Pac-12 Championship Preview

EVENING SESSION (Utah, UCLA, Oregon State, Stanford):

Now that Utah is part of the Pac-12, it seems like we always go into the Pac-12 Championship with pretty much the same story. Utah is the highest-ranked and most consistent team, the safest pick to win, but UCLA might be the more talented group if they can actually put it together. Stanford is the dangerous floater who has enough concentrated pretty to beat anyone on any day but might also fall 100 times, and Oregon State always looks like the fourth-best option but then sometimes wins. Every time I’ve done a preview of Pac-12 Championships, it has been a variation on that same story. This time, it’s pretty much the same setup again, except Utah enters in a stronger place compared to the last few years. This year’s Utah team is sturdier on beam and even deeper on vault (not to mention the bonus of being home team), and it would be an upset if Utah fails to win. Let’s break this thing down by rotation.

Rotation 1 (Utah vault, UCLA bars, Oregon State beam, Stanford floor)

The rotation order couldn’t have worked out better in terms of giving us an early sense of who’s really in the meet. We’ll know after the first rotation which teams are legitimate challengers for the title because the Utes begin on their best event while the three other teams all begin on their weakest events. The teams that haven’t figured out their weakness will be in a 0.500 hole after 11 minutes, and it’s hard to see a team coming back from that without the help of a Utah mistake.

A 0.500 hole after the first rotation is a realistic possibility because vault is the one event where Utah can truly pull away from the field. The Utes are the #1 team in the country on vault and have been breaking 49.500 all over the place, especially at home. They’ll need to show that 49.500 vaulting again on Saturday. Sure, they can win this meet without hitting 49.500 on vault, but looking toward nationals, there’s no way Utah contends with the top three without some 49.500 vaulting, at least 49.500. They have too many 9.9s to expect any less, with the usual big three of Dabritz, Delaney, and Wilson, who now have the benefit of nearly equivalent vaults from Lee and Partyka.

UCLA will need to keep things relatively close at the outset on bars, and has the talent to do so, but bars has been a real adventure this year. An adventure called The Chronicles of 9.650. Francis has been a shining beacon of stuck double pikes in the first spot, but for the Bruins, the focus will be on getting through the next three routines intact so that they can hand things off to the 9.9s from Peszek and Lee. Because Peszek and Lee have such high scoring potential, UCLA can get away with 9.825-9.850s from Meraz, Mossett, and DeJesus (DeJesus has the potential for more but has looked sloppier this season) and still be in reasonable contention for a 49.400, but they have to be 9.825s. Not those 9.6s and 9.7s.

It has been a somewhat similar story for Oregon State this year on beam. Beam hasn’t been a great event for the Beavs post-Leslie Mak, but it really should be much better. Maddie Gardiner and Chelsea Tang are both excellent beamers for realistic 9.9s, so if everyone else can get their 9.825s, that makes for a solid rotation score that can keep them in contention as they go to the higher-scoring events. The problem is how infrequently that has actually happened. Too often, they’ve been caught by a little inconsistency and more than a little case of the early-rotation 9.7s. It will be a recurring theme that Oregon State is just a couple early-lineup routines away from being a really good team. 

As for Stanford on floor, it’s all about the Ebee. No rotation in this competition needs a single gymnast more than Stanford’s floor needs Price. Once again this season, Stanford has been a little too average and flat on floor. There’s just not enough going on there. They can pull together a rotation of 9.850s, but that’s not competitive with the teams throwing up easy 9.9s in spots 4, 5, and 6. Price has competed on floor once this year, performed a medium-quality routine by her standards, and scored a 9.975. If she’s available, 49.3s-49.4s are suddenly completely doable. It not, that puts so much pressure on bars and beam to be perfect at the end of the meet because they will be giving up ground right from the start. 

Rotation 2 (Stanford vault, Utah bars, UCLA beam, Oregon State floor)

The Bruins move to beam in the second rotation, and beam is where they can make their mark. While Utah has at least a fair claim as the top team in the conference on the other three events (at least that’s what the rankings tell us), UCLA is the best beam team in the Pac-12. Even though they’ve had a fair few falls, BRUINBEAMTERROR (trademark) has been considerably less terrifying this year. There has only been one beamtastrophe! That’s pretty good! The key to beam success this year was always going to be finding three solid 9.8s in the first three spots, and it appears they have them now in Meraz, who has been a very sturdy find, Williams, who has come into her own in the last few weeks on an event that has often been her struggle, and DeJesus. If those three can get their 9.850s together and hand things over to Francis, Peszek, and Lee, all of whom have 10 potential and all of whom I’ve talked about ad nauseum, the Bruins should get a huge beam score.

They may not gain ground immediately, even with a big beam number, because Utah will be on bars at the same time, but they would gain ground comparatively once everyone has done beam. UCLA needs to use beam to keep it close after two in order to make a move during rotation three.

While it’s not much of a surprise that Utah is the #1 team in the country on vault given the number of accomplished vaulters on the team, it’s much more surprising that the Utes hold the same #1 ranking on bars. It’s not Florida. It’s not Oklahoma. It’s not Georgia. It’s Utah. The 10-machine named Georgia Dabritz certainly helps, but more than that, Utah is getting the very most out of this bars team, which became abundantly clear last week in Athens. It’s not a lineup of stars (besides Dabritz) and in fact it’s a pretty unremarkable group on paper, but while other teams with much more bars talent—like Stanford—are still giving away tenths on dismounts, Utah is hitting each handstand and sticking each landing. Nowadays, that basically amounts to an auto-9.900. If Utah isn’t in control of this meet halfway through, something will have gone wrong.

For Stanford, vault is a less extreme version of floor. They have more 9.900 potential on vault in the form of the clean work from Nicolette McNair and Taylor Rice, but make no mistake, it also comes down to Price. Of course, finally having six whole vaulters now would be a nice boost as well, but with Price’s 9.950 rounding out the rotation, 49.400 isn’t a leap of the imagination, even if the rest of the vault lineup is just McNair, Rice, an actual bag of rice, and several ghosts. Note that the Cardinal will compete on their two weaker events in the first two rotations, so don’t expect a huge number halfway through. Third place would be expected and not a problem. If they’re even remotely within striking distance of the top at that point, watch out. Bars and beam can both be fabulous. 

One of the most interesting rotations of the meet will be Oregon State on floor. How competitive are they here? The Beavs have had some huge floor rotations this year full of 9.9s, but when they’re suddenly going up against floor from UCLA and Utah (and just a few hours after floor from Cal), is it still a 9.9 parade? It needs to be. Having Risa Perez (whose enthusiasm accomplishes the unthinkable, making me not hate a happy routine) and especially Kaytianna McMillan in this lineup is such an important lift this year. It starts to bring back shades of that floor fire from the Blalock, Vivian, Jones, Stambaugh group, which feels like 11,000 years ago. McMillan had been relegated to bars and beam early in her collegiate career because of injury, but she came to Oregon State as a vault and floor girl. Those are her events, and I’m glad she’s starting to see time and scores. They’ve desperately needed those routines for a year and half, and it’s finally happening. This is the one event where Oregon State has proven the ability to get an absolutely massive number, and that’s what can keep them within sight of the other teams. Unlike Stanford, if OSU is trailing at halfway, it’s much harder to envision a comeback.

Rotation 3 (Oregon State vault, Stanford bars, Utah beam, UCLA floor)

This is the rotation in which UCLA, Stanford, and to some extent Oregon State will hope to make a move. Utah has improved a ton on beam this year, and the potential from Lee and Stover makes the future look extremely bright, but it’s still the event where they’re most likely to get stuck in the 9.825s and most vulnerable to recording a beatable 49.200-49.250 (though that also may be mitigated at home). Sometimes the splits aren’t there, sometimes the height of leaps isn’t there, sometimes the wobbles are there, and it will come down to the strictness of the judging on the day. I don’t think Utah is helped by going to beam right after the performances from Danusia and Peng, who will set the leap standard comparatively high.

I’m not sure what to make of Oregon State’s vaulting yet. The Beavs have made some clear strides, and Gardiner, Keeker, and Aufiero can each get their 9.9 on with a stick, but they still need more depth. They tend to get stuck with some low scores early in the lineup, which isn’t going to work moving forward. In the current scoring climate, you can’t have a 9.750 on vault. You can’t count a 9.800, because Florida already got six 10s while you were chalking up. It has to be one of Aufiero’s 9.925 days. And speaking of 9.925s, let’s get to Stanford’s bars. Stanford must make a move and gain some serious tenths on bars.

Stanford is too talented not to be getting 49.400s on bars every time out. I mean COME ON! Ivana Hong. Sami Shapiro’s handstands. The Vaculik gienger. Becky Wing’s gorgeous leadoff routine. Stanford should be the best bars team in this competition and should make up ground during this rotation. But it will come down to the sticking. So often, Stanford has a 9.950 routine going on the bars themselves that turns into 9.850 because of the dismount. If Sami Shapiro is getting a 9.850 on bars, the world is broken and we need a new one. Because Utah goes to floor and UCLA goes to vault in the last rotation while Stanford goes to beam, Stanford must erase nearly all, if not completely all, of any potential deficit by the end of bars. As much as Ivana Hong is the world’s perfect human on beam, the Cardinal cannot go to beam with tenths to make up. That’s just too hard to do.

UCLA’s floor is an interesting monster because they have mixed and matched so much that…who even knows what the lineup is going to be? No one. Not all of those routines are created equal, and they still haven’t really separated the MEHs from the YESes, which means UCLA’s floor performance this year has not lived up to its potential quality very many times. But, there’s still a big score in there somewhere. When Peszek, Cipra, and Francis are around at the same time, good things will happen. Like Price, Peszek has barely competed on floor this year, but now we’re getting to the time of year she has been saving her legs for. Hopefully, there are still a few more 9.9s left in those rice-paper feet. I also think it has been a smart call to move Bynum to the anchor position because now she’s getting the huge 9.925s that she never really got before the move. Even with Peszek in the lineup, Bynum probably should stay anchor because Peszek doesn’t need the anchor spot to get a big score (though UCLA is traditionally less likely than some other teams to manipulate the lineups in that way).

Rotation 4: (UCLA vault, Oregon State bars, Stanford beam, Utah floor)

It’s hard to imagine Utah heading to floor at home with a lead and relinquishing it, so the other teams must be able to use their strengths in the second and third rotations to, at the very least, keep pace with the Utes before the floor 9.9s start falling like rain. But at the same time, Utah has shown some vulnerabilities on floor this year. It’s a good rotation, but not their strongest recent floor rotation, and at times the losses of Damianova and Del Priore have shown up. Less sureness, more uncontrolled passes. Most egregiously, there was that performance last week against Georgia, which was flat-out poor from a number of people, not just from Wilson and her magical 9.650. I can’t think that will happen again, especially at home, but it does raise some doubt. There are two or three question marks in this lineup leading up to the strength from Dabritz and Tutka, which may prevent Utah from getting a true final-rotation score explosion.

UCLA finishes on vault, and I’m still waiting for that first-week performance to show up again. UCLA was excellent on vault in the first week, nailing landings all over the place, and while there have been shades of it since, no performance has quite lived up to the first one yet. As on floor, there has been a lot of lineup switching. I think they’re so giddy about finally having 9 or 10 legitimate vault options that they just go “WEEEEE!” and throw any of them out there. But they do have enough high-scoring options that 49.400 should be a comfortable result. Peszek obviously. Williams has proven her new 9.9-itude. Irvin is a sticker, even though she vaults diagonally. She’s like a bishop of gymnastics. I’d love to see Pinches and Cipra back, but who knows. The way this vault lineup has been going, Danusia will suddenly vault this week. Still, UCLA doesn’t have an excuse to give up much ground in the final rotation. Every Super Six-hopeful team should be able to get at least a 49.400 on vault, otherwise you’re out in the cold.

While Stanford is beautiful on beam, and likewise has little excuse to give up ground there, I’m still worried about this rotation. The lack of Morgan and Spinner has shown through in many of the performances, which have seen too many early 9.800s for a Stanford team. You’re Stanford! You don’t get 9.800 on beam! A hit from Wing in that first spot is essential. She has occasional consistency issues, but when she hits, she can be a marvelous 9.900 that lifts the whole group. It’s hard to imagine Stanford scoring the big upset without a competition-best beam rotation, so watch for those Wing, Rice, and Vaculik routines to tell us whether this rotation will be a competition-best one, or just an Ivana-Hong-and-guests one. 

One of the reasons it’s so important for Oregon State to get those McMillan and Gardiner 9.9s on floor and that Aufiero 9.9 on vault is that they’re ending on bars, which has been fine but not exceptional this year. The Beavs have lost some talent in the bars department the last couple years as their stars have gradually left. There’s still Aufiero to get the 9.9s, but the rest are getting stuck mostly in the 9.825-9.850s. Perhaps more than any other team, Oregon State has to stick those dismounts to pull out the scores. Especially if things get fancy in the last rotation, or if other teams haven’t been sticking (which would make a rotation of sticks look even better by comparison), OSU does have the potential to take advantage of the rotation order for a surprise big score here.

