NQS Blue Indicates NCAA Season High Bold Indicates SEC Member Rank Team NQS 1. Oklahoma 198.080 Ave 197.793 High 198.475 2. Florida 198.050 Ave 197.805 High 198.575 3. Michigan 197.960 Ave 197.805 High 198.525 4. Utah 197.870 Ave 197.650 High 198.575 5. LSU 197.735 Ave 197.561 High 198.125 6. Alabama 197.650 Ave 197.410 High 198.075 6. Auburn 197.650 Ave 197.464 High 198.575 8. Minnesota 197.395 Ave 197.300 High 198.025 9. Kentucky 197.250 Ave 197.117 High 197.650 10. California 197.220 Ave 197.120 High 197.900 11. Missouri 197.190 Ave 197.031 High 197.675 12. Michigan State 197.125 Ave 196.834 High 197.575 13. Oregon State 197.040 Ave 196.856 High 197.375 14. Arizona State 196.880 Ave 196.650 High 197.800 15. Denver 196.870 Ave 196.620 High 197.600 16. Ohio State 196.865 Ave 196.443 High 197.525 17. Arkansas 196.820 Ave 196.453 High 197.200 18. UCLA 196.795 Ave 196.711 High 198.050 19. Illinois 196.775 Ave 196.248 High 197.350 20. Maryland 196.665 Ave 195.966 High 197.175 ... 22. Georgia 196.575 Ave 196.125 High 197.175 VT 1. Michigan 49.555 Ave 49.423 High 49.875 2. Florida 49.525 Ave 49.443 High 49.725 3. LSU 49.455 Ave 49.408 High 49.525 4. Oklahoma 49.425 Ave 49.366 High 49.550 5. Utah 49.400 Ave 49.345 High 49.550 5. Auburn 49.400 Ave 49.334 High 49.500 7. Minnesota 49.365 Ave 49.331 High 49.575 8. Alabama 49.355 Ave 49.273 High 49.500 9. Kentucky 49.315 Ave 49.294 High 49.450 10. Oregon State 49.265 Ave 49.222 High 49.350 UB 1. Oklahoma 49.545 Ave 49.530 High 49.825 2. Florida 49.540 Ave 49.428 High 49.725 3. Michigan 49.515 Ave 49.490 High 49.600 4. Alabama 49.465 Ave 49.413 High 49.650 5. Auburn 49.450 Ave 49.339 High 49.575 6. Utah 49.445 Ave 49.423 High 49.800 7. Kentucky 49.435 Ave 49.392 High 49.575 8. Boise State 49.420 Ave 49.244 High 49.525 8. LSU 49.420 Ave 49.417 High 49.500 10. California 49.405 Ave 49.365 High 49.625 BM 1. Utah 49.620 Ave 49.380 High 49.725 2. Oklahoma 49.580 Ave 49.400 High 49.700 3. Florida 49.550 Ave 49.420 High 49.700 4. Auburn 49.485 Ave 49.384 High 49.725 5. Alabama 49.425 Ave 49.350 High 49.650 6. Michigan State 49.380 Ave 49.270 High 49.500 6. LSU 49.380 Ave 49.356 High 49.650 8. California 49.375 Ave 49.225 High 49.475 9. Oregon State 49.350 Ave 49.264 High 49.475 9. Michigan 49.350 Ave 49.300 High 49.500 11. Missouri 49.340 Ave 49.303 High 49.475 FX 1. Michigan 49.635 Ave 49.593 High 49.750 2. Utah 49.590 Ave 49.502 High 49.675 3. Florida 49.585 Ave 49.515 High 49.800 4. Minnesota 49.580 Ave 49.561 High 49.750 5. Oklahoma 49.550 Ave 49.498 High 49.675 6. Auburn 49.490 Ave 49.407 High 49.800 7. Alabama 49.465 Ave 49.375 High 49.700 7. LSU 49.465 Ave 49.375 High 49.775 9. Michigan State 49.460 Ave 49.341 High 49.675 10. Missouri 49.440 Ave 49.389 High 49.650 Individual Florida VT 4. Trinity Thomas 9.950 Ave 9.925 High 10.000 11. Nya Reed 9.910 Ave 9.895 High 9.975 15. Savannah Schoenherr 9.905 Ave 9.872 High 9.975 36. Megan Skaggs 9.885 Ave 9.869 High 9.950 61. Leanne