Friday Live Blog – January 7, 2022

There’s far too much happening today right at the beginning to focus on a single whole meet—imagine if this were a sport where winning mattered or something—so, not even going to bother with that.

The Plan: Emphasis on this here live blog will be on the elites making their much-anticipated college debuts today in the first chunk with Auburn, Florida, and LSU all starting at the same time, then I’ll see what else is happening for a bit until 7pm Pacific, when I’ll be hopping on the GymCastic #1 Good Time Postgame Show Happy Hour (open for everyone, not just members, this week) to have hot takes about what we’ve all just seen.

7:00pm ET
4:00pm PT
Rutgers
NIU
TWU
@ [2] Florida
ScoresSEC+
7:00pm ET
4:00pm PT
[14] Auburn
BGSU
@ UNC
ScoresYT
UNC
7:00pm ET
4:00pm PT
Centenary
@ [5] LSU
ScoresSECN
7:00pm ET
4:00pm PT
Penn St
Penn
@ Temple
ScoresESPN+
7:00pm ET
4:00pm PT
Gustavus
Adolphus
@ La Crosse
Free
7:30pm ET
4:30pm PT
Nebraska
@ [20] Iowa St
ScoresESPN+
8:00pm ET
5:00pm PT
Ball St
Illinois St
@[16] Missouri
ScoresSEC+
Quad
8:30pm ET
5:30pm PT
[22] Ohio St
@[11] Arkansas
ScoresSECN
9:00pm ET
6:00pm PT
[4] Utah
[19] BYU
[25] SUU
Utah St
ScoresBYUTV

The first bit of news of the day is that Morgan Hurd is out for Florida (and cannot even be introduced because of some amateurism nonsense), and Aleah Finnegan is not in the LSU lineup sheet. We also know Suni Lee is slated to do only bars and beam for Auburn today—the first two rotations of the meet. Per the release she’s not in the anchor position on either, which I wholeheartedly endorse because…if anyone doesn’t need to be in the anchor position to get a 10…

TWU is not listed on the live scores for the Florida quad meet as of yet. This being 2022, that could either mean that college live scores are a disaster or COVID, and it’s about 50-50.

LSU will open on vault with Rivers, KJ Johnson, Shchennikova, Edwards, K Johnson, and Bryant. No Arenas being the only semi-noteworthy absence there, but not necessarily a surprise. Differentiating between Kiya Johnson and KJ Johnson is going to be a live blogging nightmare this year, so assume if I just say Johnson, I’m talking about Kiya Johnson because she got there first.

Gonna be interesting if this is our only view for the UNC tri meet… OK looks like we have real cameras and Christina there. Christina, we’re counting on you.

Nothing has started yet, and it’s already too much.

Chloi Clark and Bri Edwards both in the vault lineup for Florida. No Wong or Schoenherr or Richards. So that’s a different approach to the start of the season.

Skaggs – VT – Florida – nearrrly sold the landing on her Yfull but came in short and did have to take a lunge forward in the end.

Live scores not functioning at UNC.

Rivers VT – LSU – really strong Yfull to begin, nice open – holds the stick, just a little bit of direction and not the most distance. 9.875

Chloi Clark goes 9.825 for a Yfull for Florida, no bad.

KJ Johnson – VT – LSU – Strong yfull, similar to Riberts, great amplitude, has the open, smalllll movement with one foot, some direction. 9.900

Edwards – VT – Florida – Yfull good amplitude, solid distance, little movement backward. Nice. 9.825

Reed – VT – Florida – the big girls have arrived now, very good Y1.5, great distance, little shuffle forward. 9.900.

Thomas – VT – Florida – NAILED landing on her Y1.5. Excellent start to the season. 9.950

Shchennikova VT – LSU – gets deep on her Y1.5 landing with a pretty large lunge forward, (a .200 lunge for me) pretty in the air. Still gets 9.825, which is high for the lunge.

Helpful camera work meant we missed Blakely’s debut vault for Florida, but the….team reaction was special?

Brusch – UB – Auburn – maloney to bail, legs together on both – a bit short on cast hs on high bar – DLO, bounce back.

Edwards – VT – LSU – also a large lunge forward on her Y1.5, better landing upright than Shchennikova, but that would be another .2 lunge for me. 9.825 again. So they’re saying these are .1 lunges. Which is kind.

Blakely went 9.775 on vault, s o Florida is done on 49.275, which they’ll take for the composition of the lineup today, but not a world beating score.

Suni Lee – Ub – Auburn – here we go – holds first hs position – blind to piked jaeger, clean – possible rushed second hs – pak is pretty – good cast on low – hits van leeuwen – solid final cast hs – FTDT, stuck landing. Lovely. great. Obviously. Edited to note that apparently she hit the low bar with her feet.

Scores not updating for Auburn right now.

Kiya Johnson – VT – LSU – nice DTY as usual, a clear bounce back this time which will be a .100. The smalllest leg crossing in the air, but very good of course. 9.875. Seems like one judge took for feet and one didn’t, which is fair.

Gobourne – UB – Auburn – hits big tkatchev to pak, flexed feet on tkatchev – good cast hs on high bar – FTDT, holds the stick, a little control waver.

Bryant – VT – LSU – handspring pike 1/2, what a star, nothing to say about the vault in the air, medium hop back for .100, but it should go 9.900. Goes 9.925.

