WTF Is NCAA Scoring – Beam (2020 Update)

Before the NCAA season begins, it’s time for the now-annual venture into the murky world of NCAA scoring for those who might want to know a little more about what’s actually going on behind that bonkers 9.950 that just got thrown. Fair warning: you’ll be happier if you don’t.

For the full experience, be sure to check out of the first two posts on vault and bars.


Composing a routine

Routine requirements
  • At minimum, an NCAA routine must include 3 A-valued elements, 3 B-valued elements, and 2 C-valued elements.

You don’t have to worry about this part. It’s very basic and every routine you see in NCAA will have been designed to meet this standard.

Gymnasts must also, however, fulfill a series of special composition requirements, each worth 0.2. On beam, those five requirements are

1 – One acrobatic series. This means two acrobatic flight elements, “directly connected,” with at least one of the elements being C value or higher.

The most common acrobatic flight series you’ll see is the back handspring + layout stepout (or loso) series.

It’s the classic NCAA series, and you’re probably sick of it. Or, you would be if there weren’t several other worse options.

You’ll notice I put “directly connected” in quotes in the above rule because, in Spencer world, an acrobatic series on beam would have to be directly connected and generate rebounding speed in one direction. It doesn’t have to do that in Actual World.

Forward + backward series may also be used to fulfill the acrobatic series requirement, of which the most common by far is the front aerial + back handspring series.

Much to the chagrin of me, everyone has decided to agree that this counts as a directly connected acro series, despite not featuring continuous rebounding movement. In reality it is just two different acro elements performed in the vicinity of one another. Still, it can be used to fulfill the requirement.

Judges are supposed to deny credit when gymnasts make a real meal of the pause between the two elements in a forward+backward series, but they’re reticent in doing this unless they have to because the 2-tenth penalty for not having an acro series is so comparatively extreme. When everyone in a meet is scoring over 9.8 on beam, a 2-tenth penalty basically feels like awarding a fall, and judges are unwilling to do that in the case of what is a relatively minor pause in the grand scheme.

As a concession to people like me, when the front aerial is used directly into a back handspring like in the series above, it doesn’t receive any connection value—even though a D+B series would ordinarily gain 0.2 CV. It’s something. It means if you’re going to do the lame series, you have take some more risk elsewhere in the routine to get your 10.0 start value.

Because of this rule, we’re starting to see more people go for front aerial + layout stepout as a forward+backward series instead of front aerial + back handspring, which still shouldn’t be considered a series in my book because it’s not rebounding, but it does at least display a lot more risk.

The dismount cannot be part of an acrobatic series if it’s going to fulfill the requirement. The series must finish on the beam.

[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT]

2 – A dance OR dance/acro combination. Here we have our first change to the college code for this season. Formerly, this requirement necessitated a combination of two dance elements, one of which had to be a C element. Like so.

Beginning in 2020, that above switch leap to split jump series still fulfills the requirement, but so do dance + acrobatic mixed series…just as long as the dance element is a C. So, you want to do a front aerial to immediate straddle 1/4? You could, and that would fulfill this requirement in addition to getting some juicy bonus.

Whether gymnasts get credit for their leap series is something else to watch with bated breath in evaluating beam scores, which will only be exacerbated by the introduction of the dance + acro combination. Everyone is one balance check away from starting from 9.8 because they didn’t get this dance combination requirement. This is why every gymnast will have a backup plan—typically something like an extra beat jump that they know they can throw in after their intended dance combo if there’s some question as to whether it will get credit.

Yeah, beat jumps count. While one skill in a dance + dance combination must be a C, there is no requirement for the difficulty of the other skill. That means you will see some gymnasts tack on fairly simple beat jumps and hitch kicks to meet the requirement.

3 – One dance skill showing 180-degree split. This goes hand-in-hand with leap combinations, as most gymnasts will get this out of the way through a dance element that also fulfills #2.

Add this to the list of areas where gymnerds feel the judges tend to be too forgiving. Judges will always award credit for this requirement as long as a gymnast attempts a skill showing a 180-degree split, even if that same judge is also taking a deduction for not hitting 180 degrees in that split. This is an inherent contradiction that we’ve all decided to live with.

The 180-degree element need not be a traditional split leap/jump (i.e., it can be a straddle jump or a sissone, anything that’s supposed to show 180 on some plane).