In all, Utah should be able to put together an early lead and ride it through the rest of the events, but this is far from an open-and-shut competition, especially if UCLA and Stanford do that thing that UCLA and Stanford do where they suddenly show up in the postseason looking a billion times better than during the regular season. The key for UCLA will be using beam to keep things close and then making a move on floor while Utah is on beam, so watch how the margin plays out in the second and third rotations. For Stanford, it’s about using Price to minimize the deficit from vault and floor, and then being the 9.950s they can be on bars and beam. For Oregon State, it’s being the little engine that could. Get 9.875 after 9.875 after 9.875, chip away and chip away, and take advantage of mistakes. Nail floor and be the most solid team overall. Those are the routes to victory. But let’s not forget about the afternoon session because there is a wealth of talent there and some serious contenders for top-four places.

AFTERNOON SESSION (Arizona, Cal, Washington, Arizona State):

The four-team separation in the Pac-12 is still alive and well, but as we saw last year when Cal finished third, the quartet is not immune. Cal and Arizona have both proven more than capable of recording competitive scores and taking advantage of a missed meet from one of the top teams. Or not even a missed meet (Cal’s season high is greater than Oregon State’s this year). One 48.900 rotation with a case of the wobblies from the teams in the top session, and they will be very vulnerable to getting passed.

Cal continues making tremendous progress. From the most extreme doldrums just five seasons ago, Cal has turned into a legitimately competitive team that is going to head to regionals as a true threat. While they haven’t quite made the jump into the thick of the top 15 yet (and we’ll get to beam in a minute), this team has taken another step forward this year, and that step is named Toni-Ann Williams. Top teams always have those huge 9.950s to rely upon, and now Cal has a couple. As a result, they’re currently #3 in the Pac-12 on vault and #4 on floor, and I certainly expect them to place right with at least a couple teams in the late session on those two events. If Cal isn’t vaulting at least level with Stanford and Oregon State, they will have missed an opportunity, but the progress on floor (not just from Williams but also from the introduction of Arianna Robinson and the now-healthy Dana Ho) is the most pleasant improvement from last season. If only they weren’t being pulled down by the beam monster.

Beam is the biggest obstacle standing between Cal and a legitimate challenge to the traditional Pac-12 powers. They’re right there on three events, and if Cal had been consistently hitting a 49.000 on beam this season, they would be 11th in the country right now and deserve it. Sadly, that hasn’t so much been happening. Early in the season it was a fall fest, and while they’ve started to cut out the falls, everyone in the lineup is still in danger of going 9.7. There’s no big 9.9 rotation savior the way that Williams has become on vault and floor. The beam performance will determine Cal’s fate. If they can get through beam, mid-high 196 is a real score and a repeat third-place finish is a real goal. 

The Arizona Wildcats (I really wish someone’s mascot was just a house cat, and the logo was a cat curled up into a ball going “meh”) come into Pac-12s as the highest-ranked team of the four in the early session. In fact, they’re just four spots below Stanford in the rankings. It’s a real credit to this team that they’ve overcome injuries to basically every essential contributor this year (from Klarenbach and Wobma before the season started to Allie Flores most recently), and have still been able to put together exactly the same regular season they always do, finishing ranked 17th and getting a couple high 196s here and there. They have, however, felt the pinch of some crucial lost routines, particularly on vault now, which may very well hurt their competitiveness at Pac-12s especially because vault is such a high-scoring event. It will be a struggle to keep pace there, but other events should remain competitive. Unlike Cal, Arizona’s greatest asset in this meet is beam.

As Cal and Arizona fight it out for afternoon supremacy, Arizona will need to take advantage of the clean, efficient elegance of that beam rotation to build up an advantage strong enough that Toni-Ann Williams can’t pick away at it. In particular, the work from Edwards, Fox, and Mills is a delight. Sometimes nerve-wracking, but a delight. A five-tenth advantage over Cal on beam is possible, and will probably be necessary. It will come down to whether Arizona’s bars and beam are stronger than Cal’s vault and floor. The classic showdown.

Washington does not have the same scoring potential as the six teams ranked above and look a pretty solid bet to adhere to the rankings and finish seventh. But while that might not seem like much, this has been a refreshing bounce-back season for Washington after a poor, not-six-people-in-every-lineup showing last season. This year, they’ve been solidly 195 and occasionally 196, which is much more what I expect from Washington in a normal year. In addition to Allison Northey the AA stalwart, Janae Janik is starting to find the consistency to go along with her lovely gymnastics, former elite Jackie McCartin has become a very useful beamer, and watching McKenzie Fechter aggressively pump herself up before routines is a life highlight. Like Arizona, the Huskies are most competitive on bars and beam, and because of those last four beam routines from Fechter, Northey, Janik, and McCartin, they too can make a statement in this session with their beam work. It’s unlikely that they will have the scores on the other events to put up a big challenge, and will be giving back tenths on vault and floor, but if other teams are falling, Washington can discreetly slip into a higher slot using their beam turning and flexibility super powers.

As for Arizona State, well, this is why we have sayings like “It’s a rebuilding year,” “You have to start somewhere,” and “Growth growth blah blah adversity.” I think that’s a saying, at least. I’m getting it embroidered on a pillow. With the gymnast exodus after Rene took over, coupled with the 11 thousand injuries this season, the devils of the sun don’t have the routines to be competitive. They can get a few solid scores from Taylor Allex and Tasha Sundby to bump up a couple rotation scores toward the high 48s, but mostly they’re looking at a lot of 9.7s and mid 48s. Finishing not-last would be a victory for ASU this year. On the positive side, that 162 earlier this month was just a one-week blip, and they were able to recover for a completely reasonable 195 last week. So the wheels aren’t completely off, just mostly. This is going to be a long process to turn Arizona State back into a team, but I do expect it to get better from here. Although, in the couple meets I’ve seen from Arizona State so far this season, Rene has been dressed kind of demurely (for Rene), and I think that’s what’s hurting the team the most. What happened to our girl?

Week 10 Rankings and Final RQS Scenarios

Dear everyone, you’re a tremendous disappointment. The end. It was the final week of the regular season, and you couldn’t even manage a single 198? No 10s for falls? Worthless. The most insane thing that happened over the weekend was that time Tory Wilson’s arm died in the middle of her final pass and she still got a 9.650, and that was barely surprising. Plus, all the seniors are getting married immediately upon finishing their final beam routines even though they were junior elites 4 months ago. Is college gymnastics just an elaborate dating website and no one informed me?

With just one week of meets remaining until we get our regional on, it’s time for another look at how  regional placement would work if the season ended today, which gives us a chance to see which teams currently find themselves in disastrous scenarios that they need to get themselves out of. I’m talking to you, Oregon State. Oregon State has missed nationals two years in a row, and getting paired with Oklahoma and Stanford would make an ignominious three-peat a little too possible.

REGIONAL 1: [1] Oklahoma (host), [12] Oregon State, [13] Stanford
REGIONAL 2: [2] Florida, [11] Penn State, [14] Denver
REGIONAL 3: [3] LSU, [10] Nebraska, [15] Boise State
REGIONAL 4: [4] Utah, [9] Georgia, [16] Illinois
REGIONAL 5: [5] Alabama, [8] Auburn (host), [17] Arizona
REGIONAL 6: [6] Michigan, [7] UCLA, [18] Arkansas

The main criticism I usually level at the regional seed organization system is that, since two teams advance from each regional competition, the best teams end up with the toughest challengers (the #1 team getting the #13 team as its 3rd seed), while the weaker teams get the easier challengers (the #6 and #7 teams getting the #18 team as a 3rd seed). But this year, the quality of the #3 seeds is high enough across the board that all the regionals would contain legitimate challengers if this ended up as the final scenario, and some of the lower-ranked top seeds would have some of the toughest 3rd seeds. That Michigan/UCLA/Arkansas regional would be no fun. For them. Tons of fun for us, just like the potential Oregon State/Stanford pairing and the Alabama/Auburn repeat pairing. And don’t forget about Cal, a dangerous host team still currently lurking outside the seeded spots.

Still, there’s one more meet to go and a lot of positional maneuvering to do, so let’s get to the rankings. I have included each team’s maximum possible RQS after conference championships to provide a sense of how high each team can possibly climb. I’ve also extended the rankings down through all teams capable of sneaking into the top 36 and advancing to regionals.

Week 10 rankings – (GymInfo)
1. Oklahoma – 197.860
Week 10: 197.725
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Scaman 9.950; UB – Wofford 9.900; BB – Clark 9.925; FX – Dowell, Brown 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 198.150
Road Score 2: 197.875
Road Score 3: 197.725
Road/Home Score 1: 198.500
Road/Home Score 2: 197.850
Road/Home Score 3: 197.700

Maximum RQS: 198.020

With the highest maximum RQS, the Sooners still control their destiny when it comes to the #1 ranking, but it’s much more of a fight than you might think based on Oklahoma’s season-long stranglehold on the top spot, having held it for the last 3 billion weeks. Because Florida has a pretty low score still to drop, Oklahoma would need a 198.175 at Big 12s to guarantee season-ending #1. It’s possible, especially at home. They’ve certainly done it before, but a 198 is never an easy score.

The other consideration right now for Oklahoma is the injury to Erica Brewer, suddenly making the Sooner lineups a bit more questionable than they were before (if she’s not able to return quickly). Natalie Brown did perform well as a replacement over the weekend, with lower difficulty but clean gymnastics. If they need to keep using her on floor, it might not be a bad idea to pull a Bridgey and keep her in the final spot.

2. Florida – 197.750
Week 10: 197.900
Week 10 leaders: AA – Hunter 39.675; VT – Sloan 9.950; UB – Sloan 10.000; BB – Boyce 9.925; FX – Hunter 9.975

RQS
Road Score 1: 198.100
Road Score 2: 197.425
Road Score 3: 197.200
Road/Home Score 1: 198.225
Road/Home Score 2: 198.125
Road/Home Score 3: 197.900

Maximum RQS: 197.955

Florida’s streak of four-straight years finishing the season at #1 is under severe threat. Still, the Gators do remain the only team with a shot at unseating Oklahoma for the top spot, with a relatively modest 197.200 that can be dropped with strong performance at SECs. At minimum, the Gators need a 197.775 at SECs to have a chance to move ahead of the Sooners, which is pretty realistic. If Florida doesn’t get a high 197 at SECs, it will count as a missed meet. It’s time to bring the quality. To win SECs, it’s going to take at least a high 197, if not a 198. 

3. LSU – 197.630
Week 10: 197.275
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Savona 9.950; UB – Wyrick 9.875; BB – Jordan, Gnat 9.950; FX – Hall 10.000

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.425
Road Score 2: 197.350
Road Score 3: 197.350
Road/Home Score 1: 198.375
Road/Home Score 2: 198.075
Road/Home Score 3: 197.950

Maximum RQS: 197.835

LSU was not able to record a counting score last weekend after a bars issue in the very first rotation. It should be noted that they did elect to rest a number of contributors in that meet before everything starts to get real, but that score does mean that LSU can no longer challenge for the #1 ranking. The Tigers can still possibly move ahead of Florida, but that will be challenging as well since the deficit is now more than a tenth. LSU would need at least a 197.975 at SECs to move ahead of Florida, and probably more than that since Florida should easily eclipse that drop-able 197.200. The biggest concern for LSU right now is getting Courville back in the AA. These teams at the top are too good for LSU to be able to survive without a 100% Courville.

4. Utah – 197.605
Week 10: 197.275
Week 10 leaders: AA – Wilson 39.275; VT – Lee 9.925; UB – Dabritz 9.975; BB – Rowe, Stover 9.900; FX – Tutka 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.850
Road Score 2: 197.275
Road Score 3: 197.025
Road/Home Score 1: 198.250
Road/Home Score 2: 198.050
Road/Home Score 3: 197.825

Maximum RQS: 197.690

You alright there, Utah? What was that floor rotation exactly? Are we past that? OK, good. Like LSU, Utah had one bad event over the weekend that prevented them from taking advantage of a golden opportunity to move into the top 3. Because the Utes are coming to the rescue of Mess-izona State and emergency hosting Pac-12s, they don’t have much room to move up in RQS anymore since all those road scores have to count. They could still potentially move ahead of LSU, but likewise would need a 197.975 at Pac-12s for a shot, along with some help from LSU, so #4 seems the most likely finish. They’ll be fine with that.

