2021 Winter Cup Senior Women

Talk Gymnastics With Us!

Join Today... Members See FEWER Ads

It depends on covid risk perception too, I think. There may be some athletes who are more anxious than others and less willing to travel right now.
 
Laurie Hernandez will compete for the first time since Rio 2016
By Scott Bregman - 23 February 2021

The last time U.S. gymnast Laurie Hernandez put on a leotard, raised her hand to the judges and performed a routine, she won balance beam silver at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio.

Nearly five years later, the 20-year-old is set to return to competition Saturday (27 February) at USA Gymnastics’ Winter Cup event in Indianapolis. Hernandez is expected to compete on the balance beam and floor exercise.

The three-day event features Team USA’s best Level 10 athletes competing in Friday’s Nastia Liukin Cup and then men’s and women’s junior and senior elites in sessions Friday evening, Saturday and Sunday.

Hernandez took nearly two years away from the sport, returning to full-time training in late 2018 after a cross-country move from New Jersey to Los Angeles. That left her with less than two years to prepare for a second trip to the Games.

But then the coronavirus pandemic hit, postponing the Tokyo Games by a year.

“I knew I was late,” Hernandez told Olympic Channel last April during an Instagram live. “We knew it was going to be a really short amount of time. It feels for me like I’m going to be a lot more prepared. It’s comforting, more time. It’s all anybody could really ask for, I think.”

That’s borne out in social media posts from the effervescent Hernandez, who has continued to show her progress in the year since the Games were pushed.

Tom Forster, the U.S. women’s high performance director, agrees that the Olympic champion has made good use of the extra time.

“[She] looks good. This extra time has really helped her,” he told Olympic Channel earlier this month. “It’s really been beneficial for her to get closer to where she needs to be.”

And gymnastics fans can be certain all eyes will be on Hernandez when she takes to the competition floor Saturday afternoon.

Notable absences

Part of the story at Winter Cup will be about who won’t be competing. The best male and female gymnasts in the United States since 2013 – Simone Biles and Sam Mikulak – will each be missing in Indianapolis.

Biles, who hasn’t lost an all-around competition since taking the U.S. title in 2013, hardly needs the practice and plans to open her 2021 season at the Tokyo World Cup in early May. She is also likely pacing herself, having spoken openly about the mental toll an additional year in the sport has taken on her.

“I was like, 'I really don’t know how I’m gonna do this. Like, another year out? I don’t think it’s possible for me at this point mentally,’” Biles said in a recent 60 minutes interview.

Mikulak, who like Biles has taken U.S. titles in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2019, for his part missed weeks of training in late 2020 after being forced to quarantine when his fiancé contracted COVID-19.

2017 world all-around champion Morgan Hurd, who stars in the Olympic Channel series All Around, had expected to compete but, like Mikulak, lost training time after having to quarantine due to close contact with a COVID positive person. Hurd is one of the Americans who has competed most recently, having looked strong en route to a victory March 2020’s American Cup.

Other notable absences include 2019 World team members Grace McCallum, MyKayla Skinner and Kara Eaker. Skinner is likely working on returning to training after a bout with COVID-19 landed her in the hospital.

Level setting

The Winter Cup will be the first chance in this second Olympic season in a row the athletes to make a statement and show that they will be in contention to make what will surely be an incredibly competitive U.S. team.

Only two members of the 2019 World Championships team that dominated competition are set to compete in Indianapolis this weekend: Jade Carey and Sunisa Lee. Carey has mathematically secured a direct qualification to the Tokyo Games by virtue of having won the vault and floor exercise standings in the International Gymnastics Federation’s apparatus World Cup series.

Her teammate, Riley McCusker, told Olympic Channel earlier this month she planned to make her return to competition at Winter Cup on at least two events (uneven bars and balance beam).

Emma Malabuyo is also expected to compete. Malabuyo was once a promising rising star, finishing runner-up as a junior at the 2017 U.S. championships, but injuries have derailed her. Malabuyo last competed at the 2019 Jesolo Trophy in early March after a broken tibia ended her season before the U.S. Classic and U.S Championships.

Other women to watch include Kayla DiCello who finished runner-up to Hurd at last year’s American Cup, and Jordan Chiles, who moved to train with Biles in 2019. Chiles competed earlier this month at the WOGA Classic and posted impressive scores including a 14.850 on vault, a 14.400 on bars, a 14.300 on balance beam and a 55.450 in the all-around.

“Jordan Chiles looks better than I’ve seen her in a long time,” Forster said. “She’s feels healthier than she’s ever felt.”

What about the newly eligible athletes?

Another element to keep an eye on will be the performance of a trio of newly age-eligible women. With the Olympics postponed a year, Konnor McClain, Skye Blakely and Sydney Barrows, all of whom were members of the 2019 Junior worlds team, suddenly find themselves eligible for the Tokyo Games.

“Their plan has been switched if they really want to try to make it for 2021,” said Forster of the newly eligible athletes. “That’s going to be that’s going to be a tough nut to do. They did have time off at least, but a lot of them were quarantined, so they really were not allowed to take advantage of the time that they needed.