Wong 9.860 Ave 9.837 High 9.975 106. Sloane Blakely 9.840 Ave 9.832 High 9.950 UB 4. Trinity Thomas 9.945 Ave 9.905 High 9.975 5. Leanne Wong 9.940 Ave 9.875 High 10.00 24. Megan Skaggs 9.910 Ave 9.893 High 9.950 28. Savannah Schoenherr 9.905 Ave 9.882 9.975 96. Sloane Blakely 9.850 Ave 9.712 High 9.900 137. Riley McCusker 9.830 Ave 9.764 High 9.925 BB 3. Trinity Thomas 9.970 Ave 9.936 High 10.000 19. Sloane Blakely 9.915 Ave 9.848 High 9.950 23. Leanne Wong 9.910 Ave 9.865 High 9.950 32. Megan Skaggs 9.900 Ave 9.893 High 9.950 37. Alyssa Baumann 9.895 Ave 9.760 High 9.925 FX 1. Nya Reed 9.965 Ave 9.958 High 10.000 19. Leanne Wong 9.925 Ave 9.906 High 9.975 48. Megan Skaggs 9.900 Ave 9.886 High 9.950 56. Alyssa Baumann 9.895 Ave 9.872 High 9.975 142. Sloane Blakely 9.845 Ave 9.853 High 10.000 AA 8. Megan Skaggs 39.550 Ave 39.534 High 39.725 13. Leanne Wong 39.485 Ave 39.546 High 39.850 For Complete NQS Team and Individual Standings, Click Here
With UF as the 2 seed, it looks like UF and bama in Raleigh. If UF takes the 1 seed, it'll likely be UF and Minnesota in Raleigh. I can't see UF being sent to Auburn in either case of 1 or 2 seed.
Here is the NCAA Gymnastics final top 10 team home attendance averages. For the 1st time ever, LSU unseats Utah (get it? "unseats" LOL) for the highest average. Utah had led the nation in home attendance every year since the late 80's. Also for the 1st time since the 80's Florida averages more than Georgia and Auburn's 5 home sellouts gave them 13 more people per meet to barely edge the Gators for 4th, their highest ever. Seven of the top 11 averages are from the SEC. 1. LSU 11,691 2. Utah 11,595 3. Alabama 9,551 4. Auburn 9,121 5. Florida 9,108 6. Georgia 8,419 7. Arkansas 4,966 8. Oklahoma 4,926 9. Michigan 4,838 10. UCLA 4,557 11. Kentucky 4,052
Did Utah have covid capacity restrictions or something lol? That's very impressive growth from the "other" SEC schools over the past 5-10 years. I wonder if we'll see more SEC schools look to add gym in the coming years?
Clemson will have their inaugural season in 2024, giving the ACC their 4th school with a gymnastics program-the other 3 are Pittsburgh, NC State and North Carolina- and add Women's Gymnastics as a sponsored sport. The state of Texas is a hotbed for girls gymnastics but only 1 college has a program-Division 2 Texas Women's U. But no interest by Texas or A&M to start a program from what I've read. But with Title IX, schools are always looking to add a women's sport since the other option to stay compliant is dropping a men's sport. Clemson was facing this dilemma and, thanks to their football program's success and the added $$ revenue they were able to add 2 women's programs- Lacrosse and Gymnastics-instead of dropping a men's program.
Missouri ranked 29th with an average of 1,284. But they just had a record-breaking season and are recruiting better. And now being a member of the SEC should raise awareness and interest.