LSU at 49.400 for vault, which they’ll definitely take because the landings weren’t there yet and I would have been harsher on a couple of them. Normal January landings. On track.

Lots of absences in that Florida vault lineup will be the story from this first rotation. Still got a good score, but nothing near the lineup they’ll hope to put up. Wong the most interesting absence for me because she had looked ready in training videos. Would seem to indicate either injury or COVID?

Sounds like Suni hit the low bar with her feet, which I did not hear because I didn’t have the sound on. Wish we had scores for it…….

Johnson starting for LSU on bars in rotation two, shap to bail is clean, legs together, good final cast hs, DLO, small hop back. Nicely done. 9.825.

Rivers – UB – LSU – toe on a bit late to Maloney to bail, legs together just slightly loose in back – strong final cast hs – tkatchev, high – good casts on high bar – DLO, little shuffle. Nice work again. She’s back. 9.875.

Dunne – UB – LSU – good first hs, nice toes in tkatchev into pak, pretty – small hesitation in cast 1/2 on low – strong final cast hs – DLO gets loose in form but found the landing, nearly sold the stick but a college salute. Such pretty handstands. 9.925 is high for me given the dismount, where I had .100 alone.

Bryant – UB – LSU – good first hs – blind to jaeger, high, kind of tight position – very nice crisp position on bail – 1/2 to double front 1/2 out, stuck landing. Excellent. 9.925. Would have liked to see more separation there from Dunne’s score.

LSU’s handstands look really good so far.

Centenary gets a good Ytucked full out of Huff.

Shchennikova – UB – LSU – Ray, some feet but strong, into pak, legs together – a little shy of vertical on cast 1/2 on low – the usual DLO position, finds the stick with a little lean to hold it. One of her better dismounts. 9.950 is…

Durante – UB – LSU – good first hs – blind to jaeger, good – slightly rushed cast hs pon high – pak is clean but cannot cast out of it and appears to have jammed her thumb badddd. That sucks.

We finally got the score for Suni Lee’s bars routine, which was 9.775. Hit on apparatus is a flat .2, which means that it would have been 9.975 otherwise? Just for watching out on how this is going to go.

Skaggs up 2nd for Florida on bars, good DLO and a stick but I did see a form struggle on 1/2 turn on the low bar. She’s following a leadoff 9.825 from Blakely. Still goes 9.850.

It’s going to be 49.500 for LSU on bars. A charitable score, but they look in very good shape with those handstands. LSU at 98.900 after 2 events, the same place Michigan was after 2 yesterday.

McCusker bars alert – super pretty shap and shap 1/2 work. Let’s right together. Ohhh double front 1/2 out is in her college routine and it’s deep with a lunge forward. Great until the dismount.

She snuck up on me and I literally had a “who’s this lovely bars worker I’ve never heard of” moment. Oh, it’s Riley McCusker you idiot.

9.825 for McCusker. I had .200 on dismount, so I feel like the judges were pretty into it. Florida and LSU getting some bars charity today. But the rest really was lovely.

Schoenherr – UB – Florida – ncie to see her in on bars if not vault – toe 1/2 to jaeger, lovely the cut away to an empty vault – a little hip angle on bail catch – 1/2 turn to double front 1/2 out, smallish bounce back. The handstand positions were not her best today, but solid. 9.875

Thomas – UB – shap to pak, pristine, good cast hs on low – toe on to Shap 1/2, legs right together, hitting her cast positions – DLO is a littttle close to the bar, finds the stick. Another great one. 9.850? Not sure what happened there. Was this another sound-off problem?

LSU starting rotation 3 with Desiderio on beam. Good switch, little pause before switch 1/2, but solid positions on both – bhs loso, small lean correction – aerial, small arm wave issue – cat leap to gainer full, stuck, slight pike. 9.850

Now looks like we have an injury for UNC on bars but I didn’t see it.

Wong – UB – Floirida – shap to pak, small leg break on pak – holds the hs on low for forever – shap 1/2, tucks the legs some on catch – DLO – tries to hold the stick but ends up leaning far forward. Some things, but also some expected pretty. Still gets 9.875, which is kind of some Wong scoring.

Update: A casual 915 of the Arkansas gymnasts aren’t available today, including Leah Smith.

Shchennikova – BB – LSU – candle mount, a little over but OK I think – full turn – aerial works into beat jump – bhs loso series, secure – switch, small pause before split jump – gainer full dismount is a bit of a struggle, larrrge lean forward to hold the landing, but on the beam that’s the most confident we’ve seen her. 9.800

Florida went 49.275 on bars as well as vault.

Suni Lee – BB – Auburn – wolf single, good, but also why Suni why – aerial, pretty into bhs, keeps it going quick enough for credit – switch to switch 1/2, lovely legs – so looks like they ended up ditching the side aerial business – bhs gainer full, hop back. Well, that’s a verrrrrrry easy routine for her, but it’s lovely. Just the dismount hop. The switch 1/2 is an E in college, which fulfills up to level for her. 9.875. Most of that was dismount.

Campbell – BB – LSU – a surprising early lineup position for her – aerial to bhs, confident – switch to switch 1/2, doesn’t quite complete it with a bend forward at the hips, flat .20 – 2/1 dismount, small amount of leg crossing but a good landing. 9.750

Kiya Johnson – BB – LSU – full turn, hit – bhs loso and another large break, bend at the hips again – this is a less confident rotation than the first two, recalling some of the issues from last season – good switch series – nailed kickover front, excellent – 1.5 dismount, small slide back. The rest was pretty strong. Still gets 9.800 with a flat .20 deduction and a non-stick.

