The Record Setters of 2025

With only national championships left on this year’s NCAA schedule, let’s take a look at who has set scoring records during the 2025 season.

Air Force

Air Force broke both of its top-line records this season, with Maggie Slife‘s 39.500 AA performance in April 3rd’s regional semifinal setting the mark for the top all-around performance in Air Force history, just eclipsing Jessa Liegl’s 39.475 from 2004.

As for the team score, the January 31st home meet against San Jose State and Hamline saw Air Force set a new program record team total of 195.775, besting the 195.725 mark set in 2019. That same meet featured a new record vault score of 49.075.

Just the week before, Alyssa Bigler‘s 9.925 vault on January 24th matched the Air Force individual vault record originally set by Jessica Wallander in 2013.

Alabama

On February 14th, Lilly Hudson recorded her first career 10.000 on floor, becoming the 8th Alabama gymnast in history to score a 10 on FX.

To go with her beam 10 from 2023 and her vault 10 from 2024, Hudson’s three career 10s now place her 6th on Alabama’s all-time list behind Ashley Miles (11), Andree’ Pickens (9), Kim Kelly (9), Dee Foster (8), and Luisa Blanco (5).

Arkansas

While Arkansas is still on the hunt for the program’s first 10.000, Joscelyn Roberson‘s record-tying 9.975 on floor on February 25th made her the fifth Arkansas gymnast to have scored a 9.975 on floor, joining Maddie Jones, Frankie Price, Kat Grable, and Jaime Pisani—and the 13th Arkansas gymnast to have scored a 9.975 on any event.

As a team, Arkansas’s 197.725 total at Kentucky on March 7th ranks as the third-best score in team history—and best-ever road score. That 197.725 included a beam-record tying 49.575, matching the mark set last year. In April 3rd’s regional semifinal, Arkansas scored 197.550, which now ranks as the fifth-best score in team history, with all five coming in the last two seasons.

Auburn

Vault remains the only event on which Auburn has never seen a 10.000, but Paige Zancan‘s 9.975 for her handspring on, handspring front pike on March 14th now places her in a five-way tie for the Auburn record on that event, along with Cassie Stevens, Drew Watson, MJ Rott, and Julia Dwyer.

February 21st’s visit to Alabama proved historic for Auburn’s team results, with the 49.500 vault score tying the team record (a mark that has now been reached six times but never beaten) and the 197.750 team total ranking in a tie for fifth all time. The top four team scores were all achieved during 2022’s run to the national final.

Ball State

While Ball State did not reach the scoring heights of 2024 this time around, March 2nd’s home meet against Northern Illinois saw a whole slew of noteworthy scores, including Delaney McMahon‘s 9.925 on beam, which now puts her in a six-way tie for the program beam record with Taylor Waldo, Lauren Volpe, Grace Sumner, Grace Evans, and Arden Hudson. That 9.925 led Ball State to a team-record tying 49.350 beam total, matching the result from January of 2023.

Zoe Middleton‘s 39.500 AA from the same competition ranks fourth in Ball State’s history—Middleton also owns the 1st and 3rd spots on the list from her performances last season—helping the squad to a 196.900 team score, which is tied for third in program history.

Brockport

At the March 8th DIII East Regional, Kiara Hockman‘s 9.850 vault tied the Brockport individual vault record first set by Stephanie Mager in 2017, and then matched by future Auburn gymnast Sydney Schumaker in 2022.

Brown

On February 23rd, Brown visited Cornell to set a brand-new program beam record of 49.175. That rotation featured four scores of 9.8 or better, led by a 9.900 from Emily Ford that came just .025 shy of the 24-year-old individual Brown beam record from Jayne Finst in 2001.

Cal

Mya Lauzon recorded her first career 10.000 on floor during February 7th’s meet against Stanford, making her the second Cal gymnast ever to reach the 10 plateau on floor after eMjae Frazier did it in 2023 and 2024.

Lauzon now has five career 10s, which is the most in Cal history, placing her ahead of Frazier (3), Toni-Ann Williams (2), Emi Watterson (1), and Cindy Tom (1).