5. Alabama – 197.425
Week 10: 197.500
Week 10 leaders: AA – Beers 39.650; VT – Beers 9.950; UB – Clark, McNeer 9.875; BB – Williams, Beers 9.950; FX – Beers 9.950

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.675
Road Score 2: 197.350
Road Score 3: 197.200
Road/Home Score 1: 197.800
Road/Home Score 2: 197.500
Road/Home Score 3: 197.400
 
Maximum RQS: 197.545

Alabama is set. The Tide cannot move up any higher that their current ranking and cannot get caught by any other team, so 5th it is. It’s a solid finish for a team with a lot of uncertainty coming into the season, but they’re still a little more prone to mistakes than we usually expect from Alabama teams once March comes around. Right now, the Katie Bailey question is the biggest one dogging Alabama. She has returned on bars but still hasn’t been quite herself. She’s a necessary piece, and it’s going to be difficult to keep pace with hit meets from Florida and LSU at SECs without her routines.

6. Michigan – 197.185
Week 10: 197.000
Week 10 leaders: AA – Artz 39.550; VT – Artz, Sugiyama 9.950; UB – Artz, Brown 9.850; BB – Artz 9.900; FX – Sugiyama 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.675
Road Score 2: 197.125
Road Score 3: 197.000
Road/Home Score 1: 197.300
Road/Home Score 2: 197.250
Road/Home Score 3: 197.250

Maximum RQS: 197.270

Like Alabama, Michigan cannot move up any higher than the current ranking, but unlike Alabama, Michigan will have to fend off challenges from the teams below to remain in this spot. UCLA is the biggest threat, but that is pretty much meaningless. Even if UCLA does pass Michigan, both teams would still end up in the 6/7 regional, so it’s a wash. Auburn does have a chance to challenge and move up as high as 6th as well, but Michigan can fend them off with 197.400, which would guarantee them a spot in that 6/7 regional.

7. UCLA – 197.130
Week 10: 197.175
Week 10 leaders: AA – Meraz 39.300; VT – Peszek 9.925; UB – Lee 9.900; BB – Peszek 9.950; FX – Bynum 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.350
Road Score 2: 197.175
Road Score 3: 197.075
Road/Home Score 1: 197.950
Road/Home Score 2: 197.050
Road/Home Score 3: 197.000

Maximum RQS: 197.320

UCLA had an odd meet at Arkansas. Val wasn’t there, so what’s the point of having the meet if the star of the team isn’t even in attendance? She wasn’t the only thing missing. The Bruins are still withholding a number of routines that should be in the lineups on vault and floor, though that’s normal UCLA behavior for this point in the year. A million people are each till doing one event, and I would expect a few of them to be spectators starting next week.

But still, even though some of the lineups were a little flat, UCLA did enough to move up another spot in the rankings and keep scratching away at those bad scores. With a higher maximum RQS than Michigan, UCLA can dictate how this plays out. The Bruins need at least a 197.300 to have a chance at moving ahead of Michigan and can guarantee it with a 197.725. Auburn is also chasing, so to ensure that they stay ahead of Auburn, the Bruins need a 197.425 at Pac-12s. That seems quite doable with the right lineups, unless they have a disaster like last year.

8. Auburn – 197.025
Week 10: 197.100
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Atkinson, Guy, Rott 9.900; UB – Walker 9.900; BB – Walker 9.900; FX – Hlawek 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.025
Road Score 2: 196.875
Road Score 3: 196.825
Road/Home Score 1: 197.750
Road/Home Score 2: 197.300
Road/Home Score 3: 197.100

Maximum RQS: 197.210

Auburn has fallen to 8th but is still a realistic challenger to move up at least one spot if not two. It will be tough, though. At minimum, they’ll need a 197.375 at SECs to have a shot at challenging UCLA (197.625 to challenge Michigan) and would probably need more. Lower in the rankings, Georgia cannot catch Auburn, but Nebraska still could. The Tigers will need a 197.125 at SECs to guarantee that they remain at least at #8.

Auburn wasn’t able to make a big dent in the RQS rankings after a 197.100 over the weekend, which featured some Caitlin Atkinson resting in the final meet before championship season, but even though 197.100 is low compared to our expectations for top teams at this point in the season, it’s still historically high for Auburn. Getting that kind of score is a very new thing.

9. Georgia – 196.875
Week 10: 197.450
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Davis, Jay 9.875; UB – Brown 9.950; BB – Vaculik 9.900; FX – Marino 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.950
Road Score 2: 196.850
Road Score 3: 196.775
Road/Home Score 1: 197.450
Road/Home Score 2: 196.975
Road/Home Score 3: 196.825

Maximum RQS: 197.010

A 197! Praise be! Georgia even moved up a spot in the rankings! That vital 197.450 does give the Gym Dogs a little bit more wiggle room to improve their RQS, but not quite enough. They will not be able to advance any higher than 9th and are in some danger of being re-passed by Nebraska and falling back to 10th. Because Nebraska has the higher maximum RQS, Georgia does not control its own fate. Nebraska could pass regardless of what Georgia does, but frankly there’s not much difference between 9th and 10th in regional placement, so it doesn’t matter that much. The bigger issue is that no matter where they finish, Georgia is going to face a #3 seed at regionals that is easily capable of a mid 196 (or high 196 on a good day). This weekend, in that early session of “home” SEC championships, Georgia needs to prove that beating a mid-high 196 team is easy and that they don’t need to be perfect to do it. Because you’re not always perfect at regionals. 

10. Nebraska – 196.865
Week 10: 196.000
Week 10 leaders: AA – DeZiel 39.425; VT – Lambert, Williams 9.900; UB – DeZiel 9.875; BB – DeZiel 9.925; FX – Blanske 9.875

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.075
Road Score 2: 196.650
Road Score 3: 196.250
Road/Home Score 1: 197.325
Road/Home Score 2: 197.225
Road/Home Score 3: 197.125

Maximum RQS: 197.080

The Huskers have fallen to 10th after an unhelpful 196.000 at Pre-Big Tens that, by most accounts, came from a combination of errors and getting totally hosed with the floor scores. Nonetheless, with a low road score that’s itching to be dropped, Nebraska can still gain a couple spots and shake things up with a good showing at Big Tens. They’ll need a 197.075 to have a chance at moving ahead of Auburn, but can guarantee moving back ahead of Georgia with a 197.000. 

11. Penn State – 196.555
Week 10: 196.650
Week 10 leaders: AA – Tasng 39.300; VT – Sibson, Tasng 9.900; UB – Raygoza 9.900; BB – Sanabria-Robles 9.875; FX – Sibson 9.850

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.750
Road Score 2: 196.650
Road Score 3: 196.175
Road/Home Score 1: 197.025
Road/Home Score 2: 196.650
Road/Home Score 3: 196.550

Maximum RQS: 196.725

There’s a big break after the top 10, so Penn State has no chance of sneaking up any higher. But, one of the most significant races to watch on Saturday will be among Penn State, Oregon State, and Stanford because I think both Penn State and Oregon State will be desperate to avoid getting Stanford at regionals. Yes, all three teams have hit 197 this year and they’re all ranked similarly, but Stanford is a nightmare draw because of how many potential 9.9s they have. They’re so capable of a huge score, even if it’s a frustratingly infrequent development. Penn State or Oregon State could have a great meet and still get Ivana-Hong-9.950-ed out of contention. As of right now, Penn State would draw Denver and Oregon State would draw Stanford. You’d rather draw Denver.

Both Oregon State and Stanford have the higher maximum score than Penn State, so their performances at Pac-12s will be the biggest factors in dictating where Penn State ends up. 

12. Oregon State – 196.550
Week 10: 197.075
Week 10 leaders: AA – Gardiner 39.450; VT – Aufiero, Keeker 9.925; UB – Aufiero, McMillan 9.875; BB – Gardiner 9.850; FX – Perez, Tang 9.950

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.250
Road Score 2: 196.700
Road Score 3: 196.450
Road/Home Score 1: 197.075
Road/Home Score 2: 196.275
Road/Home Score 3: 196.250

Maximum RQS: 196.750

Oregon State didn’t have a good beam showing in their home finale, but they used a YIPPEE HOORAY senior night floor score to break 197 anyway and move up a few crucial spots in the rankings. Beam really is a worry, but this team does have enough Tang, Gardiner, Perez, McMillan, Aufiero 9.9s on one or two events to remain a concern for any school facing them at regionals. To be assured of moving ahead of Penn State, the Beavs will need a 197.150 at Pac-12s, though they can still get caught by Stanford. 

13. Stanford – 196.530
Week 10: No meet

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.625
Road Score 2: 196.525
Road Score 3: 196.275
Road/Home Score 1: 197.525
Road/Home Score 2: 197.000
Road/Home Score 3: 196.225

Maximum RQS: 196.790

Stanford has the highest maximum RQS of all the teams ranked outside the top 10, but it’s still going to take some serious doing to reach that mark and get up to the #11 ranking they probably deserve, and that would make for the cleanest regionals draw (also the least fun). The Cardinal will need a 197.225 to make sure they get above Penn State and a 197.350 to make sure they get above Oregon State. Looking at the roster, you’d say, “Yeah, 197.3, easy,” but it has only happened once this season, and that was at home. Stanford still has work to do to prove that this isn’t another one of those years where they’re crazy talented and then finish 11th at nationals. 

14. Denver – 196.455
Week 10: 196.850
Week 10 leaders: AA – McGee 9.950; VT – Ross 9.900; UB – McGee 9.900; BB – Ross 9.850; FX – McGee 9.950

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.850
Road Score 2: 196.450
Road Score 3: 196.150

Road/Home Score 1: 196.925
Road/Home Score 2: 196.725
Road/Home Score 3: 196.100

Maximum RQS: 196.620

Denver jumped up all the way to 14th from a ranking of 18th last week after getting a road 196.850, the latest in a series of 196s and one that is made more important because it wasn’t just another one of those “Denver got a 196.8 at home and that’s a thing now?” meets that happens every year. Another big 196 may happen again this weekend because Denver is hosting the Mountain Rim Championships, which sounds so much like a fake event that would be on Make It or Break It. Or when any sports movie has to make up a competition, and it’s always called the Central Alliance Cup, and you’re like, um that’s nothing.

While Denver’s max RQS is lower than that of the teams ranked above, they could also make it as high as 11th if things fall their way at the Central Alliance Cup. They need a 196.500 to begin to threaten the teams ranked above, and that’s definitely possible. Denver is the first team that isn’t mathematically guaranteed a spot among the 18 seeds, though it’s still very likely with just 196.225 required to make it official.

15. Boise State – 196.375
Week 10: 196.225
Week 10 leaders: AA – Morris 39.275; VT – Krentz, Morris, Perkins 9.900; UB – Morris, Perkins 9.875; BB – Josbacher 9.775; FX – Morris 9.850

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.625
Road Score 2: 196.225
Road Score 3: 196.025
Road/Home Score 1: 196.800
Road/Home Score 2: 196.725
Road/Home Score 3: 196.275

Maximum RQS: 196.530

Boise State doesn’t have quite the same maximum as Denver, and while they can conceivably move up as high as a tie with Stanford if everything falls correctly, the main focus will be on securing one of the 18 seeded spots. They look pretty good to do it since quite a few teams would need to pass to knock them out, but the magic number to score this weekend that would make a top 18 spot official is 196.550.

16. Illinois – 196.355
Week 10: 196.050
Week 10 leaders: AA – Horth 39.350; VT – Horth 9.850; UB – O’Connor 9.900; BB – O’Connor 9.875; FX – Horth 9.800

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.975
Road Score 2: 196.425
Road Score 3: 196.275
Road/Home Score 1: 196.500
Road/Home Score 2: 196.400
Road/Home Score 3: 196.175 

Maximum RQS: 196.515

Like Boise State, Illinois’ maximum score is not as high as the other teams ranked in this area, so their performance this weekend is about solidifying a claim to one of those seeded spots. They’re in OK shape, but it’s definitely not a guarantee since teams like Minnesota and Arizona have higher maximum scores (and mid-195s still to drop). Both can realistically pass Illinois, and Illinois’ magic number to keep a seeded spot is 196.800, which is a fairly tough ask. 

17. Arizona – 196.290
Week 10: 196.850
Week 10 leaders: AA – Cindric 39.350; VT – Sisler 9.850; UB – Cindric 9.925; BB – Fox 9.900; FX – Mills 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 197.125
Road Score 2: 196.050
Road Score 3: 195.450
Road/Home Score 1: 196.850
Road/Home Score 2: 196.625
Road/Home Score 3: 196.475

Maximum RQS: 196.625

Watch out for Arizona. On the strength of another big home score, achieved without Allie Flores as this team attempts to manage the near-Kentucky number of injuries that are piling up this season, Arizona has moved into a pretty threatening position considering that they still have that 195.450 to get rid of at Pac-12s. Even though the Wildcats can potentially get as high as #11, that’s unrealistic since they would need to pass so many teams to get there, but they can guarantee jumping ahead of both Boise State and Illinois with a 196.650 at Pac-12s, which would allow them to draw a more attackable #2 seed at regionals.

With that low score to drop, Arizona’s magic number to stay in the top 18 is just 196.400.

