Things Are Happening – November 9, 2021

A. FIG Elections

In gymnastics administration news that’s hard to get worked up about, Watanabe Morinari has been reelected as president of the FIG by a margin of 81-47 over his challenger, president of European Gymnastics Farid Gayibov. By the standard of international sports cabals, this counts as significant because of its tight margin. The ballots at these things usually look more like:

BUT WHO TO CHOOSE???

So, how do we feel about this? It’s hard to say. Gayibov’s proposal did feature some worthwhile commentary on improving the format of the FIG’s annual competition series—instead of the largely unwieldy and pointless parade of challenge cups and apparatus cups and world cups that…what do they even mean and what’s the difference?—aiming to give it more of a thesis statement and make it more TV friendly. At the same time, Gayibov is also part of the brain trust behind SmartScoring, the failure that gave us a streaming blackout for European Championships this year. Because who could have predicted increased interest for an Olympic qualifier during an Olympic year?

Watanabe, meanwhile, got in trouble for Japanese embassies lobbying gymnastics federations on his behalf, which is kind of a no-no.

But I largely have a 6th-grade-class-president feeling about the whole thing.

In other election news, Ali Al-Hitmi won his election and replaced Vassiliy Titov as an FIG vice president. Nellie Kim, meanwhile, was reelected as a vice president but had to go to a second ballot for it to happen, so someone’s getting tased in the spleen. Li Li Leung was elected to the executive committee in dominant fashion. The previous US representative on the executive committee was Ron Galimore, so…a step up?

B. Convoluted Swiss Nonsense

The week of Convoluted Swiss Nonsense began with the Arthur Gander Memorial, a some-routines competition dominated on the women’s side by Angelina Melnikova, who elected to compete vault, bars, and floor (wisely assuming that she had long since used up her quota of beam hits for 2021). Melnikova recorded the highest score of the competition on all her events. Tais Boura of France managed a very compelling 13+ score on beam to take the silver, and Ciena Alipio finished third with competitive scores on vault and beam but just an 11.700 on bars, which put her behind Boura. Giorgia Villa competed only bars and beam, instead of the three events everyone else did.

In the men’s division, the Autumn of Moldauer continued. Following his near-medal AA performance from worlds, he competed floor, horse, vault, and pbars at Arthur Gander to take the gold medal, finishing ahead of the likes of Nagornyy, Kovtun, and Onder. The scores were, you know, a little “15s for everyone!” but the placement bodes very well for his increased competitiveness mission in the current quad. The pbars upgrades are working very well for him thus far.

The team of Melnikova/Nagornyy also fully dominated the mixed pairs competition at the Swiss Cup, winning the first round by over 3 points, winning their semifinal over Italy by nearly 2 points, and winning the final over Ukraine by more than 2 points. Nagornyy opened the door for Ukraine in that final with a miss on pbars, giving Kovtun a big lead for the men’s routines, but Hubareva’s 11.250 on bars was easily defeated by Melnikova’s 14.550 to give Russia the win. Alice D’Amato replaced Giorgia Villa on the roster and helped Italy to a bronze medal.

As for the US, Olivia Greaves injured her knee in training and had to withdraw from the competition. Yul Moldauer did still compete a first-round routine, but as there was no women’s score to add to it, the US was immediately eliminated along with another surprise elimination from Team Germany, which had a 9.800 bars disaster from Kim Bui and finished 2nd-to-last.

C. What’s Next?

The cancellation of the Voronin Cup takes one of the larger events off the remaining elite calendar, but there’s still some fun stuff.

Elite Gym Massilia in Marseilles returns to the schedule this weekend, with the Open division beginning at 9am on Friday, the Masters division (the main event) at 4:30pm on Saturday, and event finals at 3:00pm on Sunday. No roster has been released yet, but we do know the event is going to be streamed on the Vogoscope App if you buy a virtual ticket. [Update: Just downloaded the app to check it out, and the virtual ticket for the Masters division alone is $14.99. I was like, “Psssh, I could sleep for free.”]

The Gymnova Cup in Belgium runs Saturday and Sunday, with the junior AA on Saturday at 1:30pm, the senior AA at 5:30pm, and event finals on Sunday at 2:00pm. Clubs from Belgium, Canada, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, and Finland among others are slated to attend. The website does have an alleged link for streaming, it just doesn’t go anywhere yet.

This weekend also brings us the Northern European Championships, where teams from England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden (MAG only), Isle of Man, Faroe Islands, and Jersey will compete in Cardiff. The subdivisions are Saturday at 10:40am and 3:50pm local time, with event finals on Sunday starting a 9.35am. It’s an important competition for those teams that don’t normally get to compete as independent entities but are preparing for next year’s Commonwealth Games. I haven’t seen any information about streaming yet, though.

