Men CGA All-Stars

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Men's NCAA all stars - East v West. A chance to see some of the top guys before the season gets going


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Scoring is out of 10, but judges are using the FIG code, so there should be some relationship

How the teams stack up based on 2023 NCAA avg and hi scores
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Bizarre to see the athletes competing shirtless. Who decided that?
The organizers. The guys were told to do this.

There were comments on Twitter wondering what was going on. I think it' a marketing idea.

A few Stanford guys went ahead and wore uniforms.

The 10.0 was their own made up system.

Just think of the fit people would have if it got out female athletes were told to dress in skimpier outfits for an exhibition than they would for a competition.

I doubt the guys cared, because they work out shirtless anyway.

I'm just sayin.
 
Not that bizarre. This isn't a "real" competition, more like a pre-season exhibition. I wasn't offended by it.

I was more worried about that Illini floor mat with the puckers in places. Seemed like a chance to trip or get injured.
I mean I am far from offended from men doing athletics while scantily clad, lol... but I just think back to when I was competing and how insane this would have looked to me!
 
This meet is basically cramming in a bunch of men's gymnastics marketing ideas that have been floating around the discourse for literally decades since NCAA men's programs started falling off a cliff in the 90s.

The a) shirtlessness b) return to a 10.0 system c) experimenting with competition formats that draw from the excitement of other pro/college sports -- all of this is part of that long-standing dialogue.

As for shirtlessness-- I'm all for it. All for choice, really, e.g. the German team's shift to unitards. Most women have been made to compete in less clothing than they prefer to practice in (shorts over a leo is most common), whereas for men the opposite is true. Not to mention the context for gendered power dynamics is obviously not the same if you simply reverse things, as OnoNoKomachi mentioned.
 
As a female (and I am not alone in this), some get upset when we see athletes sexualized (because of our own experiences). It could backfire, especially if it gets out the athletes were told to dress a certain way (which in this case they were).

Are boys going to want to start competing in a sport that is marketed this way?

I just don't see this marketing idea making much of a difference.

I've seen individual athletes in already popular sports market themselves in this way.

Is there an example of a men's sport where this approach has worked?

Even women's? I can think of beach volleyball, but almost no one cares about that outside the Olympics (and the beach volleyball players in the NCAA do not compete in that bikini like uniform).
 

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