Here is the Final NQS Analysis Scenario! What does Florida need to pass Oklahoma? Can Michigan end #1? Can the NQS record be broken? Scores in BOLD can no longer be dropped. 1. Oklahoma Road Score 1 198.175 Road Score 2 198.075 Road Score 3 197.900 Home/Road Score 1 198.475 Home/Road Score 2 198.200 Home/Road Score 3 198.050 Current NQS: 198.080 Maximum NQS: 198.195 Possible ranking range: 1-2 Despite a non-counter over the weekend, Oklahoma stayed at #1 because no one else among the very top got a 198 either (whatttt?). Oklahoma is still looking for that 198.125 this week to break its old NQS record but will also be subject to what Florida does in terms of the final #1 ranking because Florida has the higher maximum NQS after conference championships. 2. Florida Road Score 1 198.575 Road Score 2 197.975 Road Score 3 197.775 Home/Road Score 1 198.250 Home/Road Score 2 198.150 Home/Road Score 3 198.100 Current NQS: 198.050 Maximum NQS: 198.210 Possible ranking range: 1-3 Florida does have the higher maximum possible NQS than Oklahoma but would need 198.500 at the SEC Championship to guarantee it. Which, this year, you never know. But it’s a lot. Basically, Oklahoma is sitting in control right now, but if Florida goes crazy at SECs, a switch is possible. Florida also has a chance to break the old NQS record with a 198.150. Ensuring a spot in the top 2 and staying ahead of Michigan requires 197.950. 3. Michigan Road Score 1 198.525 Road Score 2 198.025 Road Score 3 197.950 Home/Road Score 1 197.950 Home/Road Score 2 197.950 Home/Road Score 3 197.925 Current NQS: 197.960 Maximum NQS: 198.080 Possible ranking range: 1-4 Theoretically, Michigan could tie Oklahoma, but that would require a season high at that 198.525 mark and a non-counter from Oklahoma, so it’s not the most likely. The possibility of catching Florida will also be majorly challenging—requiring 198.400 to even have a shot—so Michigan is probably just hoping to fend off Utah and stay in third. 4. Utah Road Score 1 197.950 Road Score 2 197.875 Road Score 3 197.750 Home/Road Score 1 198.575 Home/Road Score 2 198.000 Home/Road Score 3 197.775 Current NQS: 197.870 Maximum NQS: 198.035 Possible ranking range: 3-6 Utah actually has a pretty wide range of possible rankings, spanning both the #1 seed and #2 seed ranges at regionals, but will be aiming for anything over 198 this week, which would be enough to clinch a #1 regionals seeding regardless of what anyone else does. 5. LSU Road Score 1 197.825 Road Score 2 197.625 Road Score 3 197.200 Home/Road Score 1 198.125 Home/Road Score 2 198.050 Home/Road Score 3 197.975 Current NQS: 197.735 Maximum NQS: 197.920 Possible ranking range: 4-7 With Alabama idle and Auburn getting a non-counter, LSU took advantage of the opportunity and jumped up to 5th place. It would take a semi-hefty score to pass Utah for a spot in the top 4, but if LSU goes 197.9 and Utah doesn’t get a 198, it can happen. LSU and Auburn are pretty similar in terms of maximum NQS, but that maximum NQS would hinge on Auburn getting back to 198.5, so consider LSU in the driver’s seat in that regard. 6. Auburn Road Score 1 197.750 Road Score 2 197.750 Road Score 3 197.250 Home/Road Score 1 198.575 Home/Road Score 2 197.925 Home/Road Score 3 197.575 Current NQS: 197.650 Maximum NQS: 197.915 Possible ranking range: 4-8 Auburn was not able to escape the tie with Alabama this week but retains the edge in the tiebreak and the higher maximum NQS after SECs. Still, it would take a 198.200 to absolutely clinch a spot ahead of Alabama in the final rankings, so the conference championship results will decide much in that regard. 