Starting Monday, the junior US women will be at a national team selection camp for the Junior Pan American Games in Colombia, which has gymnastics running from November 26-29.

In NCAA news, the signing period for athletes joining college teams for the 2023 competition season begins tomorrow, and I’ll put up the usual page to keep track of it all.

College Gym 2022: Who’s In, Who’s Out

If there’s a single defining characteristic of the upcoming 2022 college season, it’s stacked rosters. The combination of 1) a massive influx of top athletes who deferred to pursue the delayed Olympics and 2) the extra COVID year allowing last year’s seniors to opt in for fifth year of eligibility means that I’m going to die of 10s most top teams are bringing in a huge amount of talent without having to sacrifice nearly as many lost routines to graduation as usual. So here’s a look at who’s out and who’s in as we readjust for 2022. 

(Bold events indicate that the gymnast made the final lineup there in 2021, while non-bold means they competed it at some point in 2021.)

1. MICHIGAN

OUTIN
Lauren Farley – BBAbigael Vides
Anne Maxim – UBJacey Vore
Ashley Lane

2. OKLAHOMA

OUTIN
Jordan Draper – UB, FXJordan Bowers
Julianne FehringCaitin Kirkpatrick
Erin HutchinsonMoorea Linker
Evy Schoepfer – VT, UB, FXDanielle Sievers
Quinn Smith – VTMadison Snook
Anastasia Webb – VT, UB, BB, FXAmy Wier

3. UTAH

OUTIN
Emilie LeBlanc – UB, BBKara Eaker
Grace McCallum
Amelie Morgan
Sage Thompson

4. FLORIDA

OUTIN
Jazzy Foberg – VTSloane Blakely
Bri Edwards
Morgan Hurd
Shilese Jones (TBC)
Riley McCusker
Leanne Wong

5. ALABAMA

OUTIN
Kylie DicksonCorinne Bunagan
Sarah DuheLilly Hudson
Jensie Givens – UBJordyn Paradise
Alonza Klopfer – BB, FX

6. LSU

OUTIN
Olivia GunterAleah Finnegan
Caitlin SmithKJ Johnson
Tori Tatum

7. CAL

OUTIN
Cosette CarranzaElla Cesario
Alma Kuc – UBJordan Kane
Kennedy QuayMya Lauzon
Victoria SalemAbbey Scanlon
Ashton WoodburyMadelyn Williams

8. MINNESOTA

OUTIN
Mary Korlin-Downs – BBAlissa Fuelling
Lexi Montgomery – UB, BBMarissa Jencks
Lauren Pearl
Olivia Reed
Haley Tyson

9. ARIZONA STATE

OUTIN
Kaitlin HarveyMallory Marcheli
Cairo Leonard-Baker – VT, UB, BB, FXAlex Theodorou
Maya Williams

10. DENVER

OUTIN
Natalie Morton – UB, FXEmma Brown – TR
Alexis Vasquez – VT, BB, FXMia Hebinck
Momo Iwai

11. KENTUCKY

OUTIN
Madison AverettJillian Procasky
Mackenzie Harman – UB, BBAnnie Riegert
Megan MonfrediLila Smith
Gianna OrtizMakenzie Wilson
Allison Snyder
Ella Warren

12. UCLA

OUTIN
Nia Dennis – VT, UB, BB, FXMia Erdoes
Savannah Kooyman – UB, BBJordan Chiles
Nicki Shapiro – BBAlexis Jeffrey
Lilia WallerEmily Lee
Emma Malabuyo
Katie McNamara – TR
Brooklyn Moors
Ana Padurariu

13. ARKANSAS

OUTIN
Sophia Carter – UB, BB, FXKalyxta Gamiao
Katarina DerrickMaddie Jones
Gillian Rutz – UB, BBFrankie Price
Makenzie Sedlacek
Leah Smith
Cami Weaver

14. MISSOURI

OUTIN
Kambrie BrandtAmari Celestine
Chelsey Christensen – UB, BBGrace Anne Davis
Lauren ClevengerVictoria Gatzendorfer
Belle Gottula – VT, BB, FXAlonna Kratzer
Macy Orosco – UBJocelyn Moore
Alyssa Ojeda

