2019 Preview – LSU Tigers

LSU ROSTER 2019
Seniors
Julianna
Cannamela
VT
BB
FX
  • Competed 14 VTs in 2018 for 9.870 RQS
  • Has potential Y1.5 on VT
  • Competed 5 FXs (9.845), 2 BBs (9.162)
Sarah Finnegan
VT
UB
BB
FX
  • Competed AA in 13 of 16 meets in 2018
  • Ranked #1 nationally on UB, #4 on BB, #7 on FX
  • RQS of 9.960 UB, 9.940 BB, 9.935 FX, 9.885 VT
Lexie
Priessman
VT
UB
FX
  • Made final 2018 lineups on UB, FX
  • Ranked #7 nationally on UB (9.950)
  • Competed 9 VTs (9.870), 7 FXs (9.863 avg)
Juniors
Kennedi
Edney
VT
UB
BB
FX
  • Competed AA in 13 of 16 meets in 2018
  • Team’s top returning VT score (9.900)
  • RQS of 9.930 FX, 9.915 UB, 9.870 BB
Ruby Harrold
VT
UB
FX
  • Competed regular VT, UB in 2018
  • RQS of 9.845 UB, Avg of 9.733 on VT
  • Hit 4 of 5 FX routines in 2018
McKenna
Kelley
(redshirt)
VT
FX
  • Missed 2018 season with torn Achilles
  • 9.925 RQS on FX in 2017
  • Competed 1 VT in 2017 for 9.825
Ashlyn Kirby UB
BB
FX
  • Competed FX each week for 9.870 RQS
  • Competed 2 UBs in 2018 (9.113 avg)
Sophomores
Reagan Campbell
BB
  • Competed weekly BB for 9.840 RQS in 2018
Bridget Dean
UB
BB
  • Did not compete in 2018
Christina Desiderio
BB
FX
  • Made final 2018 lineups on BB, FX
  • RQS of 9.900 BB, 9.820 FX
Sami Durante
UB
BB
  • Competed UB weekly in 2018 for 9.880
Sarah Edwards
VT
FX
  • Competed Y1.5 VT each week in 2018 for 9.880 RQS
  • Provided early-season FX for 9.865 RQS
Olivia Gunter
  • Did not compete in 2018
Freshmen
Rebecca D’Antonio
  • Cypress Pointe
  • 3rd AA, 2018 Region 8s
  • Possible BB depth
Bailey Ferrer
VT
UB
FX
  • Brandy Johnson’s
  • US elite, 2013-2014
  • VTs 10.0 start Omelianchik
  • Expected to contribute VT and FX with possible UB

FINAL SEASON RANKINGS
2018 – 4th
2017 – 2nd
2016 – 2nd
2015 – 10th
2014 – 3rd
2013 – 5th
2012 – 9th
2011 – 20th
2010 – 9th
2009 – 6th

THE STORY
Every team is always fighting against the concept of regression. The roster-building project is, at the very least, about making sure the level from the previous season is maintained. That’s no small task for the top teams. LSU has been a title contender for 5+ years now and has been the “if not Oklahoma, then…” team for the last three seasons.

But the piranhas have gathered. With UCLA’s upset victory last season and Florida nipping LSU for 3rd at Super Six, the collection of legitimate challengers is broadening. Maintaining that position as the #2 team in the country, let alone improving on it, is far from a given for LSU in 2019. We know that LSU will enter the season as one of the favorites to make the 4-team championship, but what role LSU plays in that top four is still uncertain. Is LSU the #2 team again, or is LSU the one in the danger spot that might get picked off by a surging underdog that we’re currently underestimating?

Decisive in that regard will be how well (and where) LSU can improve its scoring potential from 2018 in the face of losing five 9.9s and five of the best routines on the team. When you combine the introduction of Bailey Ferrer with the return of McKenna Kelley, LSU should be able to get close to that level again (better on some events, weaker on others, but the same kind of total scores), yet that’s sort of the minimum expectation for the roster-building project. That’s refilling the tank from a season that was excellent but ultimately did not produce the result LSU wanted.

To improve on last year’s scores, to get closer to winning a title, LSU will also have to see more from some of these sophomores, potentially making the leap from depth option to competition-ready 9.875. Is that possible?


VAULT 2019
Lineup locks: Kennedi Edney, Sarah Edwards, Ruby Harrold, Sarah Finnegan
Lineup options: Bailey Ferrer, Julianna Cannamela, Lexie Priessman, McKenna Kelley

LSU showed four 10.0 starts in its final vault lineup last season, a feat that should doable again this year. The big question, and it will be a theme across the four events, is whether someone new can replicate that potential 9.950 from Hambrick to avoid a dip.

At the top, Kennedi Edney will be essential again as the anchor vaulter, and more scoring responsibility will be on Sarah Edwards in a deeper-lying lineup position this year after she burst into the vault team last season. This season, her vault can’t be just a fun bonus. It must be one of the main things. LSU will also have Ruby Harrold’s 1.5 in the lineup, which while not as consistent in landing control, provides exceptionally valuable difficulty to LSU keeping up with the best vaulting schools.

