Women’s Day 1 – In Review (Memoriam?)

Well, that wasn’t too helpful. Or maybe it was. I suppose that all depends on what you were thinking about the worlds team to begin with.

The general consensus seems to be that it’s not an amazing crop of seniors this year. There are exceptions to that at the very top, of course, but for the most part the juniors managed to outshine the seniors with more gymnasts showing an internationally competitive level of form, precision, and confidence. We also saw a surprising number of fulls on vault for US senior elites. This ain’t no 2007, people.

The GAGE juniors were at their first nationals, which is typically the “figuring out how things go” kind of nationals, and yet they were brilliant, stealing the show in terms of form, comfort with their routines, and use of “I just hit a routine and it makes me FURIOUS” face. The mid-range seniors, while typically showing more difficulty, were not as polished as the juniors. This difference is normal for a post-Olympic year, when there’s not a Simone or a Nastia who has turned senior.

  • Ragan Smith of course came out of the first day in the best shape, recording the top AA score of the year with a 57.400, despite having just a normal, OK, fine-with-a-wonky beam kind of day. She can expect to go higher for day 2.
  • Which brings us to: The beam scoring was wackadoo. Overall, the scoring didn’t seem out of control, but the execution scores on beam did create some odd rankings and were higher than what I hope we’ll see at worlds this year.
  • TD changed Smith’s floor music to be less racist! Hooray! Because that was even a situation! If you’re not up on the issue, the floor music Smith used in podium training opened with “Dixie.” Yada yada yada, it no longer opens with “Dixie.” Kim recut that music quick. Which was a good call. Although this really shouldn’t have been a situation in the first place. Do your research. Know what your music is.
  • Our presumed race between McCusker and Hurd for the second all-around position didn’t really come off, did it? McCusker was one of the few who will be happy with her performance on day 1: four hit routines and a comfortable 2nd-place in the AA despite vaulting only a full. With a repeat on day 2, she would solidify a worlds case. We shall see. I’m of course still worried she’s going to shatter into a million pieces every time she moves, but you know. Elite.
  • Jade Carey’s Amanar fall raised some concerns. The question for her heading into the meet was whether hitting at an international level was going to be an every-time thing. Because of that fall, she hasn’t answered that question in the affirmative yet. It’s just one meet, but Classic was also just one meet. To me, we’re still kind of getting an “incomplete” for Jade Carey on vault. BUT, Carey managed a very good floor score – despite what seemed a weaker routine than she showed at Classic overall because nothing matters – so inconsistency with hitting vaults may not matter too much because her floor combined with the possibility of vault looks to be more than the others have to offer for that spot. Still, watch the day 2 vaults. The score is 1-to-1 so far.
  • Ashton Locklear did not show her inbars, as she told us she wouldn’t. As long as she doesn’t show those skills, that means Shchennikova is still in the picture for bars (she fell on beam again like at Classic but was bumped down the rankings this time because of people actually doing the AA), though that position for Shchennikova will change if Locklear brings full D to selection camp. She’s quite close to Shchennikova as is, even with her downgraded routine. If Locklear doesn’t bring the upgrades by selection, then a number of different permutations open up, including by not limited to bringing Shchennikova to worlds for bars, or not stressing about a bars spot altogether.
  • Trinity Thomas is perfect. She was quite excellent on beam as the resident “nobody is allowed to do leaps but Trinity” of the US seniors, also receiving a big score on floor despite a couple short landings. Her low difficulty on vault—along with her crazy Pak on bars—kept her down in 5th, which is still a good all-around result for her, though she would be in 4th place if not for the arbitrary “doing a Yurchenko full” penalty that is imposed on the D score.
  • The fun game of the weekend has been trying to find ways to get Trinity Thomas onto the worlds team, though you have to do some significant logical contortions to get there. Right now, she’s not among the top-2 AAers, and her showcase events are beam (which won’t be a priority for specialists if the two AAers are Smith and McCusker because they’re two beamers already) and floor (where she’d be competing with Carey for a spot, Carey with the added argument of vault in her corner). May wishing make it so.
  • I enjoyed seeing Jordan Chiles get third in the AA. That’s the kind of placement she’s capable of getting when she hits four events. Vault and bars were quite clean, and she smartly toned down the attempted leaps on floor (scoring better than Classic despite weaker landings), and…get this…hit beam! The split full on beam needs to go, ideally replaced by a lower-difficulty dance element connected to a B to get series bonus. Chiles is not fitting into a worlds picture, but it was a strong improvement from Classic.
  • The best-fall award went to Leah Clapper for straddling the beam on her layout stepout series, grasping on for dear life by the legs, and then doggedly attempting to hoist herself back onto the beam for 78 minutes. Add it to the highlight reel.
  • Victoria Nguyen was not ready to compete here, with falls or as-good-as-falls on every event. She didn’t look like she was competing injured necessarily, just not ready to hit routines. She did perfect the one-armed release catch on bars, though.
  • Marz Frazier did not show us the Amanar that we were promised (ME WANT AMANAR), but she is much improved over previous seasons (if only “most improved” weren’t such a condescending award) and has turned herself into a competitive senior elite in the all-around.
  • Marissa Oakley on bars was a real highlight. Such nice toes, very composed, hit routine with a Fabrichnova dismount.
  • Simone and Laurie literally killed small children with their sheer presences when they walked by. It was definitely what a murder sounds like. 
  • Macready gonna Macready. The “blindfold young girls and make them snatch around the floor for hygiene products” apparently went so well at Trials that it’s back now. Great. 
  • As is frequently the case, floor music is less trashy in person when you have other things to be distracted by and aren’t really paying attention. I’m not saying it’s great; I’m saying I didn’t cut my own ears off. Emily Gaskins is the most compelling performer of the seniors right now by a landslide. She’s the one who makes you miss more important routines because you’re watching her floor. 
  • If you hit your routine and you aren’t Ragan Smith, you got an 8.1 E. Even if you’re Deanne Soza. 
  • We’re waiting on the juniors. O’Keefe and Malabuyo are ready to take over. Those two had the best meets of anyone, junior or senior. Even though they scored lower than Smith, they hit closer to their potential peaks.