Clemson

Clemson’s program-debut records from 2024 proved tough to beat in many cases, but Eve Jackson and Brie Clark both reached 9.950 on floor in February, matching the record that Clark, Molly Arnold, Rebecca Wells, and Lauren Rutherford all set last season.

While hosting Stanford on February 23rd, Clemson hit a season-high 196.575 team total, which ranks as the fourth-best for the program.

Cortland

It was a banner season for Cortland’s team results, with this year’s squad recording the four best totals in school history, led by a 192.075 at Ithaca on February 12th but followed closely by 192.050, 191.975, and 191.950 across February and March. The previous team record of 191.650 (2015, 2024) now sits fifth all-time.

February 9th’s 191.950 result was headlined by a beam-record setting 48.750, featuring a 9.850 from Samantha Meadows, also the highest in team history. Meadows would follow that up with another 9.850 three days later, setting the program record twice in one week.

Fisk

Nearly all the Fisk scoring records were set anew in 2025, a highlight being February 8th’s 10.000 on bars from Morgan Price, who managed to smash most of her own records through the season. Price put up the three highest all-around scores ever for Fisk with two 39.500s and a 39.450, beating her previous best of 39.400 from last season. Price also set new vault and floor records of 9.925, leaving intact only her 9.950 beam record from 2024.

As a team, Fisk put up a program-high 194.600 total during a visit to SEMO on February 28th, which beat the previous team record by nearly a point—a record that had been set a mighty 20 days earlier and featured Fisk’s first-ever 49 rotation, a 49.000 on beam. The February 28th meet was marked by a new floor record of 48.925, and a January 26th visit to George Washington delivered a new vault record of 48.825.

Florida

Florida put up two historic team results in 2025, the most significant being the 49.850 on bars from March 22nd’s SEC Championship, not only a Florida team record but also the highest bars score ever seen in college gymnastics. The week before, Florida scored 198.625 in its home finale against Kentucky, the second-highest score in team history and the eight-highest score ever recorded by any team.

On the individual front, Florida has recorded nine 10.000s during the 2025 season, with at least two coming on each event. Selena Harris-Miranda notched three 10s, two on vault and one on beam, and her eight career perfect scores now rank as the most for a gymnast who achieved them on two separate teams. At that March 14th home finale against Kentucky, Harris-Miranda also scored 39.875 in the all-around, which is tied for third in Florida history behind only the two 39.900s recorded by Trinity Thomas in 2021 and 2022. Thomas and Leanne Wong also previously hit the 39.875 level.

Speaking of Leanne Wong, she too recorded three 10s, one each on bars, beam, and floor, bringing her up to a career total of 11, separating herself from Alex McMurty (9) and Bridget Sloan (8) on Florida’s all-time list and ranking second only behind Thomas’s 28.

On February 14th, Sloane Blakely notched her 2nd career floor 10, becoming the seventh Florida gymnast to have scored multiple 10s on floor, joining the club with Wong, Thomas, Nya Reed, Kennedy Baker, Sloan, and Kytra Hunter. On March 14th, Danie Ferris became ninth Florida gymnast to ever score a 10 on vault, dating back to the four vault 10s for Susan Hines from 1996 to 1998, and on March 22nd, Riley McCusker became the 11th Florida gymnast to score a 10 on bars, the first coming from Kristen Guise and Amy Myerson in 1996.

George Washington

At February 2nd’s visit to Temple, Lola Montevago scored 9.975 on bars to set a new George Washington record on that event.

In the overall individual score rankings, Montevago’s 9.975 now matches the floor 9.975 that Kendall Whitman scored in 2024 and trails only the lone 10.000 in GW history, Devin McCalla’s beam in 2002.

Greenville

Greenville set nearly entirely new marks in 2025, led by the record team total of 191.175 set at February 9th’s visit to Air Force. February’s 190.925, 190.200, and 189.325 also now rank second, third, an fifth in Greenville’s history.

Between February 9th and March 8th, Greenville also set completely new event records, putting up 48.125 on vault, 47.500 on bars, 48.200 on beam, and 48.675 on floor.

Individually, Amara Nelson‘s 38.450 all-around record from last season held, but Ashlie Leage nearly caught her with a 38.425 on February 22nd. Nelson also went 38.375 and 38.325 this season, now ranking third and fourth on the all-time list.