“The biggest challenge for them really is that they’re not able to go out and show, ‘Hey, this is how I compete internationally.’”

Moldauer, Whittenburg and Wynn highlight men’s field

With Mikulak’s absence, the men’s title will be up for grabs. Three men in the field have previously won world bronze medals: Yul Moldauer, Donnell Whittenburg, and Brandon Wynn.

Look for Moldauer, the 2017 U.S. all-around champion, to challenge for the top spot. Meanwhile both Whittenburg and Wynn will be looking to prove themselves once again. Whittenburg last competed at the U.S. World Selection camp when he finished eighth in the all-around. Since that competition, he’s move from the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado to Wisconsin.

Wynn is making his first competitive appearance since the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials. The 32-year-old will want to start to make his case as a rings specialist, a position made more difficult with the U.S. men’s ability to qualify a specialist position to Tokyo 2020 in doubt.

Other men to watch include 2019 wrld team member Shane Wiskus, two-time World team alternate Allan Bower, 2017 world team member Marvin Kimble and up-and-comer Paul Juda, who is the NCAA’s top-ranked athlete.

Article link: https://www.olympicchannel.com/en/s...ll-compete-for-the-first-time-since-rio-2016/
 
Last edited:
Well the GAGE girls have been competing at home.

GAGE had a meet this past December, it was critiqued because there was a very large gathering (gymnasts, coaches, and parents) and there was a very lax mask wearing vibe happening, gymnasts standing around without masks on while waiting to compete. Several coaches walking around screaming with no mask on (female in red jacket, example) Not very much social distancing either.

There are videos posted on YouTube

 
Last edited:
Also…trying to figure out a way to merge this thread with the one that is already created here:
2289_2.png
2021 Winter Cup (Feb. 26-28) - Women's Side Women’s Gymn
[image] What is it? For the first time, this competition will select the members of both the Junior and Senior Women’s US National Teams. It is also a qualifier for the 2021 US National Championships. When is it? Friday, February 26, 2021 2:30 pm ET – Nastia Liukin Cup Saturday, February 27, 2021 12:30 pm ET – Winter Cup: Senior Women’s Competition - All-around & events Sunday, February 28, 2021 12:00 pm ET – Winter Cup: Junior Women’s Competition - All-around & events Where can we …
 
Yes, she is but last year she was completing at some level 10 meets. I am not sure if she was just testing out her new skills.
 
Isn’t she at Morgan Hurd’s gym? I believe none of them are competing.
Not sure if it’s the same for all the ladies at that gym, but Morgan said she was planning to compete, but lost time because she had to quarantine due to a close contact exposure to covid and didn’t feel ready as a result. If that exposure was at the gym, it could be why none of them are competing.
 
QuietColours said:
You’re right–probably COVID-related then. Hopefully just precautionary to keep them all safe
Morgan said that she had originally planned to compete but lost time because she had to quarantine due to a close contact covid exposure. It may be the same for others at the gym.
 
Last edited:
That’s scary! I’ll miss Morgan but I’m glad that their being cautious. I’m also glad that her absence from Winter Cup isn’t injury related!
 
Last edited:
Podium training is at 10:30 am eastern on that channel. If anyone can provide quick hits, I’m sure it would be much appreciated by our community.
 
Scott Bregman is doing … not quite quick hits but sharing his observations on Twitter

ETA: Gymternet is also doing quick hits on their blog
 
Last edited:
Gymnastics on TV reminder!

On NBC Sports Network, Feb 26:

2:30pm-5:00pm Nastia Liukin Cup (LIVE)

5:00pm-7:00pm Rio Olympics WAG Team Final (replay)

7:30pm-10:00pm Men’s Winter Cup AA (LIVE)

All times are EST.
 
Last edited:
megansothername said:
I love the Nastia Cup, but why is it being shown live and Men’s event finals plus junior elite women is on the website that shall not be named?
It’s most likely due to what days each event is on. It’s not a big deal for NBC to throw gymnastics on a Friday because Friday isn’t a big ratings day. Saturday/Sunday are more prime times for other sports events NBC wants to air instead.

It would have to be a more consequential competition (like a real National Championship or Trials) to get aired on the weekend. The American Cup at least had the angle of being an international competition with a forty year history.

We may only be getting this broadcast at all because it’s an Olympic year. Hopefully enough people watch that NBC thinks it’s worth it to pick it up again next year. Especially if American Cup doesn’t return.
 
Last edited:


Looks like McClain is officially shooting for Tokyo now. Not sure this is news to others, I hadn’t heard an update since last year, when her mom said that Konnor would not be aiming for the Olympics despite the postponement.

I’m not unhappy about this development; she had the goods to be in the mix and it sounds like they’ve been taking a reasonable approach adjusting her training.
 
Last edited:
I know this was discussed to death back on the old board but I still don’t think it’s fair that the new seniors this year are eligible for the Olympics but it could be a moot point
 
Last edited:

Talk Gymnastics With Us!

Join Today... Members See FEWER Ads

Back