6. Alabama Road Score 1 198.000 Road Score 2 197.600 Road Score 3 197.125 Home/Road Score 1 198.075 Home/Road Score 2 197.875 Home/Road Score 3 197.650 Current NQS: 197.650 Maximum NQS: 197.840 Possible ranking range: 5-8 Of the teams in the top 7, Alabama has the lowest maximum so will be subject to what the others score this weekend. While it’s possible that Alabama could lose a spot in the top 7, it’s not likely and can be avoided completely with just a 197.400. There’s no chance at this point for Alabama to be dumped out of the top 8. 8. Minnesota Road Score 1 197.850 Road Score 2 197.125 Road Score 3 196.500 Home/Road Score 1 198.025 Home/Road Score 2 197.850 Home/Road Score 3 197.650 Current NQS: 197.395 Maximum NQS: 197.700 Possible ranking range: 6-10 There’s an outside shot that Minnesota could challenge Auburn/Alabama this week, but it’s not super likely. Mostly, Minnesota should be content with a spot in the 8-9 zone and the 1-8-9-16 regional, which will take only 196.675 to ensure 9. Kentucky Road Score 1 197.500 Road Score 2 197.150 Road Score 3 196.700 Home/Road Score 1 197.650 Home/Road Score 2 197.450 Home/Road Score 3 197.450 Current NQS: 197.250 Maximum NQS: 197.440 Possible ranking range: 8-13 Kentucky and Cal look to be neck-and-neck as the most likely teams for that #9 spot right now, with Kentucky enjoying a slight advantage in maximum NQS, though it would take a 197.600 at SECs to clinch outright, so it will probably end up being a matter of margins on the day. 10. Cal Road Score 1 197.200 Road Score 2 196.925 Road Score 3 196.875 Home/Road Score 1 197.900 Home/Road Score 2 197.575 Home/Road Score 3 197.525 Current NQS: 197.220 Maximum NQS: 197.425 Possible ranking range: 8-13 Kentucky’s score in the early session at SECs will determine whether Cal has a shot at a spot in the 8-9 regional with its performance at the late session at Pac-12s, but Cal will aim for a 197.575 regardless, which would ensure that no other team can pass for a spot in the top 10. 11. Missouri Road Score 1 197.225 Road Score 2 196.875 Road Score 3 196.850 Home/Road Score 1 197.675 Home/Road Score 2 197.650 Home/Road Score 3 197.350 Current NQS: 197.190 Maximum NQS: 197.355 Possible ranking range: 9-13 Missouri also does have an outside shot at the 8-9 but is very dependent on what Kentucky and Cal do in that regard. One consideration for Missouri is that, in the current setup, they would be faced with traveling to Auburn as the #3 seed in the Michigan/Auburn regional group, which is a terrible setup for any upset hopes. So Missouri might not even mind dropping a spot if the top 8 stays the same. 12. Michigan State Road Score 1 197.500 Road Score 2 196.975 Road Score 3 196.850 Home/Road Score 1 197.575 Home/Road Score 2 197.425 Home/Road Score 3 196.875 Current NQS: 197.125 Maximum NQS: 197.270 Possible ranking range: 9-15 Michigan State is no longer in danger of getting dropped out of the seeded positions, so while there’s still quite a range of possible results and regionals placements that will be just as dependent on other teams as on MSU, getting a score from the conference championship is not the most urgent. 13. Oregon State Road Score 1 197.150 Road Score 2 196.875 Road Score 3 196.675 Home/Road Score 1 197.375 Home/Road Score 2 197.275 Home/Road Score 3 197.225 Current NQS: 197.040 Maximum NQS: 197.180 Possible ranking range: 12-16 Like Michigan State, Oregon State has done just enough to secure a spot in the top 16 already so is not facing the pressure of other teams at conference championships looking for a score in order to get to a specific tier. 14. Arizona State Road Score 1 197.375 Road Score 2 196.600 Road Score 3 196.550 Home/Road Score 1 197.800 Home/Road Score 2 197.075 Home/Road Score 3 196.800 Current NQS: 196.880 Maximum NQS: 197.130 Possible ranking range: 12-20 Arizona State is still in some danger of