Nelson went on to re-set the beam record with a 9.850 on February 14th, while Leage set a new bars record of 9.800 on three separate occasions. Elsewhere on the roster, Ellery Gilmer became the first Greenville gymnast ever to score a 9.900, posting that on February 22nd, while on March 8th, Rachel Miller tied Nelson’s year-old vault record on 9.750.

Gustavus Adolphus

A big year for Gustavus Adolphus saw the team break the 190 mark for the very fist time, scoring 190.275 at February 23rd’s visit to Simpson. That meet also featured a new beam record of 48.300 and a new floor record of 48.250. March 8th’s DIII West Regional performance featured a vault record of 48.025 en route to a 188.500 team score, the fourth-best number in Gustavus history. That means the only surviving previous event record is the bars mark of 47.025 from 2017.

Lili Guy set a new individual vault record for Gustavus with her 9.775 on February 14th, and she was later joined by teammate Maddox Lee, whose 9.775 on beam on February 23rd tied her own event record from last season. Lee also went 38.050 in the all-around on January 10th, the fifth-best result in team history, with Alex Kopp’s 38.525 from 2016 still standing as the record.

Illinois State

Sara Wabi added her name to the Illinois State record book in 2025, scoring a 9.900 on bars on February 28th that now puts her into a seven-way tie for the school best there alongside with Sofia Iribarren (2x), Madison Kipp (2x), Angelica Labat, Jenna Bossle, Kristy Kreinbrink (3x), and Jessie Balogach.

As a team, the squad recorded two 196s this season, going 196.150 at Northern Illinois and 196.025 at the MIC championship, which now rank fourth and fifth on the all-time list, with the overall record remaining the 196.375 from 2023.

Iowa

Iowa is still looking for its first-ever 10 on floor, but this year Emily Erb added her name to the record list on February 16th with a 9.975, which ties her with JerQuavia Henderson—who reached 9.975 on floor five times—along with Lauren Guerin and Alexis Maday, who did it twice, and Stephanie Gran, who did it once.

This year’s Iowa squad also reached the 197 mark for the fourth time in team history—and first since 2022—scoring 197.025 on senior night against Iowa State.

Ithaca

Ithaca shifted its team records around slightly this season with a 191.700 at home against Cortland on February 12th, which now ranks as the fifth-best team total in history, just ahead of the 191.675 from the DIII East Regionals. That consistency of near-record scores was borne out in the team’s NQS of 190.730, an Ithaca record.

Kentucky

The senior meet against Arkansas on March 7th proved a historic day for Kentucky as Creslyn Brose scored a 10.000 on floor, becoming the third Kentucky gymnast to do so, after Jenny Hansen recorded six 10s on floor in her career and Raena Worley did it four times last season.

That meet also saw Kentucky score a team total of 197.925, tied for the third best in school history, just shy of last season’s senior night team record of 198.100. The following week, Kentucky went to Florida and scored 49.575 on beam, matching the team record originally set at regionals in 2023.

LSU

LSU pulled off an all-time team record score of 198.575 at this year’s senior night on March 7th, beating by a tenth the previous record of 198.475 set all the way back in 2024. That 198.575 is the tenth-highest score ever recorded in college gymnastics.

At the same meet, Aleah Finnegan recorded her second career 10.000 on beam, becoming the fifth LSU gymnast to have multiple beam 10s along with Konnor McClain, Kiya Johnson, Sarah Finnegan, and April Burkholder. No LSU gymnast has ever scored more than two 10s on beam. Aleah Finnegan’s eight total career 10s are now tied with Johnson and Burkholder for fourth on LSU’s list, behind Haleigh Bryant (18), Ashleigh Gnat (9), and Jennifer Wood (9).

The next week on vault, Kailin Chio scored her first career 10.000, becoming the 13th LSU gymnast to have scored a 10 on vault, a list led by Bryant’s ten career 10s on that event.

Maryland

Maryland saw two of its individual event records tied this season, the first coming on January 18th when Sierra Kondo went 9.950 on bars. She’s the fifth Maryland gymnast since 2020 to have scored 9.950 on bars, a record first set by Audrey Barber, then tied by Tiara Wright, Sanya Glauber, Emma Silberman, and now Kondo.