4 – A full turn. Pretty simple. Nearly everyone will do the basic full turn with no embellishments because it’s the least risky. Only the most confident turners will try to do an L turn or some such.

5 – Minimum C dismount, or B dismount directly connected to a D acrobatic skill. The majority of gymnasts will perform a C dismount (the layout 1.5, the layout 2/1) or greater (the double tuck, the double pike), but the B dismount in combination is also popular, particularly in the side aerial + layout 1/1 combo. We get a lot of that, though there’s a new attempt to discourage it, which we’ll get to.

Missing any one of these five requirements results in a 0.2 deduction from the start value. Any gymnast with a routine that includes 3 As, 3 Bs, and 2 Cs, and that fulfills the five requirements above will begin with a [CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] 9.40 start value.


Bonus

From there, gymnasts attempt to get to a 10.0 start value by earning up to six tenths of bonus. Bonus is earned in two categories.

1) Skill value – Each D element earns 0.1 in bonus, and each E element earns 0.2.

2) Connection value – There many methods through which gymnasts can receive connection bonus on beam, including the addition of a few new ones to make up for the lowering of the start value from 9.50 to 9.40.

Acrobatic connections
B+D = 0.2 (dismount combos not eligible)
C+C = 0.2 (dismount combos not eligible)
B+B+C = 0.1 (dismount combos eligible as long as dismount is C)
B+C+C = 0.2 (dismount combos eligible as long as dismount is C)
B+B+D = 0.2 (dismount combos eligible as long as dismount is D)
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] B acro + C dismount = 0.1

So this means that if you’re doing a round-off or back handspring into your 1.5 dismount, you get a new extra tenth and don’t have to change anything.

Dance/mixed connections (dismount combos only eligible in final instance)
A+D = 0.1
B+C = 0.1
B+D = 0.2
C+C = 0.2
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] C+C dismount = 0.1

Turn connections
A+C = 0.1

Series bonus (dismount combos not eligible)
B+B+C = 0.1 series bonus in addition to acrobatic CV bonus

Layout stepout and front aerial exceptions
As mentioned above with the front aerial, the layout stepout also does not earn connection value in a series with a back handspring despite B+D combinations typically receiving 0.2.

To earn the full six tenths of bonus, at least one tenth must come from each category (skill value and connection value), so gymnasts can’t load up exclusively on one category or another.

But, as long as you get your 5 tenths of bonus, and fulfill all the requirements above, you’ve got your 10.0 start!


Composition Deductions

The “up-to-level” composition deduction is not quite as big a deal on beam as it is on bars, but there is one key point to it. If a gymnast does not earn any connection bonus from her acrobatic flight series, the routine must include another D acro (or E dance) element somewhere else in the set, otherwise it will receive a .10 deduction.

[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT]

The side aerial (D value) directly into a B dismount has been a popular way to meet this up-to-level requirement in the past, but beginning in 2020, that no longer fulfills the requirement. If you’re performing an additional D acro skill to meet up-to-level, it has to take place on the beam and cannot go directly into the dismount. It’s an effort to force a little more risk into these routines.

Routines must also include a backward acrobatic element and a forward/sideward acrobatic element at some point. Miss either, and lose .10. This tends to become an issue for gymnasts who have Ol’ Dead Back and can’t do back handsprings anymore.


Example

The code changes in 2020 on beam are going to require a few more people to change around their old routines than will have to on bars, so for the example, let’s take a look at one person who would have had to change her composition, were she still competing. (Kari Lee is like, “uh byeeeeee.”)

Special requirements

1 – One acrobatic series – Lee uses the classic back handspring + layout stepout, a B+D combination that does not receive connection bonus but does fulfill this acro series requirement.

2 – A combination of dance elements or dance/acro elements – Lee follows her acrobatic series with a switch leap directly connected to straddle jump with 1/4 turn, a C+C combination.

3 – 180-degree split – The initial switch leap in the aforementioned dance combination fulfills this requirement.

4 – Full turn – Lee fulfills this requirement with her first element, the basic full turn.

5 – Dismount, minimum C, or B in combination – Lee finishes her routine with a beat jump + side aerial + layout full. The layout full is a B element, and performed in combination as it is here, fulfills this requirement.

Composition deductions

Lee does not receive any connection bonus for her acrobatic series, so to meet the up-to-level requirement, she is compelled to include an additional D acro element. In 2019, she was able to do that with the side aerial as part of her dismount combo. In 2020, she would not be able to do that and would have received a 0.1 composition deduction for choice of elements not up to the competitive level, which would be noted by the judges flashing a UTL card next to her score.