15. NC STATE

OUTIN
Katelyn Cox – UB, BB, FXPeyton Childs
Alliah HarrisonMacy Jennings
Olivia Hunter – VTGabrielle Kistner – TR
Lauren Kent – UBLucy Lehman
Kasey Nelson – UB, BB, FXHailey Merchant
Victoria Prati – VTLauren Rutherford
Alexis Sheppard – UBBrooke Smead

16. OHIO STATE

OUTIN
Danica AbantoStephanie Berger
Brooke Chesney – FXKaitlyn Grimes
Kaitlyn GilsonJenna Hlavach
Morgan Lowe – VT, BBMaddy Pike
Kali SchierlTory Vetter
Jenna Swartzentruber – VT, UB, BB

17. IOWA

OUTIN
Daniela CastilloAlex Bradford
Erin Castle – UB, BB, FXAlexa Ebeling
Giovanna DeoKamryn Martinez
Emma Hartzler – UBMarissa Rojas
Sophia HunzelmanLinda Zivat – TR
Allison Zuhlke – TR

18. GEORGIA

OUTIN
Sterlyn Austin – FXSarah Cohen
Marissa Oakley – UB, BBMaeve Hahn
Riley Milbrandt

19. BYU

OUTIN
Avery Bennett – VT, FXSophie Dudley
Helody Cyrenne – UB, BBMelissa Earl
Ashley KernanRebecca Leach
Lexi Mather – BBMina Margraf
Jordan Matthews – VT, FXOlivia Matern
Abbey Miner-Alder – VT, UB, BB, FXEliza Millar
Maya PageHeidi Schooley
Abby Stainton – UB, BB, FXJazlyn Wood
Angel Zhong – VT, UB, BB

20. ILLINOIS

OUTIN
Nicole Biondi – VT, UB, BB, FXOlivia Bowsman
Kasey MeeksKadyn Fitzgibbon
Kylie Noonan – BB, FXMakayla Green
Tessa Phillips – FXKatherine Klugman
Jaylen SpenceRuthuja Nataraj
Mia Scott
Kiera Wai

21. IOWA STATE

OUTIN
Natalia Ros VaquerJosie Bergstrom
Sami StricklerMaddie Crosse
Loulou VezinaMarina Gonzalez
Hannah Loyim
Emma Ricks
Sydney Saturnino
Rachel Wilke

22. OREGON STATE

OUTIN
Lacy Dagen – VTCarley Beeman
Savanna Force – FXNatalie Briones
Lexie Gonzales – BBJade Carey
Lena Greene – VTKarlie Chavez
Niya Mack – UB, FXKaitlin Garcia
Jane Poniewaz – VT, UB, BBPhoebe Jakubczyk
Lauren Letzsch
Trinity Pyle
Brianna Yamamoto

23. SOUTHERN UTAH

OUTIN
Mikaela DeFilippo – FXMadeline Amundson
Molly Jozwiakowski – VT, UB, FXEllie Cacciola
Alyssa Ladieu – BBTaylor Gull
Summer Horsley
Isabella Neff
Katie Ours
Madeline Tyau
Jocelyn Wittwer

24. BOISE STATE

OUTIN
Tatum Bruden – VT, UB, FXEmma Loyim
Gabriela Cavinta – VT, UB, BBElaina McGovern
Dani ShaferBlake Pascal
Alyssa Vulaj

25. UTAH STATE

OUTIN
Olivia BlakelyMolly Arnold
Lara BurhansTrinity Brown
Autumn DeHarde – VT, BB, FXBrie Clark
Taylor Dittmar – BBAmari Evans
Hadley Hamar – FXDani Kirstine
Mikaela Meyer – VT, UB, FXKielyn McCright
Leighton Varnadore – VT, UB, BB, FXBrooke Wilson
Logan Varnadore – VT

26. CENTRAL MICHIGAN

OUTIN
Nora Fettinger – VT, BB, FXAvah Anthes
Kennedy Rae Johnson – VT, UBAlexis Garcia
Mayleigh Vanderbeek – BBGrace Gorham
Sydney Williams – VT, FXLia Kmieciak
Aleysia Kolyvanova – TR
Ariana Light
Quinn Skrupa

27. ARIZONA

OUTIN
Mackenzie Barile – BB, FXLara Burhans – TR
Payton Bellows – VTAlysen Fears
Kennedi DavisElizabeth Larusso
Laura Leigh Horton – VT, FXEmily Mueller
Courtney Tsunoda

28. WEST VIRGINIA

OUTIN
Maya KrausBrooke Alban
McKenna Linnen – VT, BB, FXBrynn Freehling
Michelle Waldron – VTHeidi Hartje
Kayla Yancey – VT, UBAnna Leigh
Laura Soltis