Rotation 3 starting in Florida. Skaggs – BB – switch to split, good extension – bhs loso, smallll amount of feet, secure landing – aerial, a small control movement – cat leap to switch side, good side position, again loses the feet a tad – sdie aerial to full, small movement. 9.850

Dean has a fall for LSU on beam, side aerial to bhs gets her. Way off line, none of the bhs hit the beam.

Blakely – BB – Florida – aerial to bhs, strong, good aerial extension – switch to switch 1/2, bad camera angle for it but it seemed fine – side somi, little quiver – side aerial to full, stuck landing. Confident debut beam. 9.950 is a lot. It was confident and secure, but there were some things.

Richards – BB – Florida – bhs loso loso is securely landed, some knee bending to take on each – bhs 1.5 dismount, little hop. 9.875

We had a near head landing for Centenary on floor but it looked like she just missed terror.

Bryant – BB – LSU – aerial to bhs, another very good aerial, borderline correction movement at the end – switch to straddle 1/4, a bit tight – punch front, step forward and a lean to the side but really important save, good presence – full turn, eh – punch rudi dismount, stuck. Shouldn’t be a big score, but for someone who needs to evolve into a beam leader for LSU this year, the fight and calm there were encouraging. Still goes 9.875

Baumann does usual Baumann things for Florida on beam for 9.925.

Wong – BB – Florida – ohhhh she wasn’t in the announced beam lineup – switch split to a split leap and it’s real – bhs loso, no trouble, well extended – full turn, good – aerial, just a little short, covers a step forward with an arm wave but it was a control moment – side aerial is verrrrrry low, great save but that was all over the place – and a side somi, very full routine – 2/1, bounce back. Well, college beam under her belt, but a large error in there. 9.700.

No Lazzari or Thomas today on beam for Florida.

LSU escapes that beam rotation with 49.075. Won’t be happy with that performance though. Aleah Finnegan is when?

Nice to see Lali Dekanoidze starting with 9.825 and 9.875 on vault and bars for UNC today.

Clapper – BB – Florida – bhs loso loso, solid landing, small amount of hip angle – swtich to split, hit – side aerial to full, holds the stick. The secure routine we expect from her, just some foot and leg stuff. Still gets 9.950.

Florida 49.550 on beam. They were like, “Judges, don’t you know this is a FLORIDA HOME MEET. We have a reputation to uphold.”

Suddenly, Florida’s scoring pace has gone ahead of LSU’s after three events. Though it would take…something…on floor for them to catch Michigan’s opening performance. So far, Michigan has looked the most postseasony of the top teams to compete.

Missouri opened with 49.000 on vault. Amari Celestine on 9.875.

Penn State got a 49.225 on bars. But if Dallas is coaching there anymore, does it make a sound? Hopefully I am appropriately confusing and scaring off any new readers to the live blogs.

Also UNC might beat Auburn red alert.

WHY IS HALEIGH BRYANT SITTING ON THE SIDELINE LOOKING NOT HERE. ANKLE PROBLEM? DO NOT ACCEPT.

Edwards – FX – LSU – front 2/1, nice control – front full in combination, a little steppy on landing but keeps it in bounds – great leap amplitude – double tuck, bounce back. 9.825

Culton with a few more checks than is characteristic on her season opening beam for UNC but lovely form

Seriously if LSU has to deal with injuries to Bryant and Durante from today, that is baddddddddddd.

Ballard – FX – LSU – DLO is very low, lunge forward – 1.5 to layout to stag, good control – switch ring to switch 1/2, a little short of position – double pike, controlled step, keeps it in bounds. 9.750

Gobourne – FX – Auburn – the only one we trust. And Auburn needs the score. open double tuck, controls the step back – switch side to popa, good extension – there’s no part of this routine where she isn’t putting on a crown – front full to front layout, covers the steps, conrttrols it, really nice extension on layout – double pike, forward landing with step. Some things, but that will be a usable score. 9.875

Arenas – FX – LSU – front 2/1 is strong, controlled landing, a small amount of leg crossing – front lay to front full, knees – switch 1/2 and wolf full are nicely done – double pike is somewhat short, step forward. OK. 9.775

Skaggs – FX – Florida – wolf double – rudi to stag jump, good control – split leap 1.5ish to split jump 1/2 ish, good extension positions though – 1.5 to layout, controls step, slight leg separation – good. 9.950 wait what? I mean, it was pretty but…

Alert: North Carolina and Auburn tied at 146.900 going to final rotation. UNC on floor, Auburn on vault.

KJ Johnson – FX – LSU – excited for this one – that full in is so satisfying, bounce back though – 1.5 to layout, a bit of legs in the 1.5 but nice rise into the layout – switch side to popa, slightly off line on popa – double tuck, bounce back. Some landing control but this will be a starring routine. 9.900.

Who just did that gorgeous Jaeger on bars for NIU?

Blakely – FX – Florida – double Arabian first pass, step forward, just does keep it in bounds – doesn’t get the intended set on her double tuck but pulls it around, a little short with a step – 1.5 to layout, lowish on the layout with a step back. 9.900. These scores are very high.