18. Arkansas – 196.275
Week 10: 195.900
Week 10 leaders: AA – Zaziski 39.450; VT – Wellick 9.900; UB – Zaziski 9.950; BB – Dillard 9.850; FX – Elswick 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.650
Road Score 2: 196.250
Road Score 3: 196.250
Road/Home Score 1: 196.650
Road/Home Score 2: 196.325
Road/Home Score 3: 195.900

Maximum RQS: 196.425

Because the Razorbacks don’t have a 197, or even a big 196, that could be counted if things go well over the weekend, their maximum score is fairly pedestrian. There’s not a lot they can do now. Because both Minnesota and Cal have higher maximum scores, Arkansas does not control its own seeded destiny. If both Minnesota and Cal have big days at conference championships, they can jump ahead of Arkansas and potentially knock them out of a seeded spot, even if Arkansas gets a season-high score.

Still, talk about a no-fun #4 seed to draw if Arkansas does end up getting knocked out of the top 18. It’s bad enough having to worry about these 196.8-capable #3 seeds.

19. Minnesota – 196.250
Week 10: 196.450
Week 10 leaders: AA – C Gardner 39.100; VT – Mable 9.950; UB – Tomson, Covers 9.925; BB – Hanley 9.850; FX – Mable 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.875
Road Score 2: 196.350
Road Score 3: 195.450
Road/Home Score 1: 196.675
Road/Home Score 2: 196.450
Road/Home Score 3: 196.325

Maximum RQS: 196.535

Minnesota is another team like Arizona with a very low score to drop, and that could allow them to climb the rankings significantly.  Even though they’re currently ranked outside the top 18, they’re right in the fight for a #3 seed and can even guarantee it with a 196.600 this weekend.

20. Cal – 196.190
Week 10: 196.125
Week 10 leaders: AA – Williams 39.475; VT – Williams, Palomares 9.850; UB – Williams 9.925; BB – Palomares 9.800; FX – Williams 9.925

 RQS
Road Score 1: 196.600
Road Score 2: 196.125
Road Score 3: 196.100
Road/Home Score 1: 197.325
Road/Home Score 2: 196.225
Road/Home Score 3: 195.900

Maximum RQS: 196.475

It’s going to be much tougher for Cal, but they too have a chance to move up into the seeded spots if things fall correctly. To do it, they’ll first need to move ahead of Arkansas. They do have a higher maximum score than Arkansas, so it’s possible, but it would take a 197.100 at Pac-12s to guarantee it, which is tough. More likely, they’ll have to hope Arkansas (and at least one other team) does not approach its maximum RQS and becomes beatable with a lower score. For Cal, it very much depends on how the other teams fare. But remember, Cal is hosting a regional and is another one of those very dangerous floaters regardless of seeding.

21. Central Michigan – 196.110
Week 10: 196.225
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Moraw, Teet 9.850; UB – Fagan 9.900; BB – Noonan 9.900; FX – Moraw 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.400
Road Score 2: 196.225
Road Score 3: 196.175
Road/Home Score 1: 196.150
Road/Home Score 2: 196.125
Road/Home Score 3: 195.875

Maximum RQS: 196.215

Now we move into the batch of teams that cannot move into the top 18 yet are still guaranteed to make regionals. That’s everyone from Central Michigan through the rest of the 20s in the rankings. These teams will be the 4th and 5th seeds at various regional competitions and will be at the mercy of the draw to see where they fall.

22. Washington – 195.960
Week 10: 196.600
Week 10 leaders: AA – Northey 38.725; VT – Northey, Stowe 9.850; UB – Janik 9.900; BB – McCartin 9.900; FX – Podlucky 9.875

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.600
Road Score 2: 196.300
Road Score 3: 196.125
Road/Home Score 1: 195.950
Road/Home Score 2: 195.775
Road/Home Score 3: 195.650 

Maximum RQS: 196.150

23. Southern Utah – 195.945
Week 10: 196.325
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Ramirez 9.850; UB – Ramirez 9.875; BB – Jaworski 9.900; FX – Webb 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.225
Road Score 2: 195.750
Road Score 3: 195.500
Road/Home Score 1: 196.475
Road/Home Score 2: 196.325
Road/Home Score 3: 195.925

Maximum RQS: 196.140

24. Iowa – 195.790
Week 10: 196.425
Week 10 leaders: AA – Metcalf 39.275; VT – Glover 9.900; UB – Drenth 9.925; BB – Drenth 9.900; FX – Drenth 9.800

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.425
Road Score 2: 195.850
Road Score 3: 195.225
Road/Home Score 1: 196.375
Road/Home Score 2: 195.775
Road/Home Score 3: 195.725

Maximum RQS: 196.030

25. Kentucky – 195.735
Week 10: 196.175
Week 10 leaders: AA – Waltz 39.400; VT – Phipps 9.850; UB – Waltz 9.850; BB – Waltz, Mitchell 9.925; FX – Mitchell, Waltz 9.850

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.950
Road Score 2: 195.825
Road Score 3: 194.975
Road/Home Score 1: 196.575
Road/Home Score 2: 196.175
Road/Home Score 3: 195.750

Maximum RQS: 196.055

26. New Hampshire – 195.660
Week 10: 196.150
Week 10 leaders: AA – Pflieger  39.325; VT – Pflieger 9.875; UB – Kerouac 9.825; BB – Hill 9.900; FX – Broccoli, Pflieger, Rudiger 9.850

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.150
Road Score 2: 196.075
Road Score 3: 194.700
Road/Home Score 1: 196.525
Road/Home Score 2: 195.900
Road/Home Score 3: 195.475

Maximum RQS: 196.025

27. Missouri – 195.635
Week 10: 196.150
Week 10 leaders: AA – Schugel 39.300; VT – Schugel 9.800; UB – Schugel 9.850; BB – Kappler 9.900; FX – Harris 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.975
Road Score 2: 195.850
Road Score 3: 195.275
Road/Home Score 1: 196.150
Road/Home Score 2: 195.800
Road/Home Score 3: 195.275

Maximum RQS: 195.810

Back to regionals! It’s been a hard road.

28. Michigan State – 195.610
Week 10: 195.250
Week 10 leaders: AA – Burt 39.075; VT – Cartwright 9.875; UB – Burt, Cartwright 9.775; BB – Westney 9.850; FX – Lagoski 9.800

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.325
Road Score 2: 196.275
Road Score 3: 195.625
Road/Home Score 1: 195.750
Road/Home Score 2: 195.250
Road/Home Score 3: 195.150

Maximum RQS: 195.845

29. Utah State –195.555
Week 10 A: 196.350
Week 10 A leaders: AA – Landes, Martinez 39.250; VT – McIntire 9.875; UB – Cuba 9.800; BB – Belliston, Sanzotti 9.825; FX – Landes, McIntire, Sanzotti 9.875

Week 10 B: 196.325
Week 10 B leaders: AA – Landes 39.250; VT – Kerr 9.850; UB – Cuba, Peel 9.850; BB – Cuba 9.875; FX – McIntire 9.875

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.325
Road Score 2: 195.750
Road Score 3: 195.500
Road/Home Score 1: 196.350
Road/Home Score 2: 195.100
Road/Home Score 3: 195.100

Maximum RQS: 195.805

30. Iowa State – 195.390
Week 10: 195.300
Week 10 leaders: AA – Brown 39.400; VT – Middlekoop 9.800; UB – Ledesma 9.875; BB – Brown 9.950; FX – Young 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.375
Road Score 2: 195.175
Road Score 3: 194.950
Road/Home Score 1: 195.950
Road/Home Score 2: 195.775
Road/Home Score 3: 195.675

Maximum RQS: 195.590

This is the cutoff. Iowa State is guaranteed a spot at Regionals, but all the lower teams are at least somewhat vulnerable, some more than others.
————————————————————————–

31. BYU – 195.365
Week 10: 196.375
Week 10 leaders: AA – Johnson 39.450; VT – Johnson 9.925; UB – Van Mierlo 9.850; BB – Schult 9.875; FX – Johnson 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.375
Road Score 2: 195.675
Road Score 3: 195.425
Road/Home Score 1: 195.450
Road/Home Score 2: 195.300
Road/Home Score 3: 194.975

Maximum RQS: 195.645

To guarantee regionals qualification, BYU must score 195.100 this weekend.

32. Ohio State – 195.355
Week 10: 195.250
Week 10 leaders: AA – Harrison 39.125; VT – Van Putten 9.850; UB – Van Putten 9.800; BB – Harrison 9.900; FX – Harrison, Mattern 9.775

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.650
Road Score 2: 195.250
Road Score 3: 195.200
Road/Home Score 1: 196.200
Road/Home Score 2: 195.650
Road/Home Score 3: 195.025

Maximum RQS: 195.590

To guarantee regionals qualification, Ohio State must score 195.200 this weekend.

33. West Virginia – 195.345
Week 10: 196.075
Week 10 leaders: AA – Haley 39.075; VT – Lawrence, Muhammad 9.850; UB – Goldberg 9.900; BB – Gillette, Goldberg, Idell 9.825; FX – Idell 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.350
Road Score 2: 195.300
Road Score 3: 194.975
Road/Home Score 1: 196.075
Road/Home Score 2: 195.900
Road/Home Score 3: 195.200

Maximum RQS: 195.565

To guarantee regionals qualification, West Virginia must also score 195.200 this weekend. 

34. George Washington – 195.325
Week 10 A: 195.125
Week 10 A leaders: AA – Winstanley 39.375; VT – Corcoran, Drouin-Allaire 9.925; UB – Winstanley 9.825; BB – Winstanley 9.875; FX – Raineri 9.875

Week 10 B: 196.875
Week 10 B leaders: AA – Winstanley 39.550; VT – Drouin-Allaire 9.950; UB – Mishlove, Winstanley 9.850; BB – Winstanley 9.900; FX – Drouin-Allaire 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.725
Road Score 2: 195.125
Road Score 3: 195.025
Road/Home Score 1: 196.875
Road/Home Score 2: 195.725
Road/Home Score 3: 195.025

Maximum RQS: 195.695

To guarantee regionals qualification, George Washington must score 195.350 this weekend.

35. Maryland – 195.290
Week 10: 194.875
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Skochko 9.850; UB – Karen Tang 9.800; BB – Slobodin 9.825; FX – Giameo, Walters 9.750

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.525
Road Score 2: 195.375
Road Score 3: 195.350
Road/Home Score 1: 196.000
Road/Home Score 2: 195.275
Road/Home Score 3: 194.925

Maximum RQS: 195.505

To guarantee regionals qualification, Maryland must score 195.425 this weekend.

36. Eastern Michigan –  195.280
Week 10: 195.525
Week 10 leaders: AA – Willette 39.000; VT – Valentin 9.800; UB – Valentin 9.875; BB – Gervais 9.875; FX – Loehner, Slocum 9.800

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.575
Road Score 2: 195.525
Road Score 3: 195.225
Road/Home Score 1: 195.275
Road/Home Score 2: 195.250
Road/Home Score 3: 195.125

Maximum RQS: 195.370

Eastern Michigan sits in the final regionals spot for the moment, but this is another team that does not control its own destiny. NC State has a higher maximum score, so if Eastern Michigan isn’t able to move ahead of any of the higher-ranked teams, they could get passed by NC State and not be able to do anything about it. It will be a nail-biting, wait-and-see day for Eastern Michigan.

37. NC State – 195.270
Week 10: 196.000
Week 10 leaders: AA – Woodford 39.175; VT – Knight 9.875; UB – Turner, Watkins 9.800; BB – Woodford 9.850; FX – Watkins 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 196.175
Road Score 2: 196.000
Road Score 3: 195.075
Road/Home Score 1: 195.850
Road/Home Score 2: 194.800
Road/Home Score 3: 194.625

Maximum RQS: 195.580

NC State has that very low score still to drop and can guarantee moving into the coveted top 36 spots with just a 195.225.

38. Kent State – 195.005 
Week 10: 195.050
Week 10 leaders: AA – None; VT – Drooger, Timko 9.850; UB – Drooger, Romito, Timko 9.825; BB – Stypinski 9.875; FX – Stypinski 9.925

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.050
Road Score 2: 194.725
Road Score 3: 193.800
Road/Home Score 1: 196.800
Road/Home Score 2: 195.750
Road/Home Score 3: 195.700

Maximum RQS: 195.225

Kent State cannot advance to Regionals. Road scores. They’ll end you.

39. San Jose State – 194.845
Week 10: 194.675
Week 10 leaders: AA – Guyer 39.050; VT – Heinl 9.850; UB – Herr 9.875; BB – Guyer 9.650; FX – Guyer 9.900

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.150
Road Score 2: 195.125
Road Score 3: 194.675
Road/Home Score 1: 195.675
Road/Home Score 2: 194.750
Road/Home Score 3: 194.525

Maximum RQS: 195.075

San Jose State cannot advance to Regionals.