Lee also fulfills the forward and backward acrobatic expectations with that side aerial (sideward) and the layout stepout series (backward)

Bonus

While the layout stepout series does not receive any composition bonus, the layout stepout is still considered a D skill for the purpose of awarding skill bonus, so Lee receives her first 0.1 in bonus for completing that skill.

Her next bonus comes from the switch split + straddle jump 1/4 combination, two C dance elements that when performed in combination, garner 0.2 in bonus, bringing her up to 3 tenths total bonus.

Her final combination is beat jump + side aerial + layout full, which is A + D + B. The first A + D connection receives 0.1 in combination bonus, and the side aerial receives an additional 0.1 in skill bonus. The final dismount combination of D + B is not eligible for bonus.

That means Lee ends up with a total of 5 tenths in bonus, which was perfect in 2019 when routines started from 9.50, but now that they start from 9.40, would give her a start value of 9.90. Combine that with the 0.1 compositional deduction for UTL, and this exact routine could now score no higher than 9.800 in NCAA in 2020.


Skill values

Here are the major skill values you’ll want to know for beam.

Leap and jumps

Split leap – A
Sissone – A
Split jump – B
Split leap/jump ¼ – B
Split leap/jump ½ – C
Split jump ¾ – D
Split jump full – E
Straddle jump – B
Straddle ¼ – C
Straddle ½/¾ – D
Switch leap – C
Switch leap ½ – E
Switch side – D
Switch ring – E
Sheep jump – D
Hitch kick – A
Beat jump – A

Turns

Full turn – A
1.5 turn – B
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] Double turn – E
L turn – C
Y turn – C
Illusion turn – E
Wolf turn – B
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] Wolf turn double – E
Wolf turn triple – E

Acro

Back handspring – B
Roundoff – B
Back tuck – C
Back pike – C
Layout stepout – D
Layout, pike down to two feet – D
Layout to two feet – E
Front aerial – D
Side aerial – D
Kickover front – D
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] Front tuck – E
Side somi – D
Front pike – E
Onodi – E
Rulfova – E
Arabian – E
Back tuck full – E

Dismounts

Gainer pike (end of beam) – C
Gainer full (side) – C
[CHANGE FOR 2020 ALERT] Gainer 1.5 tucked or straight (side) – D
Front layout full – C
Back layout full – B
Back layout 1.5 – C
Back layout 2/1 – C
Back layout 2.5 – E
Double tuck – E
Double pike – E
Double front – E
Double Arabian – E


Deductions

The most important thing you need to know about NCAA deductions is ‾\_(ツ)_/‾. Keep that in mind at all times.

NCAA pretends that it follows the JO code of points, except it obviously doesn’t. Not even a little. There’s a tremendous amount of subjectivity still remaining in NCAA scoring, including an unwritten understanding regarding which deductions from the JO code actually count and which ones magically don’t for the purpose of scoring NCAA routines. The standard is, “We take the JO code of points, and then just ignore all of it. The end. Here’s your score. Fetch.”

So, in these sections, I’m going to deviate from (deviate from = completely ignore) the actual code of points we’re supposed to be following and instead discuss the reality of what I see getting taken from meet to meet.

This is not an exhaustive account of deductions but rather an overview of the main things to look out for. On beam, that means wobbles, splits, and landings.


Wobbles

Judges are given quite a bit of leeway in evaluating movements to maintain balance, anywhere from .05 to .30 for each one, with the emphasis on the lower end of that range because of NCAA scoring. It means there’s always quite a bit of controversy in terms of how strict they judges are actually being for these wobbles.

FYI, complaining is a HUGE part of NCAA gymnastics. It’s like the main thing. It’s awesome.

Small balance checks and barely perceptible leans when finishing skills are going to be .05 each. Wobble deductions tend to get into the .10 territory when a leg starts to move discernibly out away from the body to retain balance. These days, the higher end of the three-tenth range for a single wobble tends to be reserved for only the very largest breaks, the Olympic-winning backstroke to somehow magically stay on the beam as the leg flies up into the ceiling. Or, theoretically, a significant bend at the hips to maintain balance.

There’s some issue over the bend at the hips, though, because to me that constitutes a major break that should warrant multiple tenths taken, but I’ve seen routines in the last two seasons or so where clearly only .10 was taken for a large bend at the hips where the gymnast leans way over and nearly has to grab the beam.