29. TOWSON

OUTIN
Kyla GambleMia Davis
Simona Kerekes – VT, BBClara Hong
Tess Zientek – UBLauren Keener
Allison Zuhlke – VT, UB, BBSteph Macasu
Felicia Poblete
Elise Tisler

30. MARYLAND

OUTIN
Collea Burgess – VT, BB, FXLindsay Bacheler
Randi MorrisTasha Brozowski
Sabriyya Rouse – BB, FXAthlyn Drage
Josephine Kogler
Sierra Kondo
Rhea LeBlanc

31. KENT STATE

OUTIN
Jade Brown – UB, FXAlyssa Guns
Sydney Chapman – VTDakota Lee
Abby Fletcher – VT, BB, FXCheyenne Pratola
Nasha Mantikul-Davis – FXBrynne Tsipis
Toshi Richard – FXGrace Wehry

32. EASTERN MICHIGAN

OUTIN
Cortney Bezold – UBGianna Antonio
Brianna Price – BBCassie Bergin
Jada Rondeau – VT, UB, BB, FXJade Blankenship
Ella Chemotti
Alana Fisher
Emma Lewis
Mayleigh Vanderbeek – TR

33. PENN STATE

OUTIN
Erynne Allen – FXNikki Beckwith
Ava Verdeflor – UB, BBSarah Duhe – TR
Abi WalkerAnastasia Frank
Grace Harrell
Jessica Johanson
Isabella Salcedo
Elina Vihrova
Olivia Yarussi

35. AUBURN

OUTIN
Brooke ButlerAnanda Brown
Sabrina Cheney – FXSophia Groth
Elise PanznerSara Hubbard
Meredith Sylvia – BBSunisa Lee
Caroline Leonard

36. TEMPLE

OUTIN
Grace BuschJewel Clark
Delaney Garin – BBMadison Dorunda
Jordan HoweAnna Hill
Lorianna LeynesSummer Ruskey
Taylor Newland – VT, UB, BBSydney Seibert
Jordyn Oster – UB, BB, FXHannah Stallings
Sarah Stallings
Danae Williams

Things Are Happening – November 2, 2021

A. Convoluted Swiss Nonsense

Even though we’ve entered the post-Olympics, post-worlds stupor, there’s actually still a fair amount of gymnastics happening over the next couple months what with the Voronin Cup and the junior Pan American Games and the usual competitions in France and Belgium. This week is marked by the annual Convoluted Swiss Nonsense meets, with the Arthur Gander Memorial on the 3rd and the Swiss Cup on the 7th.

For the uninitiated, these meets welcome mixed pair teams from around the world to compete select apparatuses in various rounds to try to crown a winner. At the Arthur Gander, the men and women compete individually. In the first round, the women select two events to compete and the men select three events, with the top 6 gymnasts in each division advancing to the final round. In the final round, they must compete an additional routine (not one of the apparatuses they already competed) to determine the overall winner. At least, that’s the usual format. Last time around, they all just competed all their intended routines on their chosen events at the same time. Whatever.

The Swiss Cup, meanwhile, is like, “That’s a dumb format, get a load of this multi-paragraph system.” At the Swiss Cup, the 10 mixed pairs compete as teams instead of individually. In the first round, everyone competes a single routine, and the two weakest teams are eliminated. In the next round, everyone on the remaining 8 teams competes another routine on a different apparatus. The scores from each of the first two rounds are combined, and the top 4 teams then advance to the semifinal bracket.

In the semifinals, the teams go head-to-head with everyone competing a routine on a third different event. For this round, all the scores are wiped, so only the semifinal results decide which teams advance to the final. In the final, the athletes on the two remaining teams compete a fourth routine, but this time, they are allowed to repeat an apparatus that they already competed, and only the final-round scores decide the winner. 

The key strategic consideration at the Swiss Cup is what event to save for the semifinals. You need to score well enough on your first two events combined to make sure you’re in the top 4, but then you also have to save a good enough event for the semifinals to get you into the final on that score alone. So, needless to say, this is weird and pointless and I love it.

The team of Melnikova/Nagornyy (because Melnikova doesn’t need a break or anything) will headline each event, with Giorgia Villa, Ilia Kovtun, Yul Moldauer, and Ahmet Onder also gracing us with their presence at both. Kim Bui will compete at the Swiss Cup, and Moldauer will be joined by Ciena Alipio at Arthur Gander and Olivia Greaves at the Swiss Cup.

The Swiss Cup will be broadcast on SRF Zwei starting at 12:45 CET on the 7th if you have a VPN set to Switzerland.