40. Bowling Green – 194.835
Week 10: 195.700
Week 10 leaders: AA – Nocella 39.225; VT – Ali 9.850; UB – Reis 9.850; BB – Ellingboe 9.800; FX – Nocella, Rae 9.850

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.250
Road Score 2: 195.200
Road Score 3: 193.025
Road/Home Score 1: 195.700
Road/Home Score 2: 195.500
Road/Home Score 3: 195.200

Maximum RQS: 195.370

Bowling Green is quite a way back in RQS, but because they have that yucky 193 road score to drop, there’s still a chance they can move into the Regionals spots if a bunch of things fall their way on Saturday. To have any chance, they’ll need a 195.275 at conference championships, and that is a score they’ve reached in their last two meets.

41. Davis – 194.795
Week 10: 196.900
Week 10 leaders: AA – Judal 39.450; VT – Montell 9.900; UB – DeFrancesco 9.925; BB – Judal 9.850; FX – Stamates 9.950

RQS
Road Score 1: 195.325
Road Score 2: 194.800
Road Score 3: 193.950
Road/Home Score 1: 196.900
Road/Home Score 2: 195.175
Road/Home Score 3: 194.725

Maximum RQS: 195.385

Davis is also very far back, but because of that insane home score they just got on senior night, their maximum possible score just increased by a significant margin. It’s still very unlikely that they’ll get up to a top 36 spot because they would need a 196.375 this weekend to have even the vaguest, remotest shot. They haven’t come close to getting that score this year except in the most recent meet. Still, it’s technically possible.

Starting with North Carolina and Northern Illinois tied at #42, all the remaining teams have been eliminated from Regionals contention.

[4] Utah @ [10] Georgia Live Blog

Before we get to today’s good old-fashioned Georgia/Utah showdown, some early action has already gone down today with the first of two Big Ten Pre-Championships. The biggest story of that meet was Nebraska continuing to be stressful. It’s never easy with Nebraska, is it? The Huskers had a great beam rotation this time (which we know they’re always capable of, though isn’t a given), but a good score was already a lost cause after an opening bars rotation with two sub-8 scores. No coming back from that, especially with a bunch of 9.7s on floor as well. Those floor 9.7s are nothing new for Nebraska (it seems like they’re always getting 9.7s on floor right up until championships and it’s not a problem come nationals), but this total score will preclude them from finishing the season ranked any higher than 9th. [Actually, there is still a chance to move ahead of Auburn next week, depending.]

In spite of Nebraska’s issues, Illinois was only barely able to win the meet with an OK performance (196.050 to Nebraska’s 196.000) that also featured too many 9.7s, scores that cannot happen if they’re going to win one of those tight regionals tussles for the second spot like they usually do.

Third place came down right to the final routine, with Ohio State and Michigan State going neck-and-neck for most of the meet. A final Lisa Burt 9.775 on bars meant the two teams finished tied for third. With the top three teams advancing to the evening session of Big Tens, they had to go to the sixth-score tiebreaker, with Ohio State coming out ahead of Michigan State.

As for Georgia and Utah, the two teams come in with different needs. So far, Utah has put together a very solid regular season full of consistent meets, barring that one beam hiccup that seems to have been just a blip (we’ll see), so the biggest question for Utah right now is what level of contender this team truly is. Given the season the Utes have had so far, Super Six is an expectation. They need to make it back this year, but would making Super Six alone be considered a victory? Or can this team do more? That’s the main issue I’ll have in mind watching Utah today, and at conference championships. How does this team compare to what we’re seeing right now from Florida, Oklahoma, and LSU, all of whom had moments of greatness and moments of iffiness yesterday?

In the rankings, the Utes have a golden opportunity today to make the argument that they’re right with that top group. Given LSU’s bars struggles and lowish score yesterday, Utah needs just a 197.400 today to pass LSU in the rankings, which is quite realistic. They could possibly jump ahead of Florida as well, but would require a 198.025, which is also doable but a much bigger challenge. Another factor for Utah is that, like Oklahoma, they have gone undefeated so far this season but have not yet faced a road meet with a large crowd and challenging atmosphere until this weekend, so this is a necessary test to pass heading toward championships.

For Georgia, we know it’s all about finally getting that 197, which means this meet takes on much more importance. As for the rankings, because Nebraska had a weak score today, the Gym Dogs can move up one spot into 9th if they get that 197 today, but this meet is more about proving that they’re not an also-ran, we-don’t-have-to-worry-about-them team come championships. Georgia needs to take advantage of senior day with a fully hit meet for a big score.

Helpfully, Brandie Jay is slated to return for Georgia on vault and bars, though not yet on floor. 
The meet begins at 4:00 ET/1:00 PT on SECN+.

Our lineup angel Elizabeth Grimsley has reported the full lineups for the meet as usual.

GEORGIA:
Vault: Vaculik, Marino, Broussard, Davis, Rogers, Jay
Bars: Jay, Vaculik, Persinger, Brown, Davis, Rogers
Beam: Vaculik, Reynolds, Babalis, Rogers, Broussard, Box
Floor: Persinger, Reynolds, Brown, Marino, Babalis, Box

UTAH:
Vault: Lothrop, Partyka, Lee, Wilson, Dabritz, Delaney
Bars: Hughes, Rowe, Wilson, Lopez, Lothrop, Dabritz
Beam: Wilson, Dabritz, Stover, Lee, Rowe, Lothrop
Floor: Lewis, Lee, Wilson, Lothrop, Dabritz, Tutka

A few changes this week for Utah, with Hughes coming in for Lewis on bars and Lewis coming in for Rowe on floor. No Brown on beam for Georgia (a late change, with Reynolds coming in). Brown’s routine has the higher scoring potential, but she’s had so many fall this year. Reynolds can’t get the same number, but is probably the more reliable hit.

Broadcast begins with the usual pre-meet chatter. Apparently, Georgia Dabritz is good at gymnastics.

Chelsea Davis is a senior. Remember Bela going “AND THEN LIIIIIIITTLE CHELSEA DAVIS” at 2008 trials? No, you don’t, because it was 1,000 millennia ago.

Rotation 1:
Vaculik – VT – some crazy legs on the block and some piking – hop back –

Hughes – UB – Hitting early hs well – solid tkatchev – clean into the bail – precise work overall – weaker tuck full dismount with a lunge and then another step to salute.

Marino – VT – Still going for the 1.5 – way short and couldn’t get it around this time. Sits it. 

Rowe – UB – Cat just called her singing a “coping mechanism” – Yessssss.good full turn – better swing out of her tkatchev – clean on bail – borderline final hs but probably OK – pikes her DLO a little in the air but sticks.

Broussard – VT – Good height and power as always, but a large bounce back. “She looks happy with that landing” no she doesn’t, and she shouldn’t. Needs more control there.

Wilson – UB – Better legs on the gienger – a small break on the overshoot but generally better – the giant full looked a little out of control but her finished it in handstand – stuck dismount on tuck full -strong landing.

Davis – VT – A bit better control on the landing, but still a hop back – the rest was great as always.

Lopez – UB -late on her giant full – but a solid tkatchev – some bits of foot issues in the bail but a good hs – DLO dismount – college sticks it but that was a step forward.

Rogers – VT – She also came in a little short on her 1.5 but not as bad as Marino – does have to hop back – medium sized – with both feet. Fine but not her strongest.

Lothrop – UB – Hits her jaeger – more hit hs – good contained form in the bail throughout – hops forward on the DLO. A couple sticks so far but too many have given away their biggest deductions on landings.

Jay – VT – Best of the 1.5s so far, but a small step forward and then another little slide to salute – good to have her back in the lineup.

Dabritz – UB – Strong comaneci – hits the jaeger as well – excellent bail – SHE DOESN’T WEAR GRIPS – holds onto the stick on the tuck full as well – could have taken a step but didn’t let herself. About her usual routine – (I still would love to see more pointed toes on her releases, but it’s not a deduction that gets taken for NCAA – if you’re giving Sloan a 10 for the feet on her tkatchev, then you have to use the same standards for Dabritz) – 9.975. She is getting to the point where any time she sticks that dismount, she’s a likely 10, which is very unusual for bars. We see that on vault but not bars as much.

After 1: Utah 49.500, Georgia 49.175
How was that suddenly a 49.500? Oh, the power of Dabritz. She can make an OK rotation seem suddenly amazing. It was a good bars rotation for Utah. The handstands were very precise in every routine, which allowed them to start from a high place. A few of those score still seemed enthusiastic early in the rotation, but that’s what a stick does for you. They can still improve those landings in several of the routines, but they did what they needed to do and more in that rotation.

Oh Georgia, the landings weren’t strong enough to get a good score there. No sticks, bigger hops from Vaculik and Broussard, a somewhat short landing from Rogers, and smaller hops from Davis and Jay. And then the fall from Marino. This team still has the potential to be great on vault. We’ve seen Jay and Rogers be the 9.950 sisters so many times before, but they’re running out of time to get themselves to that point. This still looks like an early-season vault rotation.

Rotation 2:
Lothrop – VT – OK full – pikes a little at the end and a fairly big hop back – similar to Broussard and Vaculik.

Jay – UB – clear hit – slightly close catch on the Ray but fine – solid on the bail – near-stick on the DLO with just a little bounce in place to absorb –

Partyka – VT – Very strong full – good distance and a stick – slightly low chest coming in but very minor – there you go – Just a 9.850. That was a good vault. Missing the height of her teammates, though. 

Vaculik – UB – toe on – good half turn – excellent jaeger – short on the following hs, but bail looked good – final hs is solid – sticks the tuck full – one of her best of the year. She gets the wonky legs at the end of that dismount, but sticks it clearly.

Lee – VT – Another strong full – good form, height, and direction, – pretty small hop back, basically in place.

Persinger – UB – Another high and strong jaeger – good following hs to bail – just a little late on that full and then gets little height for her double tuck – lands with a big squat and step

Wilson – VT – Her usual huge amplitude, but hops back pretty significantly this time – not one of her better landings –

Brown – UB – Usual great tkatchev – perfect legs together on the pak – still hate that half turn on low bar, but she’s hitting very well – sticks the tuck full – There you go! That’s the bars routine she can do.

Dabritz – VT – GEORGIA! Fell on her 1.5. WHAT IS THIS LIFE? Way short. Way.

Davis – UB – Get this. good first hs – Excellent taktchev – controlling the hs well – solid bail – hops back on tuck full dismount. Pretty much her usual routine, strong throughout, but I was hoping for the 10 for her.  Still a 9.925. Everyone wanted that 10 for her.

Delaney – VT – Huge full as always with the amazing height and distance, but she too hops back – not a big hop but still a hop.

Rogers – UB – great stalders obviously, perhaps a little close on Ricna? – hs and bail look very good – very good rhythm and height on the shoot to high bar – final hs looked borderline but OK – basically sticks the DLO – looks like she held onto it long enough before leaning back to salute.

After 2: Utah 98.875, Georgia 98.750
Georgia narrows the gap with a season-best bars rotation, but still going into these next two events, though would have preferred a lead. Though, that was a strong bars showing. Brown nailed her routine, Rogers was almost at her best, and Davis did a strong routine, just not a perfect routine. This is potential starting to be realized in that bars rotation.

On vault, Dabritz fell and I’m still not really over that. I wonder if that’s going to make them go back to the full out of fear of another fall. It’s a score they can’t afford to lose once things matter. Still a fine showing. None of Delaney, Wilson, or Lee stuck, but in the theme of the weekend, their excellent dynamics earned them solid scores regardless. Still need to work those landings, though. Can’t show up to Nationals with a case of the hopsies again this year.

Rotation 3:
Georgia goes to beam. Get out your prayer beads or whatever. You know your commentator knows nothing about gymnastics when he refers to gymnasts as “players.”

Brandie Jay is trying to Sam Mikulak the crowd to help them on beam. 

Vaculik – BB – She’s one of those with PETRIFIED FACE on beam – good switch to split 1/4 – solid on the loso series as well – holds the aerial well, just a bit of tightness – nice full turn – side aerial to full with a small slide. Very nice opening routine.

Lewis – FX – Comes off the floor – Megan called her back – now begins – a very good split full to start – just a slide back on the double pike – layout to front full – another slide out of it and a bit arched on that layout – stumbles back out of the double tuck – just stays in bounds, but a number of steps there. They’ll want to drop this score.

Reynolds – BB – check on kickover front – holds the loso landing well – switch side is hit – this song is just shouting Jesus at me I think – side somi is hit – stuck double full – exactly what she was in this lineup to do – solid, regular, hit routine in the 9.8 family. 9.800.

Lee – FX – Nice on the 3/1 – she always seems like she’s coming in just under the full rotation but lands comfortably in the end, just a little staggered – front full middle pass with small slide – “artsy performance so far” – translation: “this is violin music” – again a bit of a slide on the double tuck. Quite good passes, just needs a bit more control on each.

Babalis – BB – long pause before series – very small check on loso series, and another on the aerial – nothing real, just a little tight – switch and pike jump are hit – I miss the switch 1/2 though, it was a different look – good kickover front to beat jump – front full dismount with a hop.

Wilson – FX – Good DLO this time with a controlled landing – they’ve selected the right leaps for her as well – front layout to front full was OK – Whhhhhoooa – totally botched her round off and just did a bhs as her final pass. Want to see that again.