In the regional semifinal, Maddie Komoroski scored a 9.950 of her own, this time on beam, becoming the sixth Maryland gymnast to reach that level on BB. She joins Natalie Martin last season, as well as Stephanie Giameo, Sarah Hoenig, Kit Johnson, and Gillian Cote, a group that spans 26 years of Maryland 9.950s on beam.

Michigan State

Gabi Stephen used the 2025 postseason to put up a whole bunch of historic individual marks for Michigan State, starting with her 10.000 on beam at the Big Ten Championship, the first beam 10 in MSU history. She then went on to score a 10.000 on vault in the regional semifinal, becoming the fifth Michigan State gymnast to score a vault 10. She joins teammates Nikki Smith and Sage Kellerman, who have two vault 10s apiece, as well as Rhiannon Banda-Scott and Rochelle Robinson with that accomplishment.

Both meets also proved significant for Stephen’s all-around scores, with the regional performance garnering a 39.750, the second best in Michigan State history behind only a 39.775 scored by Nikki Smith two seasons ago. At the conference championship, Stephen scored 39.675, which is tied for fifth in MSU’s rankings, with all of the top five scores belonging to Stephen, Smith, or Skyla Schulte.

As for the team, that conference championship performance earned a 198.150, the #2 score in team history, trailing only a 198.225 from 2023. In this year’s regional final, Michigan State vaulted 49.650, a team record on that event, en route to a 198.000, the fifth time Michigan State has reached the 198 level, all coming in the last three seasons.

Missouri

The five 10.000s recorded by Missouri in 2025 are the most in a year in school history—the team had six total heading into this season—and Helen Hu led the way with her three 10.000s on beam, becoming the first Missouri gymnast ever to score three 10s in her career. She is the third Missouri gymnast overall to score a 10 on beam, linking arms with Sienna Schreiber last year and Lauren Schwartzman twice in 2004.

Mara Titarsolej added another bars 10.000 to her repertoire on March 22nd (also the third 10 of her career, but one came at LIU). Titarsolej remains the only Missouri gymnast ever to score a 10 on bars. Kennedy Griffin put up a 10.000 on floor on February 14th, becoming the second Missouri gymnast to go perfect on floor after Jocelyn Moore set the record last season.

In the all-around, Amari Celestine won Missouri’s season with a 39.650 on March 9th, which is the fourth-best score in school history, with Sarah Shire’s 39.725 from 2010’s run to nationals still holding up at the top of the list.

The season was similarly significant for Missouri’s team scores. On March 9th, Missouri took down its previous team record with a senior meet performance of 198.100, the first 198 in school history. That came just one week after a 197.725 (fourth all time) and one week before a 197.800 (third all time), all leading to a team-record NQS of 197.510.

Missouri also set a team record floor total of 49.725 on February 14th, and twice set a team record beam total of 49.575, the first on March 14th and the second in the regional semifinal on April 4th.

North Carolina

It had been quite some time since North Carolina set a new program record—21 years actually, since the 2004 season when North Carolina went on a run of 197s and set most of its team marks. That ended at this year’s ACC Championship on March 22nd, when Lali Dekanoidze scored the first bars 10.000 in team history. Dekanoidze is the fourth North Carolina gymnast ever to score a 10, joining Brooke Wilson’s beam from 2001, Anna Wilson’s two on floor in 2003 and 2004, and the nine 10s Courtney Bumpers scored on floor through her career.

That Dekanoidze 10 led North Carolina to a 49.475 bars total, also a new record for the team, and a 197.225 total score, the #3 mark in team history behind the 197.350 and 197.325 scored on consecutive weekends in 2004.

Oklahoma

The regional final on April 6th proved a big win in Oklahoma’s quest for individual records, with Jordan Bowers scoring three 10.000s for a 39.900 all-around total. That all-around is tied for third in Oklahoma history—behind the 39.925 Bowers scored last season and the 39.925 Maggie Nichols scored in 2017—and tied for 8th in the history of college gymnastics.