getting bumped out of the seeded positions, especially with UCLA lurking, so will be eager to get 197.325 at Pac-12s to clinch a seeded position, though in reality it probably won’t take quite as much as that. 15. Denver Road Score 1 197.600 Road Score 2 197.075 Road Score 3 196.625 Home/Road Score 1 197.000 Home/Road Score 2 196.850 Home/Road Score 3 196.800 Current NQS: 196.870 Maximum NQS: 197.030 Possible ranking range: 14-20 Denver currently sits in 15th, so would have to be dislodged by others to lose out on a seeding, but both UCLA and Ohio State do have higher maximum NQSs, so Denver may be at the mercy of others if Ohio State puts up another big score. 16. Ohio State Road Score 1 197.525 Road Score 2 196.900 Road Score 3 196.675 Home/Road Score 1 197.100 Home/Road Score 2 197.075 Home/Road Score 3 196.575 Current NQS: 196.865 Maximum NQS: 197.055 Possible ranking range: 13-20 Ohio State’s peak is higher than Denver’s but only slightly, so it would take a significant result of 197.425 at Big Tens for Ohio State to secure a seeded position outright. 17. Arkansas Road Score 1 196.975 Road Score 2 196.800 Road Score 3 196.800 Home/Road Score 1 197.200 Home/Road Score 2 197.050 Home/Road Score 3 196.475 Current NQS: 196.820 Maximum NQS: 196.965 Possible ranking range: 14-20 Arkansas is another team that could get into the seeded positions but will have to wait to see what everyone else scores to know if there’s a chance. Otherwise, Arkansas would be an unseeded geographically placed team in the Oklahoma regional, which right now would mean a regional semifinal with Minnesota and Kentucky. 18. UCLA Road Score 1 196.850 Road Score 2 196.300 Road Score 3 195.475 Home/Road Score 1 198.050 Home/Road Score 2 197.700 Home/Road Score 3 197.650 Current NQS: 196.795 Maximum NQS: 197.310 Possible ranking range: 9-20 UCLA is the team that’s making everything so ambiguous because this range of possible outcomes is so massive. We’re just going to have to wait and see what the score is like because UCLA could end up anywhere from a high #3 seed to outside of the seeded positions altogether depending on how Pac-12s goes. At minimum, UCLA will be looking for 196.675, which would be enough to clinch a spot in the top 16. 19. Illinois Road Score 1 197.275 Road Score 2 196.450 Road Score 3 196.375 Home/Road Score 1 197.350 Home/Road Score 2 197.125 Home/Road Score 3 196.650 Current NQS: 196.775 Maximum NQS: 196.970 Possible ranking range: 14-21 Both Illinois and Maryland have done enough to get themselves in position to maybe-could-iffy-maybe have a shot at a seeded position, but a lot of moving pieces would have to move a very specific direction all at the same time. 20. Maryland Road Score 1 197.175 Road Score 2 196.550 Road Score 3 195.950 Home/Road Score 1 197.100 Home/Road Score 2 197.025 Home/Road Score 3 196.700 Current NQS: 196.665 Maximum NQS: 196.910 Possible ranking range: 14-23
If the Regional Selections were held today per GymCastic podcast: Norman Regional: Oklahoma Minnesota Kentucky Ohio State Arkansas Raleigh Regional: Florida Alabama California Denver N.C. State Auburn Regional: Michigan Auburn Missouri Arizona State Seattle Regional: Utah LSU Michigan State Oregon State Washington UCLA (if NQS standing is lower than 16)
seattle region looks most likely for an upset based on today with both of my dark horses there, mich st and ucla.
3 highest home and 3 highest road are taken. the highest is deleted and the remaining 5 are averaged for nqs.
NQS is based on a team's and an all-around competitor's six best regular-season-meet scores, of which three must be away. They can all be away, or 5 away, or 4 away...as long as 3 are away. The high score is eliminated and the remaining five scores are averaged.