Rogers – BB – pause after switch into the straddle jump, and then short on the straddle position, and a check after it – weirdly large amount of trouble on that leap series – very strong loso series to recover from it – nice bhs 3/4, looked like she was getting a little crooked so gets rid of the one-armed hold which is fine – good bhs full to stuck full dismount – Great after that troublesome leap series at the start.

Obviously struggling to come up with Wilson’s score. Still a 9.650 in spite of not doing her final pass.

Lothrop – FX – Stumbles back on her full in and goes OOB  with a few steps – what is it with Utah today? – 1.5 to layout middle pass is clean and solid – switch side and popa were good, not big dance elements but she gets them around – almost sticks the double pike and then steps –

Broussard – BB – very strong loso series with the one-arm bhs – nice switch  to straddle 1/4 – smallest twitch – lovely side aerial – steps back on gainer full. Wish she had stuck that because it was lovely until then. One of her good ones.

Dabritz – FX – Comes in short on her piked full in with a large lunge – solid on her rudi to loso but not the lift she usually gets on that pass – not comfortable on this floor is the Utah problem so far. THE GUY COMMENTATOR ASKED IF THEY GET A BONUS FOR DOING THE U IN THEIR ROUTINES – whaaaaaat? – good triple full – controlled step – just needed a stronger first pass. Still not past that commentator asking if there’s bonus for showing a U in your routine.

Box – BB – GIRL! Tuck jump full – big wobble and can’t save it – they didn’t need this score but could have used it – swims a little landing her loso series – good straddle 3/4, and aerial to beat jump as well – 1.5 with a hop. Utah has opened the door on floor and Georgia could have taken advantage with one of Box’s 9.9s.

Tutka – FX -Good on the full in – she stepped with but the control her teammates couldn’t manage – layout to rudi to split to tuck middle pass is nice – bounces through her connected leaps – very solid double tuck – strong rotation saver –

After 3: Georgia 147.950, Utah 147.925
Georgia takes the lead and is right in this after a very weak floor rotation for Utah. Lots of unexpected problems there. Lewis, Lothrop, and Dabritz all threw in a poor landing there, and then Wilson had that botched round off on her final pass. With those mistakes, it’s basically a miracle that they escaped with a 49 somehow. Georgia was good, almost great in that beam rotation, but just a few issues took them out of a big score, and then of course Box’s fall. Rogers had a great routine other than her opening dance elements, and Broussard would have had a humongous score without the two steps on her gainer full dismount. Still enough to take the lead and give it to their floor team.

Rotation 4:
Wilson – BB – solid on her two loso series – just the mushy legs – switch and straddle 1/4 were a bit better this time – am I imagining things? – benefit of angle? – split jump was still a little short – small hop on 1.5. Comfortable, fine start.

Persinger – FX – front tuck through to double back – lands short with a bounce and a stumble – good switch ring as always  – double pike was much better, nice control – hits a clean rudi as well to end, just as shame about that first pass –

Dabritz – BB – full turn – hits loso series well – switch 1/2 is fine-ish, and a solid landing – strong side aerial – this is going very well for her, good switch, OK straddle 1/4 – lands low on her 2/1 dismount with a bigger hop back, but one of her better routines on the beam itself.

Reynolds – FX – holds onto the stick on the double pike – looked like she was coming in low and did have a low chest but held that stick – nice straddles – a little piked on the rudi but nice lift into the loso afterward – 1.5 to front layout with a slide forward. Good work. Gymnastics commentators have a really loose definition of what counts as a breakdancing move.

Stover – BB – very strong aerial to split jump – small check on loso series – more fluid work than we’ve seen from Utah beam rotations of recent years – nice switch – sticks the gainer full – another very strong routine.

Brown – FX – Good high double pike, looks like she held onto the landing as well with enough control – same on the double tuck – high and solid – split jump was OK, popa was strong – hits 1.5 to layout as well – gives away a minimum in that routine – probably most composed and contained floor routine for her this year –

Lee – BB – lovely two loso series – beautiful – switch to straddle 1/4 is fine – small check on side aerial to correct her feet which landed a little off line – sticks 2/1 dismount – another beautiful beam routine.

This thing is coming down to it!

Marino – FX – She has added back the DLO now and it’s so much better than the double back – good secure landing – hits her split full and popa – similar to Lothrop not big leaps but around – layout to front full is very secure – strong double pike. They’ve needed this routine from her. It’s what she was brought her to contribute, and now it looks like she is.

Rowe – BB – fluid full turn – switch is good – straddle 1/4 is about there, and secure – hits the loso series as well – Utah is not giving away wobbles in these routines – just minor checks, like on Rowe’s kickover front – sticsk 1.5 very well – there was like a clapping fight in the background during Rowe’s moonwalk. One Utah lady was REALLY severe about how she wanted everyone else to know she was clapping for this. The rest of the crowd was not.

Babalis – FX – She’s till starting with the front tuck – slides back on the landing – the leaps are strong – half to front full is good, also a little slide, though – good enough landing on the double pike (slide?) – solid chest position – another solid hit. This is such an important meet performance for Georgia.

Lothrop – BB – Check on the switch side 1/2 – solid on the loso series – short of 180 on her switch side – good switch and straddle 1/4 – sticks the 1.5. A good beam rotation for Utah and some very nice dismount sticks from the last few. 9.850 is not enough, so Georgia will win the meet.

Box – FX – Strong and high on the double pike as always – 1.5 to layout – lost her legs a little on that layout this time – does well on the switch side and popa – pulls her double tuck around as well. Good hit, vital meet.

FINAL: Georgia 197.450, Utah 197.275
Georgia so badly needed that 197 and so badly needed that win. Certainly their most complete performance of the season. Shouldn’t cover up the weakness because there’s still a lot that needs improving. The vault landings were the biggest issue this week, but there were also those singular issues on beam, and even though they got the big 49.500 on floor at home today, I do wonder how competitive that rotation will be at championships. Control and chest positions are so important for them. Love to see that DLO from Marino. It helps, and it’s much better on her than the double back was.

Utah looked solid enough on both bars and beam. No real issues there, which is unusual for Utah that those would be the strong events, but they were today. Vault did not have the landings, but they really gave the meet away completely with that poor floor rotation. What were some of those landings? Just makes that little bit of doubt creep in.

Utah’s 197.275 is not enough to see them climb ahead of LSU in the rankings. Georgia’s score is strong enough, however, to see them jump ahead of Nebraska in the rankings for the week.

In other news, the second Big Ten meet is underway and there are already problems. Minnesota is counting a beam fall from Lindsay Mable. So cancel everything. Michigan went 49.125 on bars in the first rotation with no one scoring over 9.850, which is a bit unusual. Penn State is way out in front for now with a biiiiiig 49.375 on vault. Time to put Chanen Raygoza into my fantasy gym bars lineup? 9.900 today.

   

Friday Live Blog – Oklahoma, Alabama, Florida, UCLA, Arkansas

Friday, March 13

7:00 ET/4:00 PT – TWU @ Florida (Scores) (SECN)
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – Pittsburgh, Ball State @ Kentucky (Scores) (SECN)
7:00 ET/4:00 PT – George Washington @ Towson (Stream)
7:30 ET/4:30 PT – NC State @ Missouri (Scores) (SECN
7:30 ET/4:30 PT – Temple @ Iowa State (Scores)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – LSU, New Hampshire @ Centenary (Scores)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – UCLA @ Arkansas (Scores) (SECN)
8:00 ET/5:00 PT – North Carolina @ Auburn (Scores) (SECN)
8:30 ET/5:30 PT – Oklahoma @ Alabama (Scores) (SECN)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Cal, Boise State @ Southern Utah (Scores) (Stream)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – Air Force @ Arizona State (Scores) (Pac-12)
9:00 ET/6:00 PT – BYU @ Utah State (Scores)
10:00 ET/7:00 PT – Washington @ UC Davis (Scores)
Week 9 rankings (GymInfo)
We’re on the home stretch now. This is the last Friday live blog of the season. Well, second to last. We still have semifinal day on April 17th, but that’s different animal. Starting next weekend, it’s all about the Saturdays as we head to conference championships and then regionals. 
I’ll be here from 7:00 ET/4:00 PT, beginning with Florida’s senior night meet against TWU. It’s an SEC Network+ kind of night, with six separate meets going on.

We had six 10s last Friday night. Can we break that record tonight?

Cheerleader time for the Gators. Senior night for Kytra, Spicer, Wang, and Jamie Shisler. I have to say, I was skeptical about how much competition time Spicer and Wang would see as Florida gymnasts, but they have both been sturdy and necessary early-lineup competitors on a couple events. A necessary factor when you have an elite-heavy program.

Bridget Sloan will be vaulting tonight (!), and Baker will not be. Is she out of the lineup just tonight, or is that a thing? She wouldn’t be the vault you’d remove under normal circumstances. She’s one of their best. Every time Sloan adds an event back, Florida reels in Oklahoma a little bit more.

Apparently, there are no competitors in this meet other than the seniors.Well, really Kytra. This is Kytra Night, and everyone else is her +1.

I love listening to commentators try to explain RQS. 

TWU has a girl named Spencer on the team. Nope. Disqualified. It is not a girl’s name. I have spoken.

Rotation 1 

Caquatto – VT – Her usual yfull – hop back and to the side, but she’s been more controlled overall this season. Nice form maintained trhoughout and solid distance.  9.875.
Repp – UB – seeing the end, finishes her full turn a little late, step forward on double back. 9.650.
Spicer – VT – OK, but came in a little lock-legged with a fairly large bounce to the side. Not her strongest. 9.750

Kelly – UB -nice line – a little late on her turning skills and some looseness in the knees on her piked jaeger – short on full turn – solid landing, small step on double back.

Wang – VT – Also came in just slightly short but did well to control it and just bounce a little in place. Still not getting the landings through the first three. 9.900.

Sk. Jones – UB – solid enough full turn – half turn to bail handstand was fine – small leg break – better on the handstands – full twisting double tuck – lands very low and a big stumble forward – shame because it was great until then.

Sloan – VT – She’s back! – Yes you did! – Excellent height and form as always – makes the strength over the first three vaults so clear – so much higher and opens – slides back. 9.950.

Other Jones – UB – also looking solid on the hs – late on both the full and the half turn though – if that bail was intended to be to handstand it really wasn’t – finishes with a piked DLO with a lareger step.

Hunter – VT – Just needs a stick for this 10 – couldn’t get it, though. Hops quite a bit on her 1.5 – and she’s furious obviously. Kytra! You were going to get a 40! 9.900.

Missed who this was for TWU, but the later gymnasts have cast to handstand well but struggled with landing their dismounts, another large lunge. Simpson, it was.

McMurtry – VT – commentator has no idea how to pronounce her name – Magnificent vault as always but also with a hop back on it – not big but she can be sticking – 9.900. 

Cochefksi – nice half turn to a crazy-leg gienger – best rhythm on the team – large hop back on full twisting double back. If they could control these landings, this would be a strong bars rotation. Giving away too much on those landings. Easily full tenths.

Fassbender does a fine exhibition vault – hop back – and going after the last three doesn’t help because it makes her normal amplitude look very flat.

After 1: Florida 49.525, TWU 48.650
It’s a great score for Florida and puts them on 198 pace, but they shouldn’t really be that happy with that performance. Zero sticks and a couple larger landing errors. The 10-ishness of Hunter’s and McMurtry’s vaults mean that they can have weaker (by their standards) landings and still score 9.900 because that’s the only deduction being taken, but they could have done much better. Honestly, given the atmosphere and overall scoring trends, this could certainly have been a 49.7 rotation had they performed up to capability. Sloan had probably the best landing, just a small slide, which bodes well. At SECs next week, they’ll need more control to fend off the others.

Just saw the comment that the feed for UCLA/Arkansas has been technical-difficulty-ed out of existence. Boo hiss. More Florida then! There’s always an issue with Arkansas, isn’t there?

Elsewhere, Kentucky went just 48.675 on vault as they try to carry on somehow given their million thousand injuries. Currently trailing Pitt by a little over a tenth.

Rotation 2:
Moredock – VT – has a yfull – comes in short and off to the side with a medium step –

Baker – UB – Strong Ray – hitting handstands well and precisely – clean on the bail – big big cowboy on her double front with a small hop. She’s cowboying that more than she used to. 9.825.

Girl Spencer Jones – VT – which we didn’t get to see because of Baker’s replay. “Unfortunately gets down on her hands and knees.” You mean she fell? You can say she fell. Why do we feel the need for euphemisms?

BDG – UB – lovely opening hs – clean legs on the shaposh and precise bail handstand as well – also solid in all the hs – whips the DLO a little with the leg break, as per usual, but a great landing. One of her better of the year. 9.900.

Simpson – VT – Nowhere close on her yhalf – counting a fall now. Barely got her feet to the ground first.