Did Shchennikova just trip in the middle of her leap combination? That could be score significant because you need a passage of dance for a .2 composition requirement, and the trip breaks the passage . 9.725

LSU going with just five on floor because Bryant is out and presumably there’s no one else they want to risk. It’s just the first meet.

LSU done on 196.950, a tale of two meets there. Good start, I had scoring questions of course, but it was a strong performance, then beam kind of fell apart and then floor looked quite depleted, nowhere near the intended lineup, which is not a problem as long as whatever happened to Bryant in the warmup is not serious.

Well, during Shchennikova’s leap combination moment I guess I missed Baumann going 9.975 on floor for Florida.

Wong – FX – Florida – 3/1 first pass, steps back and OOB – good height, some leg crossing – split leap full to split jump full, looked around – back 1/2 to front full to a fully crazy stag jump attempt that I’m obsessed with – double pike, mostly controls the step – 9.800, sure, why not

Wong OK on debut. Some ragged moments, which is sort of surprising, but it will be great.

Reed will finish up for Florida on floor. No Thomas here either.

Elswick with a Y1.5 attempt for Arkansas, short with a step back and still goes 9.850. Arkansas, you’re a real Florida now.

Reed – FX – Florida – DLO, bounce back, keeps it in bounds – front lay to rudi, good form and power, little slide back – double pike, opens out of it nicely at the end to control chest forward with no movement.

Really good Y1.5 from Watson for Auburn.

Long wait for the Reed floor score to finish out the scored routines for Florida. 9.950 with two obvious lack of control passes for a 49.575 floor total.

What to even do with this Florida meet? That was basically a UCLA level of drama and confusion and how did it turn out great for 197.675? The lineups were nowhere near full strength expectations, a lot fo the routines were all over the place, and also it was great?

OK got Ohio State/Arkansas going and also the Utah meet it starting soon.

Saw the Arkansas graphic before commercial long enough for the Felicia Hano erasure on the coaching staff of Wieber/Brooks/Ross.

Important 49.350 on vault for Auburn will get them the win, but this is also close to being a critical score fro North Carolina, which has found countable NQS numbers too hard to come by in recent seasons.

So one of the news elements for Arkansas is Emma Kelley being a person this season. She leads off on bars – shap to bail, some leg separations on both – FTDT with a large bound back and another extra hop. BUT IS SHE MARY LOU’S DAUGHTER. 9.650

The scores don’t work, because we wouldn’t need to know, but it was a routine, and that’s all that counts.

Gianfagna – UB – Arkansas – Ray is solid into overshoot, some pike – FTDT, bounce back. 9.775

Auburn is done on 196.300, UNC on 195.700. That would have been UNC’s #2 score of the whole season last year.

A fall from Scalzo in the third spot for Arkansas on bars. Missed her hand on her overshoot.

Hlavach for Ohio State vaults a roundoff full on back pike, a large bounce back but really impressive distance and chest position for a full-on vault.

Hambrick steadies the bars rotation for Arkansas with a really strong piked jaeger to overshoot and a stuck FTDT. Yes. Excellent. 9.850 is a little tight for me for that one actually.

And it’s a fall for Shaffer on her Shap for Arkansas, so it will be a very low bars score.

Apparently Amelie Morgan started on beam with a 9.875 for Utah, which we didn’t see.

McCallum – BB – hits vertical on candle mount – wolf double, solid – side aerial to loso, goes right up into the loso, but good work, secure, little arm wave – switch to stag jump, not a common connection – side aerial to full, stuck. Good debut. 9.875

Eaker – BB – switch mount – full turn – side aerial to loso is secure, pretty work – switch to beat jump to korbut, good speed in connection, pretty elements – split leap to side aerial tuck full, out of frame (fun) but seemed stuck. Great opening beam routine for her.

Missouri just went 49.400 on floor, which is only .100 shy of the program record.

Still waiting on the score for Eaker. Also 9.875. I thought that was stronger than McCallum’s and would have had it a touch higher.

Isa – BB – Utah – hit vertical on candle mount – bhs loso loso with a little shiver of a correction – beat jump to straddle 1/4, good elevation – bhs gainer full, pretty stick. Nice.

Paulson – BB – Utah – side aerial to loso, a little short, has to bring the front foot back on – switch to sissone, somewhat off line, covers well but a little control deduction – split leap to side aerial to full, stuck landing but more to take in that one.  9.425 tells me there was composition and that they didn’t give her the leap combination for that lean in between. Or she just fell onto the beam. RUSTY today.

O’Keefe – BB – Utah – side aerial to loso, excellent, right on – switch to split leap, good – lonnnnnng pause before beat to side aerial to full, bounce back. 9.850. An exxxtennnnnded lowering and raising and lowering and raising of the U before dismount is a time-honored time waster.

Utah 49.375 on beam. Good rotation. Could have been a huge score but didn’t have it in the final routines. Will be a huge score plenty of times.

Paulson leads off floor for Utah in the second rotation – front tuck through to 2.5, controls the step out, a tad deep – front lay to front full, solid – split leap full to sissone, good amplitude – 1.5 to layout, clean. 9.875

Classic college gymnastics moment with Sedlacek anchoring beam for Arkansas with a hit, good lay-pike series, forgets to salute. Did present after the routine, so fine, but didn’t specifically salute the judges.

Did I miss McCallum’s floor while getting food, or did they not show it?