Texas A&M It’s long been a matter of incredulity that Texas, arguably the state with the greatest volume of J.O. and elite gymnasts, has just one collegiate gymnastics program and none at the DI level (though Baylor has an acrobatics and tumbling team). There are plenty of big sports schools in Texas, and the University of Houston has actually considered adding a team. But Texas A&M is an especially compelling choice because it’s in the SEC, so it would already get a lot of visibility. Plus, College Station is located within reasonable driving distance of the Houston and Dallas metropolitan areas, so it would be relatively easy for fans from there to attend home meets. Link Lack of in-state NCAA opportunities for Texas gymnasts ‘baffling’ Link Despite serving as a hub for gymnastics talent, Texas colleges have yet to offer Division I opportunities for in-state gymnasts At age 15, Macy Toronjo was faced with a choice many don’t make until several years later. She was too young, she now acknowledges, but due to the very nature of her chosen sport, Toronjo was forced to pick a college to attend. Toronjo ended up choosing UCLA, where she spent five years as a member of the gymnastics team that won the 2018 National Championship during her tenure. For Toronjo, a Huntsville native who spent several years training at Texas Dreams Gymnastics in Coppell, the nearly 1,500-mile move from Dallas to Los Angeles fulfilled a dream to compete at the collegiate level, but it wasn't necessarily a move she wanted to make. Toronjo comes from a family of Aggies. Her dad, Walter, is Class of 1974. Two of his brothers and their wives, as well as Toronjo’s older half-brother and half-sister, also attended Texas A&M. Her brother Will, a wildlife and fisheries sciences senior, will be taking over as head drum major of the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band for the 2021 football season. But Toronjo didn't have the choice to continue her family’s tradition and become an Aggie. She has, however, made her way back to A&M, now serving as the club gymnastics team's coach and an academic mentor for student-athletes within A&M’s athletic department, but for Toronjo, staying in Texas as a collegiate gymnast was a dream she never got to see come to fruition. A&M doesn’t offer a varsity-level gymnastics program.In fact, no Texas university offers a Division I program. Texas Woman’s University in Denton sponsors gymnastics, but the team is a Division II program and isn’t able to provide the same resources as a Division I school. Despite the lack of collegiate programs, Texas still has a vibrant gymnastics culture, Toronjo said. “Texas is a huge hub for gymnastics,” Toronjo said. “Had there been a DI team in Texas, I would have just stayed in Texas because I was like, ‘I don’t want to go to a city.’ But I did, I left.” The state has produced Olympic talent such as gold medalists Simone Biles, Nastia Liukin and Carly Patterson. Mary Lou Retton trained in Texas as a teenager. Two of Toronjo’s UCLA teammates — Madison Kocian and Katelyn Ohashi — trained at the World Olympic Gymnastics Academy in Plano. Among the eight SEC schools that currently sponsor gymnastics programs, 15 athletes are from Texas — enough for a full roster. Three head coaches also hail from the state. With over 250 gymnastics clubs sponsored by USA Gymnastics, Texas has solidified itself as a hotbed for the sport, despite the lack of college-level opportunities. Though she coaches the only NCAA-level program in the state, Texas Woman’s gymnastics coach Lisa Bowerman said the state’s rich pool of talent doesn’t necessarily mean she has an advantage in recruiting. “Anyone who has been around or knows the sport at all knows that Texas is a hotbed for the sport of gymnastics,” Bowerman said. “That’s why colleges from all over the country come here to recruit our kids, and we’ve got some incredible gyms and incredible athletes here in our state. Just by sheer numbers as well, it’s a very much-loved sport here in our state. “It is a little bit baffling that there’s only one NCAA program in this state where it is so strong and is so popular.” Bowerman said while she does have athletes choose to compete for her in order to remain close to their families, Texas Woman’s Division II status puts her at a disadvantage in terms of what she can offer to recruits. While Division I programs have up to 12 scholarships to offer, Bowerman said Division II schools are allotted just six. “[Division I schools] generally give full-rides, and we do not because of how our scholarships work and how we have to divide them up and combine some athletic scholarship with [academic scholarships],” Bowerman said. “We lose a lot of really strong talent because they can go outside of our state and get a