Hunter – UB – Excellent Hindorff this time – rushes one of the handstands in there – clean on the bail – arches her final hs – low chest on landing with a step back. “She’s happy with that routine.” Not that happy. Nothing major but a couple small issues there, just a little tight tonight. 9.900 still.

Repp – VT – Better full – has the height, larger hop back.

Caquatto – UB – Quite strong on the Ray as well – clean legs and position on the bail – also cating to hs well – hops back on the DLO a ways, and then another step to salute. Great on the bars but will get hit for the landing.  9.825.

Sk. Jones – Better yhalf from her – they’re getting it going later in the rotation – good distance on that one with a pretty big step forward.

Sloan – UB – Usual dynamic Ray (but the feet!) – a little crooked on the bail perhaps but didn’t look to give away the leg separation this time – nailing all the hs perfectly – sticks the DLO – 10.000. There’s Sloan’s bars 10. Now she has the whole set. Just a matter of time. And she’s not even a senior yet. She’s stealing Kytra’s 10s!

McMurtry – UB – toe on – good finish on the full turn and a clean bail – very precise work and then sticks her full twisting double back – fine, solid work. Marian goes 9.900 (which is about what I thought it would get, but the other judge goes 9.750)

Commentator calls them the parallel bars. Nope.

After 2: Florida 98.975, TWU 96.725
TWU counting a vault fall now, and Florida just slid off 198 pace there in spite of Sloan’s 10. Not really a problem with that rotation. In fact, I had fewer issues with that performance than I did with vault. Caquatto did give away too much on her landing, and Hunter looked a little tight, but Sloan, BDG, and McMurtry pretty much did what they can do in those routines. For the most part, they’ll take that performance. 

Arkansas now reports that the webcast is back on. This is not the first no-webcast fake-out we’ve had this year. What is happening? Stop jumping the gun with reporting that there won’t be a webcast!

Rotation 3:
Fassbender – BB – They’ve have messed with this lineup basically every week (not complaining) – clean on the aerial to bhs – full turn – sheep is getting better? My imagination? – side aerial to full dismount. Very clean start, no wobbles there. 9.850.

Kremer – “Already looks like she’s enjoying the music” – You mean because she’s competing a floor routine? Comes in short on a double back with a lunge – loses her feet on the rudi and goes off the the side and OOB. She has a gigantic bruise on her leg, and some sloppiness on the 1.5.

Spicer – BB -solid loso series to start, hits the gainer loso to follow as well – her work always looks a little tight but she’s hitting – short on the switch – slides back on gainer full, but solid. 9.900.

Moredock – FX – takes a hundred million steps out of her double pike (or “a few steps”) and goes OOB – switch side and popa are a bit short – layout to half is fine as the middle pass – 1.5 to layout last pass with no height, just pulled around the 1.5 and an arched layout –

Boyce – BB – Back in the lineup this week as expected afte rbeing held out last week – very clean on the aerial to bhs – and again on the loso series – she has improved her details since last season – the wrists are still a little extreme sometimes, but she’s focusing on them – switch was iffy but split jump was good – sticks a staggered gainer full. Good hit.

Repp – FX – large lunge back on double tuck –  switch side is fine – they love these front layout+front half combos, but they’re working for them, best pass in each of the routines so far – hits her wolf full – front full is clean to end.

McMurtry – BB – Just kind of wobble on choreography – step back on punch front – leaps are OK as is the shush – full turn is tight – smallest things causing tiny problems – that was a 2.5 dismount, not a 1.5 – step but solid work on the dismount. 9.875.  

Sk. Jones – FX – a bit low chested on the double pike but the solidest double salto landing on the team so far, just pulls around that front full, has to step back – looks sluggish going into the final pass – 1.5 to layout and the flag lady is feeling pretty charitable because it looked like she did go out.

Hunter – BB – Strong landing on her huge loso series – nice full turn – still looking a little tight though – switch side is a bit wonky – near stick on the double tuck – just a small hop in place – 9.900.

Jones – FX – front to double pike – good form throughout that pass and had the height on the double pike – OOB though – leaps are not there – short on both straddle and wolf – she tries to get some points back with me by using a loso out of her final pass, but the leaps, girl.

Sloan – BB – way off on her aerial and a big bend at the hips – repeats the skill into a bhs – switch to split jump – another check on nothing – she scored very well last week but looks like she needs more time with this one. This looks like one of her usual January beam routines. Nice side aerial. Great 2/1 stuck, but they won’t use this score.

UCLA and Arkansas soon to get underway but not yet.

Jones – FX – solid double pike in the air with a large-ish step back – switch side and popa look fine – fine on the front layout and full – in spite of the early step, she looks the most comfortable with her passes – 1.5 to layout final pass – hit work.

After 3: Florida 148.375, TWU 145.475
Florida goes 49.400 on beam, which is OK but not great. The problem for Florida is that when Sloan isn’t having one of her good ones, they lack that huge auto-9.950 that they used to have with Caquatto at the end. No major issues until Sloan, but those little bits of tightness will hurt them compared to a team like Oklahoma.

UCLA and Arkansas starting now.Nelson just had a fine yfull with a hop.

Francis – UB – good first hs – excellent form on shaposh – hits bail – nice shoot to hb – full could still finish a bit earlier, but I’ll take the current finish if it means she keeps sticking that dismount, which she did once again.

Canizaro – VT – more piking than we saw from Nelson on her yfull and a pretty large bounce back. Good distance, though.

Meraz – UB – This is still my question mark routine for UCLA. It’s solid but there are form issues throughout. A little floppy in the bail but keeps her legs together – hs look pretty good this week – flat tkatchev – leg break on the DLO and then lands short with a lunge forward, which has happened quite a few times this year.

Elswick – VT – Good height on her full and not much piking – also has a pretty significant bounce back –

DeJesus – UB – They have a lower score from Meraz to drop now, so Sophina needs one of her good ones – a little short on first hs – the usual legs on her gienger – hits the bail pretty well, but is cutting all these handstand short – lands with her chest down on the ground on her dismount with a step back. One of her sloppier routines.

MacMoyle – Vt – Back in the lineup this week – good vault – one of her better landings – just a little bit of piking at the end, and comes in somewhat short, with a small hop in place –

Mossett – UB – Huge on the jareger – clean on the pak as well – she seems to have figured out that skill – shortish on the final handstand, and then the usual two small steps on the dismount – they’ll take it but she gave away a bit at the end.

Zaziski – VT -GREAT full. Very nice – Excellent body position maintained throughout and a stick. 9.850. Tighter scoring tonight than in many other meets and to the Arkansas home meets previously, when that would have received a 9.950.

Peszek – UB – full is great – that’s how you do a gienger – hits the bail well – a little arched on her last hs – tries to pretend like she stuck the DLO but stepped to salute – still good work, though.

Wellick – VT – Another very strong vault – great height and distance and form, just a small, small slide of the legs on landing.

Lee – UB – good first hs – hits the bhardwaj excellently  – shaposh half is clean as well – not a good DLO with a large lunge back. They did not nail this bars rotation. Still gets a 9.900.

After 1: UCLA 49.275, Arkansas 49.150.
Not a problematic vault rotation at all for Arkansas. Zaziski and Wellick both nailed the vaults at the end, so they should be happy with that performance. It was better than some of the huge vault scores they’ve received at home so far this year. UCLA was just OK on bars. Francis was excellent, but other than her, the dismounts were not excellent with a few giving away way, way too much.  

Back to Florida.

Fassbender – FX – Opens 2.5 to front tuck, a little ragged int he legs but fine, double pike middle pass – low chest but controlled – a little short on her split full and straddle – not terrible but can be closer to 180 – 15 to front pike is secure.

TWU working against a fall on beam in the second spot from Kelly, Simpson looked like the loso was going to be fine here, but adjusts too quickly and has a large wobble – large lunge back on gainer full – a bunch of trouble deductions in there.

Spicer – FX – solid enough landing on the piked full in – the usual stagger and chest but under control – front full to front pike – short on the front pike with a hop back – shouldn’t be giving away that error – solid double pike with perhaps a tiny slide but nbd. Fine routine, not her cleanest.

Sk. Jones – BB – love the round off back pike (layout? Whipped layout?) acro series but bends at the waist on it – good kickover front, that’s the best part of her routine – sticks 1.5 – solid after the trouble series at the start.

Wang – FX – Pretty good DLO this time – looked like she was coming in a little short but didn’t show it in the landing – layout and half middle pass its a little piked in places – fine on the double tuck to finish. She’s progressing with this routine.

For UCLA, Honest came in a little short on an otherwise strong yfull with a hop. Good stick from Meraz who is back in the lineup.

Spencer Jones is hitting beam – just a check on the full turn and a hit gainer full.

Hunter – FX – Here we go – best and last 10 chance – Great DLO, good control on landing – 1.5 to layout to front pike is hit – it’s less interesting than her old middle pass, but I understand the decision – there’s no reason to spoil the chance at the 10 – hits her straddles I suppose – camera issues – great chest position and control on double tuck – Give it up? 9.975. Would have had no problem with a 10 there. Marian Dykes was not giving that thing a 10. Jeers from the crowd.

Repp falls for TWU, counting a fall now.

No Baker on floor tonight for Florida, so I assume there’s an issue. They’ll need her back yesterday. I need her back. Florida will finish floor with Bridgey. If Bridgey gets a 10 and Kytra doesn’t…

Caquatto – FX – front double full with some raggedy legs and a lunge – no front tuck this time. rudi to a solid split jump – very good switch side and straddle – solid hit on the double pike.

Peszek hops back on her vault for UCLA. They finish with Irvin and another larger step back. No Williams?

Paige Zaziski just did a DAMN FINE bars routine – Great stick on DLO. UCLA was once again just OK on vault. Those landings were not good enough for this point in the season. Meraz stuck, but too many bounces to get those 49.5s that the top teams are getting.

Florida finishes with a 197.900.  Which is basically terrible compared to last weekend’s scoring standard. A solid meet, but every rotation has areas to improve.

We’re already starting Alabama and Oklahoma!

McNeer bounces back on vault. She has been sticking. They needed a stick.

Clark – UB – Good shaposh and rhythm in the swing – very clean on the bail – hits her hs  – good finishing position on the full turn – hops back on double tuck. Solid, though.

C Sims – VT – Good height and there’s the stick! Nice vault. A little piking down in the chest at the end to hold the stick, but great. 

Kmieciak – UB – Very strong Ray – good hs – a little hip angle on the bail there – sticks the full twisting double tuck – nice work again. Clean first few routines, exactly the right start.

Brannan – VT – She’s added back the 1.5 now – risky and I like it – hops to the side, though. Would she score better with a full? Some knee bend as well.

Jackson – UB – High piked jaeger – hits the bail – hs look OK – step back on the DLO – very, very straight position on the DLO – not an arch. So typical of OU that she would suddenly become a bars worker this year.

Beers – VT – Put her back to the full, which is a good move. Great form and power, small hop back. 9.950. The scores are coming today. 

Wofford – UB – good full turn – and a strong half to follow – lovely form on the jaeger – clean bail – perhaps short on final hs – just a twitch of the legs on the tuck full dismount – great beginning, just gave away some tiny bits at the end.

Williams – VT – 1.5 with a pretty big step forward. Girl! This was your chance! Everything great except the landing.

Scaman – UB – a little tight in that first hs – piked jaeger is fine – hits the bail well – these hs are an issue, though – just bends to hold onto the stick on the tuck full – Ashley says she was close on the piked jaeger – not really that close, though – it was OK – the couple tight handstands were the thing in that routine.

Clark – VT – Very strong full in the air, but just came in short enough that she was not able to keep the stick and does a large lunge-salute forward.Didn’t get the landings from the last two, which has opened things up for OU.

Dowell – UB – Good shaposh – exceptional Church – also a bit short on her bail (minorly, but definitely there) – hops on DLO 1/1 dismount. A couple areas in there to take, but good work.

Note: I always feel like people are short on their bails at Alabama meets. Is it just something about the angle we’re seeing these skills, or is there something in the air in Alabama that makes people miss all the bails?

After 1: Alabama 49.450, Oklahoma 49.375
Fine but not amazing rotations for both teams. Everyone on Oklahoma’s team had just slight issues, tight handstands or hops on landings or some Alabama-esque bails. Alabama was having an excellent vault rotation with Sims and Beers nailing their vaults. It could have been a massive score, but they just gave away the advantage with the landings on the last two, so Oklahoma remains close.

Pinches just had a struggle on floor for UCLA with some low and ragged landings. Arkansas has reorganized this beam rotation with Wellick at #2 and Zaziski at #3. Bend and wobble on the kickover front from Zaziski – step and then a lunge to salute on the 1.5. A couple moments of tightness there as well.

Pua is back in on floor for this meet. Cowboyed her double arabian but a bit better control on the landing. Nice middle pass – front full to a stuck front pike – split full and popa looked around – lower chest on double pike but controlled landing.

Nelson – BB – you could tell she was off on that loso series before it started – short, center of gravity was way off and comes off the beam – solid front tuck – hop forward on 1.5. 