Those three 10s bring Bowers up to 12 all time, passing Ragan Smith for second on Oklahoma’s list and trailing only the 22 from Nichols. Bowers’ five floor 10s are the most on floor in Oklahoma history, and her four bars 10s are tied with Nichols for the most.

Faith Torrez put up two more 10s of her own at regionals, one on beam and one on floor, bringing her to four 10s for the season and five for her career. That puts her in a tie for fourth on Oklahoma’s career 10s list alongside Olivia Trautman, Anastasia Webb, and Haley Scaman.

Oregon State

Jade Carey continued smashing her own Oregon State records this season, most notably with her career-high 39.925 all-around score recorded on senior day on March 15th. That’s the highest all-around in Oregon State history and tied for the fourth highest all-around in NCAA history, behind only the Karin Lichey 40.000 from 1996, the Mohini Bhardwaj 39.975 from 2001, and the Suzanne Metz 39.950 from 1995.

That 39.925 helped Oregon State to a 197.700 team total, the fourth best in school history, a list still led by the team’s lone 198 from 2023.

Carey also put up two separate 39.850 all-arounds this season, which are tied for 4th in Oregon State history behind several other Jade Careys. Her four 10.000s this season—three on floor and one on beam—bring her to 16 for her career, 11th on the all-time college list and second among active gymnasts behind Haleigh Bryant’s 18.

Penn

Penn’s all-around records have been shattered by Skyelar Kerico, who put up the top three all-around scores in school history during March and April this season, culminating in a school record 39.450 during the regional semifinal. In previous weeks she had also scored 39.425 and a 39.325 to go with her old school record of 39.325 posted last season.

Kerico’s individual AA results have been bolstered by a new Penn-best vault score of 9.925, which she recorded twice in March. The team records have also felt the impact, with a season-high 196.200 on March 4th now ranking fourth in Penn’s team history.

Pitt

Pitt’s big result of the season came at the senior day meet against West Virginia, when the team put up a 196.575 total, the second best ever scored by a Pitt team, trailing only the 196.775 from the 2022 season. The floor score of 49.350 in that meet is tied for the best Pitt floor score in nine years, though still trails the 49.450 floor from a 2004 meet in which Alyse Zeffiro scored the only two 10s in Pitt history.

Rhode Island

Nearly all of 2024’s new team records were broken again by this season’s Rhode Island squad, which passed the 192 mark for the very first time on January 26th with a 192.125, and then rebroke that on February 23rd with a 192.725. In all, the top four team totals in Rhode Island history all came this season.

On the events, Rhode Island set a vault record 48.150, a bars record 47.550, and a beam record 48.625 (twice) all this season, leaving intact only last season’s 49.250 floor mark. The oldest scoring record in Rhode Island history is now Morgan Lunn’s beam 9.825 from all the way back in February of 2023.

On the individual front, Olivia Keyes absolutely wrecked a bunch of old records, most of which were already her own. The 2025 season saw Keyes mimic the team results and put up the top four numbers in school history, led by a pair of 38.725s in January and February and followed by a 38.650 and 38.625. On February 9th, Keyes set a new Rhode Island individual bars record with a 9.725, and on March 8th, she tied the floor record with 9.900, a record she shares with Emma Tucker (2024) and Kelsey Gates (4 times, 2023-2024).

Rutgers

The March surge that Rutgers put on this season to qualify to regionals was reflected in their record book, with Rachael Riley matching the individual beam record of 9.950 that was originally set by Erin McLachlan in 2020 and also reached three times by Hannah Joyner from 2021 to 2023.

As a team, the 196.550 scored in a visit to New Hampshire on March 16th is now the third highest total in school history behind only a pair of 196.8s from 2023 and 2024.

Simpson

Simpson stars among the new teams that obliterated their old records during the 2025 season. Olivia Hedary excelled in the all-around, recording the school’s first and only score in the 38s with a 38.050 on February 1st, breaking the previous record of 37.425 from Avery Ingram.

February 23rd was a major day for individual records as Emma Tolbert set a new best floor mark of 9.825, Kaelyn Tally set new best vault with 9.800, and Evalyn Resnick set a new best bars with 9.625. Those records followed on the heels of Brooklen Morgan‘s 9.725 on beam, which equaled the record set by Ingram in 2023 and Emma Charles in 2024.

