The United States looked as we have come to expect during podium
training for the 2016 Pacific Rim Championships in Everett, Washington —
confident, prepared, and ready to take care of business.
Ten-time world champion Simone Biles
is making her season debut, where she will perform a new floor routine.
Her tumbling looks big, clean, and powerful as always, and it will be
interesting to see how the new music and choreography plays to the
crowd. She is also debuting her Cheng vault, which looked great in
podium training. Prior to training, Biles said she was hoping to show
consistency on bars and beam, and she did just that, hitting both
routines cleanly.
World champion gold medal team member. Brenna Dowell
will also make her season debut this weekend. Her performance at last
year’s world championships did not go according to plan and left many
wondering about her future on the elite scene. She began to address
those concerns today, showing a new front layout to double front pass on
floor and the best DTY vault on the team. She also has a new bars
routine, replacing the Tweddle to Ezhova with a smart Maloney to Tkachev
connection, which picks up two tenths in bonus without being as tricky
to catch. She also added a Jaeger, and her Church to pak looks much
cleaner than it did last year. More importantly, she looks more
confident in her ability to hit this routine. She did fall once on the
Jaeger, but it looked like a simple miss and not a mental error. Her
training on beam was mostly clean as well.
Two-time 2012 Olympic gold medalist Aly Raisman
looks like she is building confidence as the season goes on, as she
slowly works up to being at her best in time for the summer and not too
early. Her tumbling was strong in podium training, hitting all of her
passes including the 1.5 through to double arabian to layout as well as
the piked double arabian to wolf jump in the full run-through, though
she struggled to stay in-bounds when just warming up passes on their
own. She trained by DTYs and Amanars on vault, with the Amanar being the
stronger of her two. She has also continued to improve on bars (adding a
stalder full connected from a bail there for an extra two tenths in
difficulty) and hit her beam routine well, including a nearly-stuck
Patterson dismount.
Like Raisman, Laurie Hernandez
also competed at Jesolo earlier this season. Her floor work was
expressive as always and she hit her tumbling well. Her vaults were
okay…her landings are not always the cleanest, and even when she sticks,
she doesn’t get a ton of distance. Other than her opening stalder full,
her bar work is incredibly clean and precise. She was also hitting beam
very well, her only issue being her chest position on her double pike
dismount.
Ashton Locklear
is competing on two events here, bars and beam. Bars was her strength,
as usual, and she hit her six skill connection series with ease. Beam
had some highlights, like her aerial to split jump to wolf jump (all
three of which were very fast and well-connected), but also included
some balance checks and bent legs on her flight series.
Finally, Ragan Smith was added to the team after Maggie Nichols
injured her knee on vault while training at the ranch. Smith thought
the reason she wasn’t initially named to the team was because she fell
on beam at camp, so she was particularly eager to show Martha Karolyi
what she could do here. She responded by nailing her beam (even
receiving praise from Karolyi), but unfortunately, she fell on her
double layout in her floor run-through, though her choreography between
her third and fourth passes was some of the best of the day. Her vault
and bars have also continued to improve
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