B. NCAA is coming

The season (I know it’s a college sports thing just to call it “season” instead of “the season,” but kill me please) starts in about two months, which counts as soon and means preview season is upon us. Deal with it.

We’re still waiting on some schedule stragglers, like Oklahoma cough cough cough, but enough teams have released their slates that I have made the 2022 master schedule and added it to the menu bar at the top. Here’s a quick look at the highlights, starting with opening day on Wednesday, January 5th and ending with the national championship on April 16th:

2022 NCAA Schedule Abridged

MEET WEEK 1
Wednesday, January 5
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Kentucky @ Arizona State
Thursday, January 6
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT Georgia @ Michigan
Friday, January 7
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT BEST OF UTAH: Utah, BYU, Southern Utah, Utah State
Saturday, January 8
9:30pm ET/6:30pm PT COLLEGIATE CHALLENGE: Cal, UCLA, Arizona State, Oregon State, Arizona, Washington
Sunday, January 9
TBD Alabama @ Oklahoma
MEET WEEK 2
Friday, January 14
9:30pm ET/6:30pm PT Oklahoma @ Utah
Saturday, January 15
4:00pm ET/1:00pm PT Arizona State @ Michigan
Sunday, January 16
3:00pm ET/12:00pm PT Alabama @ Florida
5:00pm ET/2:00pm PT Stanford @ Cal
MEET WEEK 3
Monday, January 17
3:00pm ET/12:00pm PT UCLA @ Minnesota
Friday, January 21
6:00pm ET/3:00pm PT Florida @ Georgia
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Arizona State @ Utah
MEET WEEK 4
Monday, January 24
8:00pm ET/5:00pm PT Michigan @ Minnesota
Friday, January 28
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT LSU @ Georgia
8:30pm ET/5:30pm PT Arkansas @ Florida
TBD Alabama @ Auburn
Sunday, January 30
TBD Denver @ Oklahoma
MEET WEEK 5
Friday, February 4
10:00pm ET/7:00pm PT Utah @ UCLA
10:00pm ET/7:00pm PT Cal @ Stanford
Saturday, February 5
4:00pm ET/1:00pm PT Auburn @ LSU
MEET WEEK 6
Friday, February 11
6:00pm ET/3:00pm PT LSU @ Florida
TBD Georgia @ Alabama
Saturday, February 12
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT Utah @ Cal
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT Arizona State @ Arizona
MEET WEEK 7
Friday, February 18
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT BIG FIVE: Michigan, Iowa, Illinois, Ohio State, Maryland
8:00pm ET/5:00pm PT Oregon State @ Utah
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Alabama @ LSU
Saturday, February 19
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT BIG FIVE: Minnesota, Nebraska, Michigan State, Rutgers, Penn State
8:00pm ET/5:00pm PT METROPLEX: Oklahoma, Denver, Washington, Stanford
Sunday. February 20
5:00pm ET/2:00pm PT UCLA @ Arizona State
MEET WEEK 8
Friday, February 25
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT Oklahoma @ Florida
TBD Georgia @ Arkansas
Saturday, February 26
3:30pm ET/12:30pm PT Michigan @ Nebraska
Sunday, February 27
1:00pm ET/10:00am PT NC State, Temple @ George Washington
7:00pm ET/4:00pm PT Cal @ Arizona State
MEET WEEK 9
Friday, March 4
7:30pm ET/4:30pm PT Iowa @ Iowa State
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Michigan @ Oklahoma
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Minnesota @ Utah
TBD Arkansas @ Alabama
Sunday, March 6
2:00pm ET/11:00am PT Elevate the Stage: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Auburn
3:00pm ET/12:00pm PT Cal @ UCLA
MEET WEEK 10
Friday, March 11
8:30pm ET/5:30pm PT Utah @ LSU
9:00pm ET/6:00pm PT Oklahoma, Boise State @ Arizona State
Saturday, March 12
4:00pm ET/1:00pm PT Auburn, West Virginia @ Michigan
Sunday, March 13
3:00pm ET/12:00pm PT Iowa @ Cal
4:00pm ET/1:00pm PT Arkansas, Oregon State, Nebraska @ Denver
MEET WEEK 11
Saturday, March 19
All Day Conference Championships
MEET WEEK 13
Wednesday, March 30
All Day Regional Play-Ins
Thursday, March 31
All Day Regional Semifinals
Saturday, April 2
All Day Regional Finals
MEET WEEK 15
Thursday, April 14
TBD National Semifinal #1
TBD National Semifinal #2
Saturday, April 16
TBD National Team Final