Eaker – FX – Utah – 3/1, pretty nice in the air, she lands a little hunched over but a nice one overall. She beat Wong in the battle of the Gage 3/1s today – switch ring, you know, switch 1/2, nice – 1.5 to front full, that one was underrotated with a hop around – 9.800

OK, time to prep for GymCastic, starting in a few minutes. Join us?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Georgia/Michigan Live Blog – January 6, 2021

Amid two meets being canceled outright and 11 other withdrawals, it appears we have an actual, real-life competition happening today to kick off the 2022 season, pitting the defending champions Michigan against Georgia.

Scores
BTN+ ($)

Michigan enters as the very heavy favorite, not only as the defending champion but as the team that looked much stronger and more prepared during public previews in December. Now, this was nearly a month ago, but Georgia’s lineups were sparse on several events during the First Look, so eyes today will be on whether the team has been able to round out the beam and floor lineups with six full, competitive routines, and whether the early bars routines are up to a 9.8 level.

My current favorite thing about this meet is the Georgia press release that notes, “Newcomers Sarah Cohen, Maeve Hahn, and Riley Milbrandt look forward to the collegiate environment as well.” Stirring expectations.

Michigan’s projected lineup features no surprises, with Brooks, Wilson, Wojcik, Heiskell, and Morrison in the AA, Brenner on three events, and Guggino on beam.

Anyway, Michigan’s live scores are still from the exhibition and we don’t have lineups for Georgia and we’re 1 minute 13 seconds away from starting so…right on track.

Touch warmups underway now.

Sounds like a change for Michigan with Guggino coming in for Brenner on vault.
Cashman, Ward, Finnegan, Schild, De Jong, Roberts for Georgia on bars.

Rotation 1

Michigan VT 1: Guggino – Y1.5 – stuck landing to start the season. Some knees, great landing. Good amplitude, very strong start. 9.900

Georgia UB 1: Cashman – Tkatchev a bit low but fine – bail, leg break, shoot to high, a little low, a couple .05 handstands, DLO, step back. Fine. 9.725

Michigan VT 2: Wojcik – Y1.5 – solid work, medium hop forward, some leg separation on her block but solid legs in the air. 9.850

Georgia UB 2: Ward – arches first hs but pulls it back – shaposh to bail, really struggles on bail, large elbow bend on catch, probably no credit for the skill, too shy of handstand – very short hs on high bar – DLO, good, step back – will need to drop it. 9.225

Michigan VT 3: Heiskell – Y1.5 – very good height – medium hop forward – excellent leg position throughout. 9.900.

Georgia UB 3: Finnegan – nice Ray amplitude – toe on to pak, leg break pretty clear – borderline short 1/2 turn on low – nice toe point overall – FTDT, step back into salute. Best so far. 9.800

Michigan VT 4: Morrison – Y1.5 – another high vault but the largest bound forward we’ve seen from the lineup so far, hopping with both feet. 9.825

Georgia UB 4: Schild – good first hs – toe on to Ray, somewhat close on catch with elbow bend – leg break on bail catch – solid final cast hs – DLO is a lot better, too closed in the hips but a solid landing, just .05 movement. 9.850 is high.

Michigan VT 5: Brooks – Y1.5 – lands just a bit short with a smaller step back – great dynamics, small amount of foot crossing. 9.900. I probably would have been 9.850 for that because of the step backward.

Georgia UB 5: De Jong – short first hs – toe on to Ray….ayy takes it too far and couldn’t get her grip over. Georgia really needed a hit for her. Resumes with a bail, short hs on high bar – DLO is solid, small shuffle forward. 8.925

Michigan VT 6: Wilson – Y1.5 – lands with a medium lunge forward, landing just seem like it caught her a tad by surprise. 9.875. Scores got a little high toward the end of this rotation, as expected, but nothing egregious.

Georgia UB 6: Roberts – a bit short on first hs – toe on Maloney, pretty into bail, good legs together – short cast hs on high – DLO, small bounce in place. Best of the rotation, the first moment of really pristine gymnastics with that Maloney to bail. 9.825. How is that lower than Schild’s, he asked to the ether.

Mulligan shows a Yfull in exhibition for Michigan.

After 1: Michigan 49.425, Georgia 48.425

Very strong start to the season for Michigan. That was basically a March-level vault performance for a completely useful score. I think I was at 39.350 or 39.400 for it. Guggino was the strongest of the lineup and probably would have gone 9.950 with just a deduction for knees had she been in a later lineup position.

Georgia, well, not the start Georgia wanted. The first couple spots in this lineup are going to be a problem, but they could have gotten away with this for something close to a 49 with a hit from De Jong, so not a definitely tragic outlook here. Finnegan and Roberts showed some nice work, and Schild’s dismount was better than in the first look, but I think she got away with the large leg break on the bail there.

Word on the tweets is that Baumann has an elbow injury. NOT IDEAL. She’s very important on the other three events.

Rotation 2

Georgia VT 1: De Jong – did it about as well as she could with her Yfull – controlled the landing, a clear pike, some direction. 9.825 she’ll take it.

Michigan UB 1: Heiskell – good first hs – blind change to jaeger, good toes, a little close – solid cast hs – Pak, keeps legs together well – giant full to double tuck, mayyybe a little movement, very clean opening. 9.875

Georgia VT 2: Cashman – ooof. Not sure if she was intending to vault a Yfull tucked but she didn’t get a block at all and had to tuck it and ended up landing on her knee-face anyway. 8.750

Michigan UB 2: Brenner – blind to jaeger to overshoot, good height, just a tad soft – a bit short on cast hs on high – DLO, another well controlled landing. Good. 9.875

Georgia VT 3: Magee – Y1.5 – lands short but pulls it out, pretty large lunge diagonally backward but…a hit. And they needed it. 9.775 is fairly forgiving.

