In light of the whole Rene Lyst situation, ASU has finally hired a new head coach to replace her. Lyst was hired after the retirement of John Spini, coming over from a position at Arkansas. Ever since then, it has gone downhill from there, and there were so many injuries and transfers that they couldn't even fill up whole lineups for a time. While they had a freshman class coming in that seemed like it could turn around, the injuries continued, and, eventually, she was placed on administrative leave, and it was safe to say this meant she would not return as head coach next season. For the rest of the season, their assistant coach served as interim head coach, and just in that time period it was obvious that the girls seemed a lot happier when they were not being coached by Lyst.
Showing posts with label ncaagym. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ncaagym. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Making Sense of the New Vault Code
Ahh, NCAA season is upon us. Meets every weekend, how glorious it is. This year, the vault code has been revised, and the infamous yurchenko full has been degraded to a 9.95 start value, instead of a 10.0 SV as in years past. The idea behind this is that it would reward the girls who do perform harder vaults like yurchenko 3/2s and other creative vaults. Additionally, it would reward those who do exceptional fulls (a la Alex McMurtry), as well as create variety amongst vaults being competed. Now, will this happen? It's only 2 weeks into the season (well 3, counting the Cancun Classic weekend), as we all try to make sense of these new rules and how they have affected teams in these first few weeks of the season, which is exactly what I'll do here.
In the first week, scoring amongst the 9.95 vaults (the fulls & such) seemed very tight and strict, however the girls doing 10.0 vaults seemed to be rewarded for their difficulty. When judging these vaults, it's important to note that a 9.8 vault would have been a 9.85 vault had it started from a 10, like in previous years. This is where it gets real interesting. The "what if?" hypotheticals begin to come into play, questioning the harsher scores such as 9.75s as "would this really have scored a 9.8 last season?". Emma McLean, for example, performed a gorgeous yurchenko full, complete with a stick, but only scored a 9.75, which I definitely think would have scored 9.85+ last season and in seasons past when the full started from a 10.0 (see: somewhere around 18:)), but my replay was being weird, here, if it doesn't work, be patient and mess with it). There are exceptions to this, as some scores were definitely just, and some meets seemed particularly generous, such as Kentucky's first meet and UCLA versus Bama.
In the last week, it seemed as if the judges got themselves under control. The scoring seemed just for the most part. See: See: Olivia Karas' vault from the Ohio State meet, which at the angle given in the stream seemed as if it warranted a higher score, but upon other angles it is seen that the just deduction was taken on her yurchenko 3/2.
But, judges will be judges and go crazy at some point. See: one judge giving Brandie Jay a 10 when she clearly had leg separation. Yeah there's the whole building on scores and judges trapping themselves scenario, but that definitely shouldn't have warranted a 10. There's always gonna be extremes. That's just how it's gonna be with judges. One meet, generous scoring, the other tight. And epitomizing generous is Florida home scoring in Gainesville. Ahh, the ever so famous Gainesville scoring. Those vault scores were whacked out. Some were higher than deserved, some were lower, and they definitely didn't seem to properly rank the vaults. The judges did a good job at distinguishing the different vaults, thus far seemingly sending a message that big scores will be given for properly executed 10.0 vaults, but they're not afraid to score an exceptional yurchenko full high or take deductions, though time will tell if it is actually worth it to upgrade vaults.
As of now, it's hard to formulate if it will be worth it, but by season's end we should know, especially if Super Six comes down to it. Being a new rule, some girls chose to stick with fulls, especially seniors who didn't want to learn something new, if they hadn't done it before (of course there's the Sloan exception and others), and if it proves to be worth it I'm sure others will follow. But for now, we'll just have to wait it out.
In the first week, scoring amongst the 9.95 vaults (the fulls & such) seemed very tight and strict, however the girls doing 10.0 vaults seemed to be rewarded for their difficulty. When judging these vaults, it's important to note that a 9.8 vault would have been a 9.85 vault had it started from a 10, like in previous years. This is where it gets real interesting. The "what if?" hypotheticals begin to come into play, questioning the harsher scores such as 9.75s as "would this really have scored a 9.8 last season?". Emma McLean, for example, performed a gorgeous yurchenko full, complete with a stick, but only scored a 9.75, which I definitely think would have scored 9.85+ last season and in seasons past when the full started from a 10.0 (see: somewhere around 18:)), but my replay was being weird, here, if it doesn't work, be patient and mess with it). There are exceptions to this, as some scores were definitely just, and some meets seemed particularly generous, such as Kentucky's first meet and UCLA versus Bama.
In the last week, it seemed as if the judges got themselves under control. The scoring seemed just for the most part. See: See: Olivia Karas' vault from the Ohio State meet, which at the angle given in the stream seemed as if it warranted a higher score, but upon other angles it is seen that the just deduction was taken on her yurchenko 3/2.
As of now, it's hard to formulate if it will be worth it, but by season's end we should know, especially if Super Six comes down to it. Being a new rule, some girls chose to stick with fulls, especially seniors who didn't want to learn something new, if they hadn't done it before (of course there's the Sloan exception and others), and if it proves to be worth it I'm sure others will follow. But for now, we'll just have to wait it out.
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