Typically, top teams aren’t looking at Yfulls as absolute lineup locks and essential scores, but Sarah Finnegan is capable of outscoring most of the 10.0-start possibilities with her full and should be treated as an equal lock.

In lifting the supply of 10.0s back up to four, most important will be Bailey Ferrer and her Omelianchik that we were introduced to in the 2017 J.O. season. LSU may have other 10.0-start possibilities depending on health and landings, coming from the likes of Julianna Cannamela, who showed a 1.5 at times last season but went back to the full at the end of the year for scores. And of course, there’s Lexie Priessman with either a 1.5 or a full. I never like to project Priessman in the vault and floor lineups because while she’s obviously very capable of big numbers, the main goal is just making sure her legs don’t turn to dust and fall off before the end of her senior season. She must be protected for bars.

BARS 2019
Lineup locks: Sarah Finnegan, Lexie Priessman, Kennedi Edney, Ruby Harrold, Sami Durante
Lineup options: Bailey Ferrer, Bridget Dean, Ashlyn Kirby

Expect LSU’s bars lineup to be the most familiar and the most constant in 2019. There’s not a surplus of bars options on this team, so I fully expect the five lineup returners from last season—Finnegan, Priessman, Edney, Harrold, Durante—to compete every single week again this year. That will be enough to score quite well and, for the most part, maintain the potential from last season. Finnegan and Priessman frequently go 9.950, Edney will get some 9.9s of her own, and Harrold and Durante will almost always go over 9.8.

In the “who slots into Myia Hambrick’s lineup position?” conversation, the main nominee should be Ferrer. LSU will hope her routine comes through for a score that exactly maintains everything from last season, though she is brand new on the team this week so we’ll have to wait to see how it plays out. In that regard—and simply to protect against any unforeseen problems—LSU must have other bars options. Importantly, we saw Bridget Dean emerge from the cave for a bars routine at the 101. At this point in December, hers looks like a 9.750 set, but it’s nonetheless a usable routine. LSU is also trying to get Ashlyn Kirby back from injury. She provided backup bars last season, though did not hit in her two counting routines.

BEAM 2019
Lineup locks: Sarah Finnegan, Kennedi Edney, Reagan Campbell, Christina Desiderio
Lineup options: Sami Durante, Bridget Dean, Bailey Ferrer, Ashlyn Kirby, Julianna Cannamela

Beam is the most obvious point of concern for LSU this season because of the perfect-shaped hole in the lineup left by the departures of Macadaeg and Hambrick. It’s not going to be quite the same, and replacing those scores will be an onerous task. (The fact that both would sometimes get hosed for 9.850 in the first two spots almost helps the score-replacement project now because 9.850 is a very doable replacement task, even if replacing their actual gymnastics quality isn’t going to happen.)

Finnegan will remain the hope for a better future in the anchor position, and her fellow returners Campbell, Edney, and Desiderio will all be back in the lineup for 2019. Desiderio is the #2 returning score for LSU (9.900 RQS), and it seems she’ll be tasked with filling the leadoff role. So that’s four members of the lineup, done, easy peasy.

Now the hard part. Looking at the roster, the remaining two spots are wiiiiiiide open, but we did get some direction on that front from the 101 by seeing Durante and Dean in the lineup. Durante in particular looks like she’ll provide some solid replacement work, though it is reasonable to expect a drop in beam scores in the first-half positions for LSU this year. People like Finnegan and Campbell will have even more responsibility to get huge numbers in the late positions because they may not have the same early-lineup score support to lean on.

FLOOR 2019
Lineup locks: Kennedi Edney, Sarah Finnegan, McKenna Kelley, Christina Desiderio
Lineup options: Bailey Ferrer, Sarah Edwards, Ruby Harrold, Lexie Priessman, Ashlyn Kirby, Julianna Cannamela

While beam would be LSU’s most obvious point of regression compared to 2018, floor is the most obvious point of progress because LSU is losing one set from Hambrick (kind of an important set) but gaining what should be two strong scores from Kelley and Ferrer.

McKenna Kelley missed last season with injury but should return to scoring 9.9s this year, and floor has typically been Ferrer’s best event. It’s her most likely apparatus on which to deliver big numbers. If you put in those two, along with returners like Kennedi Edney, who should get 9.9s again this year, Christina Desiderio, who came along on floor toward the end of the season and will be expected to deliver bigger numbers more consistently this year, and Sarah Finnegan, who will Finnegan all over the place, that’s a very compelling five.

There should be plenty of choice for the remaining spot(s). Your ideal routine is Priessman’s, but see the note on vault. Otherwise, Kirby made the final lineup last season and is probably the favorite to lead off again once she’s fully back, Harrold is an excellent choice if the landing control is there, and Edwards will probably play the same role of providing a realistic lineup option that may or may not go depending on the week and the health of everyone else.