LSU pulled things back together on beam with a 49.375 featuring a couple 9.950s. Recovering from that bars issue. They need to figure out that bars lineup.

Back to OU/Alabama

Lovan – VT – Some piking in that vault and a larger hop back. Not her best.

Some low chest landings for Meraz for UCLA on floor but a controlled routine. 

McNeer – UB – Very strong Ray – hitting her hs pretty well – and a stick on the DLO. Great start. Very clean routine – big releases and hit handstands throughout.

Kmieciak – VT – Great form on her full, but also a pretty big bounce back. OU just a little off so far tonight. Nothing bad, but not quite nailing things yet. Championships still a month away.

Bailey – UB – late on her giant full turn – but clean through the rest of her work – goes to the full out and completely stumbles back with a ton of steps – shame. That can be a great routine.

Dowell – VT – Huge 1.5 with a near stick – just a step back but not major – looked great in the air –

Winston – UB – Needs to hold that first handstand a bit more – just short on some of them – strong tkatchev and pak, though – very nice work on those – missed all three of her cast handstands, though. Small movement on dismount.

Capps – VT – Another with a bounce on landing. Her usual lovely full in the air, but not enough control on these vaults so far to get the huge scores.

A Sims – UB – Weiler 1/2 with a leg break – is WAY off going to her bail handstand, misses her hand,  collapses the skill, and comes off the bar. She’s fine – that’s a fall that looks worse than it really is. They’ll have to count Bailey’s score now, though. The rest was OK, but with the usual leg breaks.

Jackson – VT – Huge distance on her 1.5 as well – massive vault, but also with a medium step forward.

Neither team is really on it so far today. Oklahoma just has the smaller mistakes now compared to Alabama.

Beers – UB – Strong open hs and shaposh into bail combo – a little short on her half turn on the low bar – some leg breaks – half turn to double front and does pretty well to control the landing – looked like she was going to overrotate it a bit but saves it with a small step.

Scaman – VT – You know they didn’t bring the sticks today because even Scaman didn’t stick. Best landing on the team so far, though, just a small hop back. The rest was beautiful as always. She opens out of that vault so well.

Clark – UB – Good toe on to shaposh – clean on shoot back to high bar – one short handstand late – her usual huge DLO but even she takes a small step. Good work but a couple places to take there.

After 2: Oklahoma 98.825, Alabama 98.550
Oklahoma takes the lead after a fairly weak 49.100 from Alabama on bars. They had the fall from Sims, the dismount mistake from Bailey, and a couple people with some unnecessary dismount steps. Not the rotation they wanted. VERY interesting that Jetter appears to be out of the bars lineup now. Has missed a few meets in a row. Oklahoma gets the same 49.450 that Alabama got on vault, even though they did not bring their landing shoes. No sticks in that vault rotation, but as Florida did earlier, they were able to rely on the inherent quality of the vaults from Capps, Dowell, Jackson, and Scaman, all of whom are really only getting deductions for their landings because the rest of the vault is brilliant.

Both teams need more sticks, though, if we’re really going to see some deserved high 197s. Not enough landings so far.

Arkansas counted a fall on beam, while UCLA went 49.300 on floor in another rotation that mirrored the rest of the meet so far. Fine, but not what they can do. Mostly because neither Francis nor Peszek were in the floor lineup. Then what’s the point of anything? Also Cipra had a short landing to take her score down.   

Both the UCLA/Arkansas and Oklahoma/Alabama meets are back on for the next rotation. Meraz hitting a very solid beam and McNeer having just a couple small checks in her otherwise lovely work. Nice stick on the 1.5 for her. That’s what they’ve been missing during those 9.850 fests. Meraz has a step forward on hers.

Capps – FX – Stop talking through this routine, Ashley. Solid double pike. Clean on the front layout to front full as well. This is better landing control from Chayse than some of her routines this year, and of course the performance is lovely. SHUT UP COMMENTATORS. THIS DOES NOT REMIND YOU OF ALABAMA’S ROUTINES. I DON’T CARE. Double full to layout stepout – the twisting is a little ragged, but everything else was strong and solid.

Guerrero – BB – solid on her two loso series – good switch and then a check on her straddle 1/4 – side aerial to a full that was pretty piked – bent to hold onto the stick.

Red alert. Hall gets another 10 on floor.  2nd 10 of the day.

Lovan – FX -Clean rudi to stag to front tuck – with low difficulty, she needs to be clean and she is – front full to layout is secure as well – very strong switch and split full – definitely hit the leaps – easy and comfortable double pike – she is so tiny that she doesn’t get much amplitude, but she is able to get the skills around with that inch of air she gets.

Williams, K – BB – big and strong on the switch side – perfectly secure on the punch front – (very nice beam routine from Dejesus for UCLA as well it appeared from watching peripherally) – hits the bhs loso as well – the leg form is a little sloppy but it’s well hit – popa is fully around and hit to 180 – pretty full turn – sticks the 1.5. GREAT routine. Her best beam of the year. 9.950. One judge went 10, the other 9.900.  

Dowell – FX – EXCEPTIONAL double front – great stick into the stag – and a solid 1.5 to front full as well – hitting her splits as well – she’s starting to progress as a performer, but everything is still quite tense and severe – nails every single pass, though. That was excellent.

A Sims – BB – Wobble with the leg up on the aerial – another check on the loso series – pulling it back together with her excellent leaps – that switch side is perfection – very good double back with a small step. Struggles early, cleaned up the errors about halfway through.

Jackson – FX – I enjoy this routine, it’s weird but not bad-weird like some of the “rowing a boat” era routines – such an open piked full in – great control as well, with a step but a clearly controlled one – half to front full is very secure as well – leaps looked OK and comfortable on the double pike. Should be another good score. 9.850? Because why? 

PENG FELL ON BEAM MY LIFE IS OVER.

Beers – BB – Good switch and split – solid side somi – hits her loso series as well – lovely full turn – good closure of feet to head on the sheep jump though with the legs very apart – good stick on the 1.5 – another strong routine. She and Williams nailed this rotation. “Her head actually leaves the beam.” Um, I hope her head left the beam. Her head shouldn’t be on the beam.

Peszek trying to save UCLA. Good aerial to back – THANK YOU switch to straddle jump this time and it’s great – good full turn – large amount of stalling before dismount series. Stuck – great routine.

Scaman – FX – Ashley reports that she came in short on her DLO. I was busy watching Peszek and missed it – nice middle pass, though. Good split half and straddle – short on the double pike dismount with a lunge. The weakest routine she’s ever done? Maybe. 

UCLA does end up breaking 197, with a 197.075 [adjusted to 197.175] -but they would have hoped for a bit more. Won’t be able to catch Michigan with that score.

Clark – BB – Nice switch and split – hits her loso series well with a bit of leg issues but not much – nice sheep and full turn as well – Dana has them really focusing on making these full turns pretty and I appreciate that a lot – secure kickover front – hops her legs together on the gainer full.

Brown – FX – Filling in for Brewer who had the curse of the 10 and got injured in warmups after getting a 10 last week. She is a lovely gymnast, but does she have the big gymnastics? Very secure double back to start – layout to a clean rudi as well – why are we zooming in on her face during the dance elements? – this was a pretty pretty routine, and she gave away very little. Should get an anchor boost in the score as well. The beauty of that last spot.

After 3: Oklahoma 148.200, Alabama 148.075
Alabama had three very solid routines in that rotation, all of which got big scores to help them to massive 49.525. Oklahoma was saved by that obvious accomplished floor star Natalie Brown, with a 9.925 (!) to maintain the lead. They got a couple 9.925s there and were able to drop Scaman’s score, but I thought other than Scaman they performed well. Don’t understand Jackson’s score. I thought that routine was great. (Just saw the comment about the scoring spread. Yeah, I don’t see a 9.750 for that routine AT ALL.)

A Courville-less LSU goes huge in the final three rotations for a 197.275 total. They won’t be able to use that for RQS (Florida does a little dance), but some big rotation scores in there to end without their top gymnast.

The expression difference between KJ and Dana is hilarious. Dana is leading a brass band in a parade, and KJ is like “I will break everything, especially the judge who gave Ali a 9.750.” She is also coaching beam right now, compared to Dana on floor.

Final rotation now, just a little over a tenth in this one, with Alabama about to go to senior night floor, but Oklahoma about to go to Oklahoma beam.

Kmieciak – BB -nice wolf – solid on the loso series – just looked a little tight on it and didn’t give away a wobble – nice straddle 1/2 – finishes double tuck with a larger lunge back, but strong on the beam.

Frost – FX – Strong DLO with a littel bounce – switch was iffy but popa and wolf full looked fine – punch front full to layout – some ragged feet on the double tuck but hit. Solid 9.8ish starts for both teams.

Sorensen – BB – so pretty but makes me so nervous – lovely switch and split – fluid on the aerial and bhs connection – wonderful displays of flexibility – sticks the gainer full – that was an excellent routine.

Jetter – FX – Out of bars but in on floor – double arabian with a bit of an uncontrolled lunge forward, though she stays in bounds. Hits her leaps well – nice on the 1.5 to front full – clean on the 1.5 to layout as well. Solid work throughout, and did well to hold the double arabian in bounds.

Lovan – BB – strong switch side – clean loso series – and lovely aerial into a hit split jump – more very precise work – standing loso to back full – and she hit that one just like her floor routines – so efficient and clean – fast and precise.

Thanks for the heads up about Jackson’s raised floor score. Correct decision. A bit more margin for OU now.

Winston – FX – Excellent leaps – wonderful to see – secure double tuck – just layouts middle pass – Ashley not happy with how simple this routine is, but it’s leap-heavy work because she nails all of them – switch ring as well – slides back on double pike. 9.800. Hmmm, I thought that was a strong routine. Am I blindly biased in favor of her opening leaps?

R. Clark – BB -split jump – came in a little short on that aerial but did well to stay with it and connect into the swingdown without giving away a pause or a wobble – full turn – small check on stag – controls the side somi – sticks the 1.5. Great work.

K. Clark – FX – Strong and high double pike as always, just keeps that front leg planted – leaps look good as well – 1.5 to layout goes right to the edge but stays in – finishes with a high and secure double pike – their best floor routine so far – nailed all her passes –

Capps – BB – solid on the loso series to beat jump – moves with such confidence and wonderful rhythm – nice full turn – hits her aerial – SACRILEGE: I don’t love her squatty little side-to-side choreography there toward the end. Everything else, yes. That, no. Sticks gainer full. Great work.

Beers – FX – Big DLO and good control – layout to front full is controlled as well – she has this routine down now – it wasn’t quite there early in the year, and then she had that mess, but since the mess she has returned to the 9.9 gymnast we know. Good split full – hits her double back – chest up, secure landing. Very nice. Dana is ALL ABOUT THE 10 HANDS for that. 9.950, but the 9.900 for Capps was enough for OU to clinch it.

Brown – BB – Nice sissone – she’s similarly lovely and simple on beam as on floor, but on her straddle 3/4 has a bend at the hips – good full turn – switch is OK to a stuck gainer full. Had the wobble, but they don’t need this routine. Still a 9.850. The Natalie Brown Show?

C Sims – FX – front tuck to double back – no DLO? – front full to front pike is solid as well – nice switch side and split jump – I was going well, but finishes with a short double pike and a lunge forward.

FINAL: Oklahoma 197.725, Alabama 197.500
Justice done. The correct result there. Alabama gave it away with that poor bars rotation, so even though Oklahoma did certainly have some moments of Slopsville on the first two events that took them out of 198 contention, the Sooners were solid on floor in the counting scores and then pretty much nailed that beam rotation about as well as they could. We’ll have to be on Brewer watch, though, because she’s key to a few of these lineups. Oklahoma, however, looked far from unbeatable today and didn’t bring their usual routines in quite a few instances.

Alabama had a few moments of brilliance in this meet, especially some of those 9.950 beam routines. That’s the best beam routine Kayla Williams has done in college. Lauren Beers brought it tonight as well. But the bars mistakes, counting that dismount from Bailey, along with a couple of those later vault landings were enough to put them down below Oklahoma. Both teams looked fine, but neither had an awesome meet. Oklahoma opened the door for Alabama, but the Tide was not able to take advantage.

Overall, not nearly as strong a day as last Friday. The scores were lower, mostly as a result of weaker gymnastics. Florida has the top score on the day and probably the most consistently solid performance, but even the Gators showed the lack of Kennedy Baker on a couple events and had a few too many just OK routines for 9.825. While LSU had three rotations of a good meet and a bars trouble (no Courville + no Ranzy = trouble), and UCLA just lacked precision in the landings across the board. Note: UCLA’s score was raised to a 197.175 after DeJesus’s beam score was corrected to a 9.850. Auburn finished with a 197.100 (too many 9.7s on bars).

NC State just fell to Missouri, but did score a 196.000, which is HUGE in their fight to drop some 194s and get into the top 36. Big result for them.