Michigan UB 3: Morrison – nice piked geinger – clear hip to bail, some hip angle on catch there – borderline final cast hs – DLO, drops into it, small slide back. Similar level to the others. 9.850

Georgia VT 4: Ward – good Tsuk full, some of her better landing control with a small slide back, pike in the hips. Good. 9.825

Michigan UB 4: Wilson – good first hs – blind to piked jaeger, not the highest but caught – bail, good legs together, a tad crooked on catch – solid cast hs on high – DLO, great landing. Fab finish. A couple things at the beginning. 9.925

Georgia VT 5: Lukacs – just with the Yfull today, probably advisable – medium hop back, legs on block, some pike, not the amplitude she used to get. 9.775

Michigan UB 5: Brooks – blind to piked jaeger, nice – toe on to bail, slight shiver on catch – she is GOING for it on the border of being out of control – good final cast hs – DLO 1/1, lands a bit forward but not too bad, hop. 9.850

Georgia VT 6: Roberts – Working to save the rotation again with a strong Y1.5 – lots of knee form in the air so it won’t be the biggest score but great landing control. 9.900 Same score as the best Michigan vaults which is fancy.

Michigan UB 6: Wojcik – toe on to her deltchev, huge into overshoot, very comfortable – crisp hs on high bar – DLO flung it out a bit but found the stick. Fantastic routine. 9.950

After 2: Michigan 98.900, Georgia 97.525

Michigan with another very prepared and comfortable rotation with only an accumulation of .05s in there really for 49.475. Wojcik the obvious highlight. Georgia somehow escaped that rotation with a 49.100. Which they’ll take any day for a rotation with a fall and a couple sloppy vaults. I’m a little more worried about vault than I was before, but if they can get Baumann and Hawthorne in here, the shape of a competitive vault lineup is there. It’s kind of supposed to be their best event?

Ahhh the traditional mid-meet live-score death. We welcome you back for another year.

Rotation 3

Michigan BB 1: Morrison – candle mount, making its final stand in college, fine – bhs loso series, large break, step back and a bend at the hips, twist to the side but saves it – cat leap to switch 1/2, not bad amplitude there, into beat jump – full turn, wobble – gainer pike, small hop in place. Got through her first competitive beam routine, but enough things that they’ll want to drop for a big score. Gets out of there with 9.775, which is high for me. The minimum I see would be .15 for the series wobble (hip bend, step, twist to side), .05 for the turn wobble, and .05 for the dismount for 9.750, and that’s taking nothing for form.

Georgia FX 1: Perez-Lugones – steps off because music didn’t start – clear anti LGBTQ+ bias – double pike, under control, chest down – 1/2 to front full, another good landing – switch side to popa is short of split – double tuck is a struggle, very low, large lunge forward and another step. 9.575

Michigan BB 2: Heiskell – cat leap to side aerial, smoothly done – switch to switch, probably good, we couldn’t really see it – bhs loso series, right on – full turn, solid – 1.5, a believe stuck landing. Lovely routine. 9.925

Georgia FX 2: Magee – piked full in is pretty good, lands with a stagger and has to hop to the side as she presents – switch 1/2 to popa, nice popa legs – 1.5 to layout, low on the second layout and a step back – double pike, chest down and a lunge forward. Through it but they’re not quite there on floor yet. 9.700

Michigan BB 3: Wilson – hitch kick, high – bhs loso series, very small hesitation on landing, good power – split jump to straddle full, has to arch back to hold it, questionable combo there as she waited pretty long in between – cat leap to switch side, crooked there and another wobble – double tuck is great, lunge back though. Gave away some things. 9.700

Georgia FX 3: De Jong – 3/1, some of her best twist completion there, really well done, small bounce on landing – switch side to wolf full, around – 1.5 to front layout, better lift into her second element, some leg position – double tuck is another huge struggle, lands very low with multiple lunges forward. 9.375

Michigan BB 4: Brooks – bhs loso loso, great in action, small bend to the side on landing – switch to switch, not her mosstest version but fine – full turn is good – kickover front, excellent – double tuck, big, takes a large bounce back though. 9.825

Georgia FX 4: Roberts – front tuck through to double tuck, secure landing, comfortable – switch side to popa to wolf jump full, loses her position on the wolf and a little under there – double pike bounces back a little out of control but didn’t have the short pass trouble of the others. She has been SAVING Georgia today. 9.775

Michigan BB 5: Guggino – Interested to see this debut – full turn, hit – bhs loso, nicely done, good toes – split jump to straddle 1/2, positions have improved on those dance elements, a little short on split – cat leap to side somi, bend forward but secures it – bhs 1.5 dismount, step forward. 9.825

Georgia FX 5: Lukacs – good height on double pike, small foot position adjustment on landing – 1.5 to layout, a little low and some minorly crossed legs – switch side to wolf jump full, a little under turned there but those positions are better than JO – double tuck, chest down but not the weakest final pass, hop forward. 9.700

Michigan BB 6: Wojcik – aerial to beat jump, pretty – switch to split, nice – bhs bhs loso, right on – full turn, OK – 1.5 dismount, stuck. Well that was excellent. A second 9.950 of the day for Wojcik, very nice.

