Me too!  I wondered why we were trying so difficult a rutine on the beam this 
year.

Jerry

From: GatorTalk <[email protected]> on behalf of Hhsgator 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: GatorTalk <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, August 14, 2019 at 5:47 PM
To: GatorTalk <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] US Gymnastic Championships

[External]: This email originated from outside of Clarion University.

Thanks for the explanation, Sandy. I feel smarter for having read this.
Helen
Sent from my iPhone

On Aug 14, 2019, at 12:39 PM, Sandy Alonso 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Elite and NCAA can be very different from everything to the maximum difficulty 
of routines to the scoring system.

The short and sweet version is that a routine in Elite (say, bars) gets a 
maximum difficulty applied to it based on the elements of the routine, with a 
handful of elements being required for each bars routine.  You'll see on bars 
in Elite a ton more release moves, for example. Elements are rated from A 
(easy) to J (only the Biles triple-double on floor is rated a J) and there's a 
max number of points based on how hard they are.  If a gymnast completes all 
those elements, then there are deductions taken for flaws in execution, which 
resuts in a final score.  In Elite, any score in the 14+ range is super-good.  
(It probably means you started at 15+ and only had about 1 to 1 1/2 points' 
worth of deductions, so you had a hard routine and did it fairly well.)

In the NCAA, there are a number of required elements for each apparatus, but a 
routine can be super hard (Rachel Gowey & Alyssa Baumann are two with very 
difficult elements on beam) or meet the required elements.  The most you can 
get with required elements is a 10.  So there is no "bonus" for doing really 
hard elements.  In fact, it can work against you because NCAA is more about 
consistency than difficulty.  They've tried to change that up a bit recently by 
making a very common vault a 9.95 max score (since almost everyone was acing 
it), which is now encouraging harder vaults with a 10 start.

If you saw Saturday's coverage, you might have seen Trinity Thomas' floor 
routine.  This was much different than her NCAA routine, not just because of 
some added requirements (they all have to do some kind of pirouette routine) 
and more leaps/less dance, but you probably saw that first tumbling pass where 
she attempted a different element called the Biles (not the triple-double) and 
rotated short.  She does not do a tumble element quite that difficult in NCAA.  
Because there's no reward; a fall on a single element penalizes you more in 
NCAA than Elite.

This is why you'll see more falls and errors in Elite and less inconsistency in 
NCAA (among the better teams).  It's better to be "perfect" in NCAA.  I think 
that's why NCAA looks prettier to the more casual observer.

In Elite, they typically do not compete as often (or in such a short time 
frame) as NCAA.  But when they do compete, their routines are going to take 
longer and have more exhausting elements.

On Tue, Aug 13, 2019 at 3:34 PM Stompin' Gator 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I've been kind of spoiled by the SEC Network's gymnastics coverage in which 
there is almost non-stop action. NBC seems to want to focus on a just a few 
athletes and not even acknowledge the existence of others. I guess they are 
ramping up to the Olympics and want to start focusing on the ones they believe 
will be there. It's all about the star power, I guess.

I'm aware that the level of difficulty is greater for these type competitions 
than the collegiate ones (announcers mentioned that elite gymnasts do 3 times 
more gymnastics), but there were times where I was not very impressed. It was 
mostly the uneven bars, where most routines were sloppy when it came to the 
handstands. Is this just my lack of gymnastics knowledge showing?
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