Cal will welcome six newcomer's for 2015-2016, according to a school release.
Canadian Aaron Mah (the 2014 Canadian jr. AA champion) will be joined by Bailey Chang, Harrison Plate, Mitchell Awisus, Haden McCarey and Roshan Toopal.
Link: Cal Release
Long time assistant Randy Solorio has been named interim Head Coach at Sacramento State for the 2015-2016. He has been at Sac State for 30 years. Former CSUS Head Coach Kim Hughes retired at the end of the season.
Link: http://www.hornetsports.com/sports/wgym/2014-15/releases/20150511uderoa
PAC-12 coaches are pushing for changes to regionals and nationals to gain TV exposure: Article
Josie Angeny, L10 at Prestige in Pa., has committed to Kentucky. She placed 7th AA at her 2014 state meet and 3rd AA at regionals.
Alyssa Minyard, L10 at Tigar in Colorado, has committed to OSU. She qualified to the NIT in 2014. This season she finished 8th AA at her state meet and 37th AA at regionals.
Aya Suzuki, L10 at San Mateo Gymnastics, has committed to UC Davis per her instagram. She finished 7th AA at the NorCal meet and 5th AA at regionals this season. Video
Kaite Ford, L10 at Legacy Elite, will join the EMU team. She finished 5th AA at her state meet and 29th AA at regionals this year. Video
Kaitlyn Holley, L10 at Premier Gymnastics, has committed to TWU. This season she finished 5th AA at her state meet and 11th AA at regionals. Video
Hannah Lewis, L9 at Gym America, will compete at UW-Eau Claire. Video
Kierra Abraham, L10 at United Gymnastix in Maryland, will compete for Alaska. Video
Olivia DeLuca, L9 at the New England Sports Academy, has committed to Springfield College. She placed 5th AA at her 201 state meet and 9th AA at regionals. Video
Janelle Kopa, L10 from Michigan Elite, has committed to join UW-LaCrosse.
Allison Jahns, L10 from Energym, has committed to UW-LaCrosse. She placed 4th AA and 20th AA at her state and regional meets respecively this season. Personal Page
Caitlyn McBride, at TNT Gymnastics, has committed to Ithaca. She finished 16th AA at her 2014 state meet. Video
Lexy Ramler from KidSport in Minnesota, has committed to Minnesota. Lexi has competed at the junior elite level since 2013. In 2014 she competed at the Secret Classic and the P&G Championships (3rd on bars).
Jenny Rowland makes the jump from Auburn and takes her impressive coaching background to Florida.
The first day of the Men's JO Nationals was finished on May 7th, and Region III won the team title.
In the junior elite division, athletes competed one day of optionals under the JO rules. Saturday, they'll do technical sequences. Here's the top scores by age group:
After the first of two days of optional Level 10 Junior Olympic division competition, the leaders are as followsLO
Link: USAG Results and Videos
Canadian gymnast Angel Zhong has committed to BYU per her instagram page. Angel competed at Elite Canada last January, finishing 23rd AA. She finished 3rd AA and 1st on vault and floor at the 2015 BC Championships.
Polina Shchennikova, Elite gymnast training at Tigar in Colorado, has committed to Michigan. In 2013 she placed 3rd on bars and 8th AA at both the Secret Classic and the P&G Championships.
Tabitha Yim has been named the new head coach at Arizona. She has coached at Stanford for five seasons.
Bridget Dean, L10 from Orlando Metro, has announced that she is now committed to LSU. She had previously committed to Kentucky.
Sydney Hogan, L10 at Cedar Valley Gymnastics, has committed to Iowa. Sydney has been competing at Level 10 for a number of years and she qualified to JOs in 2013 and 2014. This year she placed 10th AA at regionals.
In an article and video piece, ESPN features Greg and Megan Marsden talking about how they successfully marketed Utah's program. The article also touches on the future of NCAA gymnastics and the impact of the rising costs-per-athlete. (See the video and article here)
"When I look at the big picture, I'm really concerned about the future of college athletics as we know it," Marsden says, citing a recent vote by the power five conferences, including the Pac-12 and SEC, to allow schools to offer full cost-of-attendance scholarships that cover food, transportation and miscellaneous expenses. "That will add another million or more to most athletic budgets," Marsden says. "The next thing coming down the line will be long-term healthcare and the final blow will be when we start paying football and basketball players in some form. It's inevitable, and when it happens, there won't be enough money to go around. Tough decisions will have to be made and I'm concerned about Olympic sports. It's important for gymnastics to position itself right now. If our meets and championships aren't live on TV with good ratings, we might not survive."
The Marsdens have long advocated for changes to meet formats that will encourage more live TV coverage and increase revenues.
This season, both the SEC and Pac-12 networks aired regular-season women's gymnastics meets live to great success. "But our championships are not on live TV," Megan says. "Our tape-delay broadcast of championships on ESPNU was interrupted with a live softball game between two unranked teams. That tells me we have not come far enough. It is our problem to fix. That Greg wasn't able to do so during his career is his biggest regret."
Perhaps some coaches who initially disagreed with proposed format changes have had a change of heart.
"When Greg's proposal first came through years back, I was one of the only coaches against it," says Faehn, who recently announced her departure from Florida to accept the role of Senior VP of the women's program at USA Gymnastics. "But I have done a 180. We need to be live. A few years ago, I didn't follow women's softball. Last year, NCAAs was on live and I was engrossed. When our championships came on, I thought, 'Why do I want to watch this? I know the results.' A light bulb went off. We need to make our product more TV friendly."