Georgia FX 6: Hawthorne – high double pike but a large bounce back out of it – split leap full to split jump full is excellent, great extension and height – front lay to rudi to split jump, great position in front lay – nowhere close to the tumbling she’s capable of but a comfortable, clean set to help Georgia get out of the bottom of the well on floor. 9.850

Koulos in exhibition for Michigan, near fall on front aerial.

After 3: Michigan 148.200, Georgia 146.125

A 49.300 for Michigan on beam, which is another good score, pretty much entirely thanks to Wojciuk and Heiskell. This was not as strong as the other rotations as four of the six people gave away some real deductions, and this is Michigan’s one question mark this year because they have to replace Farley and Bauman, but no real problems there.

For Georgia, meanwhile, the situation on floor was pretty simple in that they are not yet prepared for these floor routines and could not manage those final passes, save for the two athletes who were doing 2-pass routines, Roberts and Hawthorne, who unsurprisingly had the best performances. A 48.600 and it could have been worse. Not having Baumann really shows in that lineup. And now we get to see about beam.

Rotation 4

Georgia BB 1: Magee – beat to straddle 1/2, lovely – bhs bhs loso, securely landed – lean on her full turn and pretends to dance out of it – 1.5 dismount, step forward/diagonally

Michigan FX 1: Guggino – so she’ll end up in three lineups today – double pike, solid controlled step back – switch side to popa, short back leg on popa there – front lay to front full, some knees bending – frotn lay to rudi, good rise into rudi, slide back. Good. 9.825

Long delay for Magee’s score. Longgggggg. By my count she had her 10.0 start without much controversy?

And it’s up, 9.750.

Georgia BB 2: Finnegan – bhs loso series, verrry tentative and falls, was off line on the bhs – resumes with a solid side aerial to a high wolf jump – straight jump ish to switch side, she has good leap amplitude, full turn a tad hesitant – 1.5, nearly holds the stick, arm wave forward. 9.225

Michigan FX 2: Heiskell – brings out the double Arabian and its very good, controlled landing – 1.5 to layout, controlled step, good form in 1.5 – switch 1/2 to wolf full, a little shy on the switch 1/2 position – double pike, another solid landing, just some chest position. She has continued getting better. 9.900

Georgia BB 3: Hawthorne – bhs loso, solid, small movement – her switch split jumping was tentative today, short – kickover front from knee to wolf jump was connected pretty well this time, small shiver – 1.5 dismount, some leg crossing, lunge forward. Through with a hit. 9.800

Michigan FX 3: Wojcik – double pike, nails the landing – split leap full to popa, excellent, wonderful extension – front double full to front pike, another well controlled landing – rudi to straddle jump, good control, no travel. Excellent. She’s having a DAY. 9.900

Georgia BB 4: De Jong – full turn – switch to split jump, was tight on that switch but pulled it out and got the connection – aerial to straddle jump, solid – bhs loso series, holds it well despite being a little off, some form in the air – side aerial to full, small movement back. Good fight to minimize deductions. 9.850

Michigan FX 4: Morrison – awesome FTDT, nailed the landing – front lay to front full, loose leg position in the air, controls landing – nice amplitude and positions in dance elements, strong work – double tuck, very secure landing. Great. 9.875

Georgia BB 5: Baumann – ohhhhh they’ve got Baumann doing beam, big deal that she’s able to get into this lineup – side aerial to loso, lean and an arm wave, pulls it back – full turn, nice – beat to switch side, excellent feet – 1.5 dismount, step back. Hopefully this bodes well for her ability to get back on vault and floor. 9.750

Michigan FX 5: Brooks – huge full in, controls step, chest up, nice – front tuck stepout through to double tuck, again solid control on landing and nothing you can take for chest position – double pike, controls the step. Good work. 9.925

Georgia BB 6: Schild – aerial, a little short with a check, breaks connection into bhs loso, pretty in the air but another larger lean on landing – switch to split, good split, some back leg on switch – cat leap to side aerial to full, chest position, step to the side. Ohhhh 9.200. Yikes. Would want to see the start value breakdown there. I thought it was going to be a hit score, if not very high because of the wobbles. But it looks like she’s short a tenth of bonus in there by my count. Still means she got hit hard for the checks though, or they didn’t give another combination somewhere, or both.

Michigan FX 6: Wilson – open full in, controls the step, great – front lay to front full, controls landing – switch side to popa, huge split positions, great extension, actually overturns the combination though – double tuck, small slide back. Michigan…very ready for this meet. 9.950 for Wilson in anchor spot.

FINAL: Michigan 197.750, Georgia 194.500

Great start to the season for Michigan. They looked very prepared with their landings on all four events and noteworthy with their endurance on floor. This was basically a postseason-level performance and one that if replicated in a regional final would definitely qualify to nationals, which is pretty strong for the first meet. Beam is the one question mark for Michigan this season, and I think is still a question mark after this meet, but 49.300 isn’t a problem.

Georgia, it wasn’t awesome. A 194.500 is not a good score, and these lineups looked sparse. The equivalent of counting a fall on beam, actually counting a fall on bars, and a ton of short landings on floor. They need Baumann back on vault and floor and Hawthorne back on floor immediately, but it’s going to be a journey this year. It will get better as they go and find their final floor passes, and maybe hit a meet or something, but there just doesn’t look like a lot of 9.9 gymnastics in there right now.

