back – lowish and a step. 9.750.
4. Schneider – Solid double pike to start – layout to layout full middle pass – switch side and straddle full are medium but fine – no for the drumline choreography – double tuck dismount – sticks it chest low. 9.850.
5. Sisler – Punch rudi to loso was strong – give me a loso out of a floor pass with pointed toes and I’m done. Lands pretty forward on her double pike with a large lunge in the middle pass – double full to punch front dismount. She always looks like she’s going to get about 1 centimeter off the ground on these passes. 9.875.
6. Flores – Rudi to loso mount, cat leaps and whatnot – also lands short on her double pike – low chest with lunge forward – they all look like they’re going to splat all these passes and then pull them around – front full to layout with a bounce out of it – 9.825.

After 3: UCLA 147.300, Arizona 146.825
Legitimately good beam rotation there for UCLA. Some looked tight and wonky in the early spots, and Peng was not as solid as last week – but Danusia and Sam were excellent and they showed the potential of what that rotation can be. Given what we’ve seen this season so far on beam, 49.350 is basically amazing. They would be in good shape right now if not for counting that bars fall.

No Peszek on floor today?
Thankfully, we’ll get to see Pinches.

Rotation 4 – UCLA on floor, Arizona on beam
UCLA floor:
1. Pinches – Nice high double tuck and enough control on the landing – she has developed much more presence on floor as a UCLA gymnast – enjoy watching this – OOB on her middle pass double full, but the form looked fine – knee-chest on the double pike but did stick it. Looked good except for the double pike. 9.775 even with the OOB. 
2. Meraz – (in for DeJesus) – large lunge out of double tuck mount – her straddles are certainly 180+ – secure front full in her middle pass – this is one of those UCLA “I’m going to stay on the ground for pretty much all of it” routines. Also knee-chest on the double pike, but that was a good hit after the first pass. 9.825.
3. Francis – “More of a James Bond theme” You mean because she’s using Bond music? “I feel like she’s almost on a secret mission with all those tumbling passes.” WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? Very secure on the double tuck – and little stumbly on 2.5 middle pass but fine – I could watch Danusia exist all day. Sticks her double pike as well with just medium low chest. 9.925. 
4. Gerber – This routine is very pretty. Right down my alley too. Fine double back – small slide? – 1.5 to pike to stag looks nice – an actual switch ring as well – Looked really good until the double pike with was quite low with a step. Still strong. I actually think this is weaker than her routine last week but will clearly get a much higher score. 9.825.  
5. Hall – Big cowboy on that double arabian with a step back – eh – front full to pike is nice – illusion turn – split full to straddle jump full is fine – I like a slow tempo routine, but this one just comes across as sleepy – a bit better than last week, though. Way short on double pike dismount with hands down. Oopsie. 9.275. 
6. Cipra – throws the tuck full – low landing and a step to the side but she stays in bounds with it – 1.5 to front tuck – was that supposed to be a layout? The tuck looked improvised and sloppy. Elephant walk because Val. Hands down on double pike. Well, they threw that meet score away in the last two routines. Unacceptable. Sam Peszek, please save the day next time.

Arizona beam:
1. Fox – switch and split – back leg a little short on those – off line on her front aerial and comes off the beam, both feet half on – figures it out the second time – and falls again on her straddle 3/4 – Yeouch. Fall #3 on the front toss. Amanda Two tells us you’d rather have people on beam who hit. Really? Sticks the gainer pike at least.
2. Cindric – lovely press handstand stag mount – switch + split looks good – secure on loso series – sheep is an NCAA sheep but solid landing, hits the side aerial – lots of pauses before elements but solid. hop forward on front full dismount. 9.775. 
3. Schneider – opens full turn, Off on the bhs+loso series, splits have Raisman legs – NCAA sheep – sticks front full dismount. They’ll have to count this, but it will be low because of the fall obviously but also the dance elements. 9.250.  
4. Sisler – stepout to bhs to loso – looked solid and pretty but then a wobble stepping out of it – switch split is good – solid front toss – Sticks her 1.5 dismount. Best of the group so far. Trying to save it. 9.800. 
5. Mills – pretty aerial with minor pause before loso, elegant full turn with confident finishing position – switch to stag – nice height into her side somi as well – she’s lovely on beam – small bounce in place before gainer full dismount. 9.850. 
6. Flores – three series into loso is secure, slightly wonky on her full turn, pause after iffy switch into solid side aerial, straddle 1/4 is hit, 1.5 dismount with fake stick-salute.

UCLA 195.975, Arizona 195.300.
God, how UCLA was that? I also love that they counted two falls and still got the same score as last week. My, my, how the scoring standards change.
Well, obvious what the problems were there for UCLA. Exhibitions happening right now, which we don’t get to see because TV. Beam was great, though. Beam was great. Not for Arizona, though. Without that problem, they could have challenged for the upset.

Interview with Nush. She’s a gem.

Someone interview Miss Val about these falls like NOW.

I love Sam Peszek’s faces of honesty after bad meets.

In other news, Georgia had a disaster (thanks for the reports in the comments!), so maybe UCLA shouldn’t feel too bad.