I respectfully reply here: nope.

I'm a very committed gymnastics fan, and I've watched this team all season
- every single meet save Arkansas, which wasn't broadcast (and I wasn't
going to Fayetteville to see).   Friday was a "big stage" night and they
absolutely killed it on beam, plus had extremely good scores on floor and
bars as they have all season.  On Saturday, they outscored themselves on
vault (one of their best team vault scores all year), and were not as crisp
on bars and floor (49.425 on each apparatus; anyone will tell you a team
scoring 49.4 on each event is a championship-caliber team).  Unfortunately,
after Amelia Hundley's respectable 9.775 on beam (a little low for her; s/b
around 9.8 - 9.85), Rachel Gowey and Alicia Boren both fell off the beam,
so UF had to count a score.  Once that happened, the pressure was ratcheted
up big-time on the remaining beam performers to not stumble.  They didn't,
but the pressure led to lower scores all around, so right out of the gate,
UF was 1.5 points behind their normal "pace" for a meet.  Throughout the
season, she's done all the right things: such as resting gymnasts here and
there during the season to avoid injury or wearing them out (Elite and
Level 10 gymnasts only compete 4 or 5 times a year; NCAA gymnasts compete
in 9-15 meets in a season less than four months long).  Two of the three
assistants (Adrian Burde and Jeremy Miranda) were here with Faehn, only
Owen Field is new.  There is nothing that happened on Saturday that was on
account of a lack of training, discipline, or proper encouragement from the
training staff.  This team has been stronger than any Faehn team I can
recall on beam, which is the least forgiving of the apparatus.  Some times
the athletes can't execute.  It just happens.

Just a reminder; even Rhonda Faehn missed the Super Six in 2011 with an
exceptionally talented team.  The next year, that team lost to Alabama in
the finals just by a hair before going on to three back-to-back national
championships.

Another thing of note: this is the first year with a new format; if this
had been the old format, nobody would be groaning that UF missed nationals,
as they would have qualified to go to Dallas and compete to be included in
the Super Six (final).



On Sun, Apr 7, 2019 at 2:55 PM Charlie <[email protected]> wrote:

> Gymnastics seems to be slipping a bit under Rowland. The ladies don't seem
> to do as well on the big stage.
> Charlie
>
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1996 National Football Champions   |  2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 
National Football Champions   |   Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier 
(1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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