Records That Could Fall in 2022

We were supposed to be graced by the first meet of the college gymnastics season today, but since, er, um, circumstances dictated otherwise, I’m instead looking at some of the college gymnastics scoring records that we could see bite the dust in 2022 (as long as there are…meets that happen), and a few other records that almost surely won’t.

Team NQS – 198.120 (Oklahoma, 2018)

It’s not a season unless at least one team is bumping up against the 198 mark for NQS. Oklahoma’s 198.120 from 2018 still stands for now, but Oklahoma also went 198.115 in 2019 and looked nearly sure to break the record in 2020 with a 198.080 and two road meets left before the season was canceled.

Most 198s in a season – 19 (2018)

The 2021 season saw a piddly-by-comparison 13 scores of 198, so there’s still some way to go to reach the 19 recorded in 2018 or the 18 recorded in 2019, but if it happened in 2018 or 2019, it can happen in 2022.

Most 10s in a single meet – 7 (Michigan @ Georgia; March 8, 1997)

This is among the oldest-standing scoring records in college gymnastics, a dual meet in which Georgia saw four 10s (Leah Brown and Kim Arnold both got 10s on vault and floor) and Michigan got three 10s (Sarah Cain and Nikki Peters on vault, Heather Kabick on floor) in a meet Georgia ended up winning easily 198.475-196.225.

The record has been under serious threat three times since then, competitions where six 10s were scored—a UCLA quad meet with Michigan, Minnesota, and Fullerton in 2002; an Arizona State/UCLA meet in 2003; and the UCLA/Oklahoma meet from 2018—but it is yet to be matched. 

Highest cumulative score (2 teams) – 396.600 (Florida @ Oklahoma; March 6, 2015)

In this meet, Oklahoma defeated Florida 198.500 to 198.100, one of 13 occasions in college gymnastics history in which two teams have scored 198 at the same time. In last year’s national championship, Michigan and Oklahoma combined for 396.4125, which ranks 6th on the all-time list.

Most 10s in a single day – 12 (March 12, 2004)

Thatttttt’s a lot of 10s. On this day, Arizona State recorded five 10s at home against Minnesota, while Florida hosted UCLA with only one 10 for each team (was that a try?), Washington scored two 10s at home against Boise State and Seattle Pacific, LSU scored two 10s away at Centenary, and Missouri got a 10 away against TWU. 

Highest team score – 198.875 (UCLA, Stanford, 2004)

UCLA and Stanford both scored 198.875 at meets within two days of each other during the 2004 season, which is ludicrous and would take a serious jump in scoring to be matched. The highest score in recent years is that 198.500 from Oklahoma in 2015. 

Most 10s in a Season – 91 (2004)

While the overabundance of the highest scores has been a source of angst in recent years, there were 31 tens in the 2021 season. It’s still nowhere close to the world of 2003 (83 tens) and 2004 (91 tens), which means those marks are probably safe.

Highest individual score – 40.000 (Karin Lichey, 1996)

I mean, it’s possible, but…

 

 

 

 

 

NCAA Week 1 – Schedule and Links

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Links will continue to be added as they become available.


COVID Withdrawals

  • [13] Arizona State has postponed its opening day meet against [12] Kentucky due to COVID.
  • The Collegiate Challenge with [7] Cal, [8] UCLA, [13] Arizona State, [17] Oregon State, Arizona, and Washington has officially been canceled.
  • West Virginia has withdrawn from its opening meet with LSU. Centenary will replace WVU.
  • NC State has withdrawn from the quad meet at North Carolina, which will now be a tri meet with Auburn and Bowling Green.
  • Pittsburgh has withdrawn from the quad meet at Temple, which will now be a tri meet with Penn State and Penn.
  • Southern Connecticut is out of the meet at New Hampshire, and UW-Oshkosh is out of the meet at Davis.
  • SEMO has withdrawn from the quad meet at Missouri, which will now be a tri meet with Ball State and Illinois State
  • UW-Eau Claire‘s meet against Hamline has been canceled.
  • Lindenwood has withdrawn from Saturday’s meet at Iowa.

Meets marked ESPN will be broadcast live on TV and can also be streamed online at the link provided for those who have a log-in from a TV provider subscription that gets ESPN2, which is all of them, right?

Meets marked SEC Network will be broadcast live on TV and can also be streamed online at the link provided for those who have a log-in from a TV provider subscription—U-Verse, Spectrum, DirecTV, Dish, Xfinity, Verizon, Sling, Hulu, or YouTube TV.

Meets marked SEC+ may be streamed on WatchESPN for those who have a log-in from a TV provider subscription—U-Verse, Spectrum, DirecTV, Dish, Xfinity, Verizon, Sling, Hulu, or YouTube TV.

Meets marked ESPN+ may be streamed through a separate paid subscription to the ESPN+ streaming service ($7/month).

Meets marked BTN+ are streamed through a paid subscription to BTN+ ($15/month).

Meets marked BYUTV will be broadcast live on TV on the BYU Network or streamed for free at the link provided. (You have to make a profile and log in—ugh—but after that it’s free.)

Meets marked YouTube are, you know, on YouTube.

Meets marked FREE are free at the link provided from a Pac-12 digital or school-specific stream.