full ride, which we can’t offer.” The state’s history with the sport goes back to Béla and Márta Károlyi, the former coaches of the United States Women’s National Gymnastics Team who established the Karolyi Ranch in Huntsville in the 1980s. The Karolyis helped build a gymnastics culture in Texas, said Lauren Porter, a meteorology junior and three-year member of A&M’s club gymnastics team. “A lot of gymnasts and coaches came here to be around that because the Karolyis used to be the people who decided on the Olympic Team,” Porter said. “Being invited to the Karolyi Ranch — it was a big deal to be near that and having the opportunity to have the Karolyis come and see you.” Though the Karolyis’ influence on the sport has been marred by recent abuse scandals that led to the ranch being dropped as a USA Gymnastics’s training centerin 2018, Bowerman said the love for the sport that lives on today in Texas is still due to the duo’s influence. “Back in the day, the best gymnasts moved across the country to come to Texas to train with specific coaches and to train in specific gyms because they were having success at the national and international level,” Bowerman said. “I think that kind of got the ball rolling, and it just continued to build from there and became a part of the culture of our state and a sport that was known and loved within our state.” While the Karolyi Ranch is no longer an active training center for the national team, Porter said the state still has a plethora of clubs to continue promoting its gymnastics culture. Toronjo’s former club Texas Dreams and World Olympic Gymnastics Academy, or WOGA, in Plano are two of the most successful clubs in Texas, and tied for fourth-most Junior Olympic National Team qualifiers among the nation’s clubs in 2017. “Every gymnast knows the culture of Texas gymnastics. Here in Texas, you see very competitive gymnastics clubs,” Porter said. “We have places like WOGA and a few other places that we see national champions and a lot of Olympians come out of. A lot of your gymnasts who are in the NCAA or the Olympics are from Texas, and that’s where you see a majority of super high-level gymnasts coming out of.” Despite the deep-seeded culture surrounding gymnastics in Texas, there is another sport that takes precedent in every level from peewee to high school to professional: football. Porter said the importance of football in Texas led to other sports, including gymnastics, being put on the “back burner” in the early days of athletic departments across the state. Though the Karolyis’ influence on the sport has been marred by recent abuse scandals that led to the ranch being dropped as a USA Gymnastics’s training centerin 2018, Bowerman said the love for the sport that lives on today in Texas is still due to the duo’s influence. “Back in the day, the best gymnasts moved across the country to come to Texas to train with specific coaches and to train in specific gyms because they were having success at the national and international level,” Bowerman said. “I think that kind of got the ball rolling, and it just continued to build from there and became a part of the culture of our state and a sport that was known and loved within our state.” While the Karolyi Ranch is no longer an active training center for the national team, Porter said the state still has a plethora of clubs to continue promoting its gymnastics culture. Toronjo’s former club Texas Dreams and World Olympic Gymnastics Academy, or WOGA, in Plano are two of the most successful clubs in Texas, and tied for fourth-most Junior Olympic National Team qualifiers among the nation’s clubs in 2017. “If UofH (University of Houston) gymnastics team got NCAA approved in the future, I’d consider coaching gymnastics after my career,” Biles said. Regardless of the push to expand the sport to the collegiate level, Toronjo said college club teams still hold a significant importance for the sport. College clubs provide a place for athletes to compete without the pressure of pursuing “perfection,” Toronjo said. “It gives people the space to find their joy again,” Toronjo said. That joy is something Toronjo said she has yet to find again, though some of the club’s members have been successful in rekindling their love for the sport after going through similar situations. “With everything they went through, they came back to the sport and maybe they’re not doing as hard of skills. That’s OK,” Toronjo said. “They’re doing it because it’s fun and they love gymnastics. That’s something I honestly have not felt or been around in a very long time.” For Porter, who trained at APEX Gymnastics in Leesburg, Va., A&M’s club team gave her a sense of familiarity despite being over 1,000 miles from home. “Gymnastics has always been an easy place for me to make