Actually grasping the beam to maintain balance is a flat .30 deduction. That’s why you typically won’t see the full .30 deducted for a major wobble in which the gymnast avoids grabbing the beam, to give her some manner of reward for the fight.

As always, falls are .50.

Leaps and jumps

Oh, split positions. The hill we’ll all die on. On elements requiring a split, which include not only switch splits and split jumps, but also the sissone and straddle elements like the switch side, gymnasts are expected to reach the full 180-degree angle in split, legs fully extended and parallel with the beam (at minimum), and toes pointed and continuing the line made by the leg.

Judges have the purview of taking up to .20 for an error in lack of split, though we mostly see .05 being taken for each split error unless it’s RILLLLLL bad. Missing the 180 position in either or both legs is a deduction. Watch the back leg in particular, which is the telltale leg.

Because gymnerds are the way we are, no deduction is deemed large enough for lack of split. We basically want to take full points for missing 180.

Judges should also be evaluating whether the knees are bent (bad) and whether the toes are pointed (good), and deducting accordingly, though the 180 position tends to be the main standard for NCAA deductions on split elements.

Those leg form deductions apply to acrobatic skills as well as dance skills, and in elements like back handsprings and layout stepouts, the judges are looking for a fully straight leg and pointed toes and should be taking a small deduction when that’s not the case.

Many other deductions can be taken on dance elements depending on the skill. A common one is a crooked position on a switch side. Some gymnasts will achieve 180 degrees on a switch side, but the 180 position angled in the wrong plane, which is a deduction. The 180 in straddle needs to be parallel to the beam.

The sheep jump is also typically a disaster in NCAA. A sheep jump is technically expected to show closure of feet to head and an open angle in the hips.

No one in NCAA does this—deductions on sheep form tend to be pretty charitable so there’s little incentive to get all Chinese about it—but those who really don’t come close to foot-head closure, show a leg separation, or maintain a closed hip angle can get deducted.

Landings

Evaluation of landing steps on beam tends to be the same as on bars. One added factor on beam dismounts is crossed legs on twisting elements, though I’m not convinced that’s being deducted as much as it should be. The legs should be straight and pasted together throughout those twisting layout dismounts, not helicoptering.

The best rule of thumb for landings is that small steps will get .05 off and larger steps/lunges will get .10 off. What defines a larger lunge is fairly ambiguous (psh, like you’re out there measuring someone’s “shoulder width”—you can’t even see it from your angle), but I like to think of it this way: If the step looks larger than that person’s natural walking stride would be, it’s a .10. If it’s a normal walking step or smaller, it’s a .05.

In general, hops will be punished more severely than steps because they demonstrate less control (two feet moving, rather than one foot moving and one foot planted), but very small hops, little bounces in place, and baby slides back with both feet will typically just get the .05 treatment, which is fine. A hop in place is not a stick and will be deducted, unless you’re a home team ranked in the top 10, in which case the judges will decide to go temporarily blind in the middle of your landing and treat hops in place and baby slides as sticks, even though they’re not.

College sticks. The college stick occurs when a gymnast hasn’t actually stuck a landing but has enough control to pretend she stuck the landing, trying to cover up the step by sliding into a salute at the same time. This tends to get .05 off, even if the step itself ends up being pretty large, to a degree that would normally warrant a full tenth.

In addition to stepping/hopping/lunging, there will be landing position deductions for issues like an egregious squat or piking way over in a lean to try to hold a stick. A stuck landing does not mean the landing is free from deduction, and leaning all around or doing the butterfly to try to stay planted are deductions. If the gesticulations are significantly wild, they can end up being a larger deduction (.10) than the small step they’re serving to avoid (.05).

Landing errors can go up to .30, though we tend to see that large of a landing deduction taken only in multi-step, I-do-the-triple-jump-now situations.

6 thoughts on “WTF Is NCAA Scoring – Beam (2020 Update)”

  1. the double turn gets upgraded after peng graduated because of course. It was ridiculous that it was valued the same as the loso though.

  2. Am I the only one who isn’t a fan of OU beam routines? Every routine is so similar I can’t take it.

  3. Are pause deductions on beam still a thing this year? And if so what exactly is the deduction?

    1. Yes. On beam a 2 second pause is .1. A 3 second or longer pause is .2. For the most part, the large penalty has eliminated most of the pauses we used to see.

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