On the team front, all five of Simpson’s best ever team scores came during the 2025 season, led by a 189.425 on January 18th. That meet total included a new beam record of 48.050 and a new bars record of 46.500. Simpson also set a new vault mark of 48.100 at the DIII West Regional during which nearly every competing team set an all-time vault record at the same time.

Stanford

As one of the teams that was good in 2004, Stanford has team records that are notoriously difficult to break or match, but one way to do that is with a 10. Ui Soma‘s 10.000 on bars at the ACC Championship made her the fourth Stanford gymnast to have scored a 10 on bars in her career, joining Elizabeth Price (twice in 2018), Liz Tricase (thrice in 2006 and 2007), and Amy Murakami (once in 1999).

In all, 13 Stanford gymnasts in history have now scored 10s at some point, with Price’s five career 10s leading the list.

Texas Woman’s

The seven-year-old team scoring record for TWU went down on senior day this year as Texas Woman’s welcomed NC State and scored 196.600, beating the previous record of 196.525 scored when the team won the USAG title in 2018.

This year’s record performance was led by a 49.325 on bars, which tied the program best on that event, originally set in the 2014 season.

UC Davis

It was a major year for individual records at UC Davis as Amelia Moneymaker broke the all-time AA mark at March 14’s visit to Sacramento State with her 39.550, eclipsing Kelley Hebert’s 39.525 from the 2018 season. The next week, Moneymaker went on to score 39.500, now the third-best score in team history.

On vault, Keanna Abraham‘s 9.950 from February 28th now sits alone atop Davis’s record book, joining the record 9.975 on floor she already owns from the 2023 season.

UCLA

UCLA has put up five 10s this season, led by the three from Jordan Chiles, which brings Chiles to 11 for her career. That ties Katelyn Ohashi for fourth on UCLA’s all-time list, behind Jamie Dantzscher (28), Kyla Ross (22), and Jeanette Antolin (14). Chiles’ six career 10s on floor is now third behind Dantzscher and Ohashi, and her five career 10s on bars is now also third behind Ross and Dantzscher.

Ciena Alipio joined UCLA’s 10 club on beam, becoming the 11th Bruin to score a 10 on beam in her career, dating back to Kristen Maloney, who got the first-ever UCLA beam 10 in the 2001 season. Brooklyn Moors joined the lengthy history of UCLA floor 10s, becoming the 19th member of that list, dating back to Amy Thorne in 1993, the first-ever 10 for UCLA.

For the team, UCLA’s first Big Ten Championship proved a boon as the team total of 198.450 now ranks as the fourth-highest score in UCLA history, though still lags behind the team record of 198.875 from 2004. The Big Ten Championship also saw the Bruins score 49.750 on beam, tying the program record set when winning the national title in 2018.

Ursinus

The March 8th DIII regional brought Ursinus its highest rotation score on any apparatus in team history with a 48.700 on floor, featuring no score lower than 9.625.

Erin Roe‘s all-around performances also put her name in the record book as her 38.575 and 38.500 this season now rank second and third in school history, behind only the 38.675 from Kaelin Ruoss in the 2015 season.

Utah

The list of changes to Utah’s records in 2025 are the Grace McCallum show as her four 10.000s during the season now bring her to eight for her career, which is fifth on Utah’s all-time 10s list behind Maile O’Keefe (15), Theresa Kulikowski (14), Kristen Kenoyer (11), and Georgia Dabritz (9). McCallum’s three 10s on bars now bring her to sixth overall, one shy of the Utah record of seven bars 10s, which is shared by Kulikowski and Dabritz.

McCallum also went 39.800 in the all-around on February 21st, the second strongest total of her career and fifth in Utah history. McCallum’s 39.825 last season was the best all-around total for Utah in 20 years.

Utica

Utica’s second season brought many new records, featuring the all-around scores from Emmy Graff, who now owns the top three AA totals for the team. Her 38.625 from March 2nd’s visit to Cortland is the new top mark. Alyssa Langston set a new bars record of 9.825 in very the same meet, though the rest of the individual records that Alexis Castellaneta set last season remain intact.