14 thoughts on “2019 Preview – LSU Tigers”

  1. I don’t think LSU can pass UCLA or Oklahoma this year, but if they did end up with their first title I would be happy. DD deserves one before her retirement. This appears to be their final shot at a title before DD retires.

  2. i’m surprised to see finnegan keep the full on vault. it seems like she has the height and technique to get a 1.5 and i know she trains one. we know she can go 9.95+ on the other three events on a good day but i think the full will seriously hurt her chances to win the national all around title. we know that all fulls get hammered (unless you’re alex mcmurtry)

  3. The trouble for LSU is that both UCLA and Florida should be significantly better this year than they were last year, when they beat LSU at nationals. LSU wasn’t particularly close to Oklahoma last year either. They were much closer in 2017. LSU never replaced the sky high vault/floor scores from Gnat.

    Personally, I think it’s a stretch to see how they replicate last year’s scores, let alone improve on them. On beam alone, I estimae they are going to lose .125 by replacing a 9.89 RQS from Macadaeg and 9.925 from Hambrick with likely 9.85s from Durante/Dean. I would estimate Hambrick’s 9.905 on vault will be replaced by a 9.875 from Ferrer, since the Omelianchik scores poorly in college (see Anastasia Webb). On Bars, I just don’t see Ferrer scoring 9.915 RQS. On floor, you can probably replace Desiderio’s 9.82 with a 9.9 from Ferrer, and I think Kelly can keep Hambrick’s score, so you get .08 back. I still have them .1 behind where they were last year, whereas I think UCLA/UF get even better and OU stays the same.

  4. Thank God we don’t have to see Macadaeg’s 32,000 head lifts on beam. That was beyond annoying

  5. I am curious why you think UF, especially, will be much better this year. They are losing McMurtry and Slocum (and Baker, though, that probably won’t have as much of an impact with her injury last year). Alex was good for near 10s on three events and while I know Florida has a good team, I am not sure there is anyone who wasn’t already in the lineup that can replicate McMurtry scores. In addition, UCLA has lost Peng and while everyone assumes Flatley will step into that role, she hasn’t competed in several years so I doubt she’ll be perfect 20 right off the bat (not that all of Peng’s 20s were deserved last year anyway). You’re right that the sophmores will have to step up and the team can’t consistently count many scores below 9.8, but I think the outlook is better than you indicated above (speaking to commenter Matt Boyle). Also, if I am remembering correctly, the margin between 1st and 4th last year was actually smaller than the margin between OU and LSU (at 1 and 2) than in the previous years, so while they got fourth, with a stick here or there in the unfavorable luck of a vault final rotation, they could have edged anyone of the other three out. They didn’t, of course, but the results were closer than you think.

    1. Trinity Thomas has the difficulty and execution to score 10s across all 4 events. Between her and the other freshmen, Florida more than replaces McMurtry and Slocums routines. Looking at Super Six last year, McMurtry fell on beam and was sub 9.9 on vault so they can easily improve on how they did in finals.

    2. Trinity Thomas will likely equal if not improve upon Alex’s RQS scores alone. The other freshmen/sophomores/juniors are all strong on paper (in their elite days) so UF should be much improved – the question for them is can they execute real scores to meet “on paper” expectations, and do they have the championship mojo that Bridget Sloan brought to the team in 2013 (the last Gators to win an NCAA title graduated last spring).

      UCLA is all about their 2018-19 junior class – they’ll be the team to beat for the next two years. The other classes complement the juniors.

      OU is going to see a major drop after this season with the graduation of a strong AAer and Breana. Even with Maggie still having one more season they are losing a lot of excellent/consistent scores.

      LSU is a wild card this year and they are very dependent on staying healthy more than any of the other top four teams – an injury to a key member could be devastating. They are also the most vulnerable to being caught, though that distance is greater between them and #5 Utah.

    3. Agreee with everyone else on Florida. Trinity looks like she will come in and replace McMurty’s scores. Plus Baumann is looking improved aa and vaulting a 1.5, not mention Leah CLapper and Sydney Johnson Scharpf. THough I have a feeling next year will be FLorida’s year with the only senior this year being Boren.

      UCLA is much improved on vault, with 6 competition ready 10.0 starts and a 7th from Sekai Wright once she’s back. That alone makes up for Peng. Beam will essentially be the same. I think the middle routines on bars will make up for Peng loss there. And they look extrmeely strong on floor again.

    4. Peng scored 20 (perfect 10 on bars and beam) only twice in her career:
      1. On the road at Stanford on March 11 2018.
      2. At Super Six in St Louis on April 21 2018.

      Peng never scored a 20 at home at UCLA.

      1. >Peng never scored a 20 at home at UCLA.

        Makes sense. UCLA home scoring tends to be low. 😉

    5. UCLA is going to be so much better on VT and FX this year and that alone will allow them to absorb losing Peng Peng’s scores.

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