friends,” Porter said. “I’ve done it my whole life, and in high school I didn’t do much in school because as soon as school was over I had to go straight to gymnastics almost every day. I knew by joining gymnastics I could easily make friends, I could continue doing the sport I love, and it was also a place for me to train and get energy.” Her teammate, bioenvironmental sciences junior Kaylee Connolly, had never done gymnastics prior to stepping foot on A&M’s campus, but has since found a nucleus of support and camaraderie through A&M’s club. Despite the special place the club team holds for them, the members still have a desire for the club to grow to varsity level. “I wish there was something we could do to make NCAA happen, but unfortunately, it’s all up to the authorities,” Porter said. “As much as it stinks, it is what it is. But the more we get recognition for club teams in the state of Texas, the better it’ll be.” After making the 1,500-mile move to Los Angeles to pursue her collegiate career, Toronjo is finally making Aggieland her home, though not in the way she imagined growing up. But as special as it would have been for her to compete in her home state, she said the expansion of the sport at the collegiate level, whenever the time comes, will be “huge.” Bowerman said she thinks it will take just one major institution in Texas to add gymnastics for others to follow. “There are times that it can feel hopeless, but I also know that what our sport offers to any university is incredible and I believe strongly in that,” Bowerman said. “We’re not going to stop working toward that ever probably, and I think it’s just a matter of time before one larger university in the state adds and then someone else sees their success and it can hopefully domino effect and grow from there.” With the increasing popularity and success of club gymnastics teams in Texas — A&M’s club won the National Association of Intercollegiate Gymnastics Clubs Championship in 2019 — Porter said it is only a matter of time before a university’s administration takes notice. “The more we have people joining the club teams, the more I think schools will see that it is a popular sport here and there is opportunity to grow that,” Porter said. “A&M being a part of the SEC now, I do foresee that eventually being an option because the SEC does have a lot of phenomenal gymnastics programs with a history of it. It just might take a while for our university to see that, and unfortunately there’s nothing that the club teams can do other than gain recognition.” Although there is not yet an end in sight to the work left to do to expand gymnastics in Texas, there is still plenty of interest and passion surrounding the potential growth of the sport on the collegiate level. Four-time Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles, a Houston native, tweeted in 2018 to express her support for the University of Houston’s gymnastics club and her hope that it will eventually move up to varsity level. “If UofH (University of Houston) gymnastics team got NCAA approved in the future, I’d consider coaching gymnastics after my career,” Biles said. Despite the special place the club team holds for them, the members still have desire for the club to grow to varsity level. “I wish there was something we could do to make NCAA happen, but unfortunately, it’s all up to the authorities,” Porter said. “As much as it stinks, it is what it is. But the more we get recognition for club teams in the state of Texas, the better it’ll be.” After making the 1,500-mile move to Los Angeles to pursue her collegiate career, Toronjo is finally making Aggieland her home, though not in the way she imagined growing up. But as special as it would have been for her to compete in her home state, she said the expansion of the sport at the collegiate level, whenever the time comes, will be “huge.” “It could have been something really special, and who’s to say ‘could have.’ Maybe it will or could be something special,” Toronjo said. “It would be really awesome to see because it would have been a huge movement for the sport. The sport is in a new cycle right now, it’s changing … and the culture is shifting to more joy.”
Well, technically you are correct. It's the top 6 scores with the requirement that 3 are road scores. UF is unusually having to drop its highest road score, but still there must be 3 road scores in the 5 average. If this is wrong, I apologize for the lack of understanding. UF can improve more than OU this week as the Gators have a lower road score to drop. To get the 1 seed, UF still must outscore OU this week, but not by much so long as both are replacing their lowest road score or UF outscores OU's current replaceable road score if the sooners do not improve. I like UF's chances.