That March 2nd meet was also a big deal for the team, setting the new record team total of 189.325, as well as a beam record 48.075 and a bars record 47.125. They had to wait one more week for a new floor record—which came at the East Regional—of 48.275, the highest apparatus score ever for Utica. In all, last year’s team high of 186.175 was bested six times in the 2025 season.

UW-Eau Claire

Vault history was made for Eau Claire at the West Regional this year, as Cadence Cordova‘s 9.750 set a new individual record there, also leading the squad to a team vault record of 48.075.

That vault record came one week after Eau Claire scored a 189.575 overall, the second-best total in team history, trailing only the 190.550 from last February. That score, in turn, came a week after Eau Claire set a new bars team record of 47.600.

UW-La Crosse

La Crosse’s DIII Championship-winning score of 194.925 on March 22nd obliterated the old program record of 193.650 that had been set when La Crosse won the DIII title back in 2016. This 2025 championship featured a rare 49+ rotation—a record 49.050 on beam led by three 9.850s, just a quarter tenth under Jennifer Houle’s 20-year-old La Crosse event record.

Like most teams there, La Crosse also set a program vault record at the DIII West Regional, scoring 48.525.

UW-Oshkosh

Oshkosh’s recent major run of scores (all team records have been set in the last four seasons) continued in 2025 with 194.350 and 194.150 team totals that rank second and third in Oshkosh history behind the 194.975 from last year’s national championship, still reigning as the highest DIII score ever.

That 194.350 on February 27th included two event records, with the team going 48.850 on beam and 48.725 on vault. On the individual front, Oshkosh continues to add to the record pileup of 9.825 on beam as Lydia Hayden did it for the second time and Delaney Cienkus did it for the second and third times. There have been nine beam 9.825s in Oshkosh’s history but never a 9.850.

UW-Stout

It was a big year for Stout on both the individual and team fronts, with Jamie Beatty‘s DIII all-around championship score of 38.800 taking over the top spot in Stout history from her teammate Gillian Cummins, whose 38.625 had set the record just two weeks before, a quarter tenth higher than Beatty’s 38.600 from the same meet.

On the event front, Emma Brittingham‘s 9.825 on bars at February 20th’s home finale set a new Stout record, highlighting a meet that proved record-breaking in many ways as Stout set a new high team total of 191.900 and a new bars high of 48.700. The vault record also fell at the West Regional a couple weeks later with a 48.475.

UW-Whitewater

Whitewater’s team records also got a good scrubbing in the 2025 season, with March bringing a 194.025 and a 193.750, the second- and third-best scores in Whitewater’s history, trailing just he 194.450 from last January.

Three of the team’s four event records were also set anew, with dueling 48.875s put up on bars and beam this season, along with a record 48.550 on vault, which the team achieved twice.

Wilberforce

Everything Wilberforce did was a record in 2025 because it was the team’s first season, but records they are nonetheless. The first meet of the year brought the high team total of 180.275 and the vault high of 46.675. The second meet set the floor and beam records on 47.300 and 46.950, while the bars record of 43.475 didn’t come until March.

Individually, Kiora Peart-Williams dominated most of the highs, leading the way in the all-around with a 38.075 and on vault and bars with 9.650s. Sadara Mayhorn had the best beam with a 9.725 in January, while Saniah Smith had the best floor with a 9.750 at the same meet—a mark that was matched by Diamond Cook in the National Invitational semifinals on April 11.

Winona State

It was Kennedy O’Connor‘s world on vault this season for Winona State as her two 9.825s set the program-best mark there, also leading the team to a vault record 48.650 to win that event at the West Regional.

The West Regional was a major accomplishment for Winona as their 191.900 team score set a new program record, beating the old mark of 191.650 from 2016. The week before, the team had scored 191.000, an echelon the team has now hit five times, twice this season, once in 2017, once in 2016, and once in 2002.

Yale

Yale returned to its favorite team total—195.125—in this season’s home finale after also scoring that number twice last season. It ranks as the third-best result in team history, behind a 195.400 from 2024 and a 195.325 from 2018.


Discover more from Balance Beam Situation

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.