 

11 thoughts on “Women’s Day 1 – In Review (Memoriam?)”

  1. If I were senior, including any member of the Final 5 who’s thinking about coming back, I’d be really nervous about this crop of juniors. They are amazing! However, I also want Trinity to go to Worlds. And Riley–I love how rockstar confident she looked after having a couple of shaky meets this year. She has great flair. Are only 4 able to go? And is 2-per country in the finals still a thing? I know it’s only for ind awards this year, but I’m not clear on the details.

    1. The rules for this year’s Worlds team are: each country can bring four gymnasts but only three can compete on each apparatus and only two per country can advance to the AA/event finals.

      On the men’s side, they can bring six athletes but only three up on each apparatus and two advance.

  2. Trinity has been doing the yurchenko full since 2014… and every year since.. WHY? Whats her deal? I dont see her even in the race for Worlds this year. Next year def. Chiles, meh. If she had a second vault she would fit into the worlds picture. But she looks over it, especially after floor. But selection camp is the final say.

    1. This is by far the easiest year to get to Worlds. If it doesn’t happen this year, chances of it happening next year are slim.

      1. Next year is a team worlds, (unlike this year which is only individual), so
        someone like Trinity (not quite top 2 AA with no standout event) has a better chance of fitting in the picture. If this year was a team worlds, IMO she’d be on it.

        For those with a standout event (like Jade Carey), this year is definitely the easier year to make it.

      2. Yeah but the competition next year is going to be way harder because the Junior trio will be seniors.

  3. I hated vault. I’m not here to see FTY. I can go to UCLA for that tyvm.

  4. Is triple wolf immediately into double wolf turn a potential deduction? I feel like it sets up very poor routine flow. Its such a slow skill, and so watching essentially five wolf turns in a row has to be one of the most boring things for me to watch.

  5. the highlight of the day was Simone saying she was back in the gym !!! and lol at Laurie trying to dance around the fact that’s she not

  6. I feel like Leanne Wong wasn’t pointed out for being Leanne Wong. Same goes for Kara Eaker and how they’re in third and fourth as first year juniors!! Gotta love GAGE.

  7. I’m so proud of Ragan for working so hard on bars- but let’s be real, those are some fairly janky in-bars. Props for working the code, though.

    Still in it for Morgan Hurt and Jordan Chiles, even if they need a little consistency.

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