Author: Lauren Taylor

  • W. Gymnastics hosts Wildcats

    As the Cardinal women’s gymnastics team faced the University of Georgia in its first meet of the season, it was well aware of the serious challenge that stood before them. Not only was Stanford contending with the five-time national champions and current top-ranked team, but it was also competing before 10,224 opposing fans in the bleachers of Georgia’s Stegeman Coliseum. Hopes were high and pressure was higher, but in the end, Georgia barely edged out the Card for a 195.150-195.050 victory.spo011410wgym

    According to head coach Kristen Smyth, however, the Stanford women had every right to head back to the Farm with heads held high, after what she deemed a “really good start to the season.”

    “We performed really well and handled all the factors beautifully,” Smyth said. “We focused on ourselves, which is always what we strive to do. The girls covered one another and had each other’s backs and that really allowed us to compete with confidence.”

    The team hopes this confidence will carry them into this weekend’s home meet against the University of Arizona. The No. 20 Wildcats will likely pose less of a challenge than No. 1 Georgia, but nonetheless, fans can expect an exciting match-up this Sunday in Burnham Pavilion.

    In last year’s dual meet with Arizona, Stanford reigned supreme, achieving a 195.575-195.175 win to preserve its perfect 8-0 record. However, the team’s overall performance was far from flawless, as they were outscored by the Wildcats in two events and finished with a season-low score. Parts of the meet were undoubtedly rough, but solid performances from team members Carly Janiga, Nicole Ourada and Shelley Alexander helped the Cardinal hold off No. 24 Arizona and achieve their eighth victory and best-ever start to the season.

    Now as the 2010 Stanford women enter this Sunday’s meet, they again expect to come out on top. This time, however, they will have the tremendous contributions from freshman Ashley Morgan, a particular standout at the Georgia meet last weekend. In her collegiate debut, Morgan proved her aggressive and confident nature and she showed just how easily she can compete with anyone, despite her age. Smyth praised Morgan for a “fantastic job,” and she has no doubt that everyone can expect equally stellar performances from the freshman this Sunday and for the remainder of the season.

    Overall, there are a few changes that will be made in the team’s approach to the upcoming meet; there will also be several differences from last weekend in terms of the competition’s atmosphere. For one, senior co-captain Allyse Ishino plans to employ a new release on the bars and these improvements should substantiate the team’s overall goal of creating more depth in its all-around game.

    In addition, unlike last weekend, this Sunday the teams will engage in an exhibition routine for each of the four events, rather than for just one. Smyth hopes the extra exhibition routines will give the young team an opportunity to gain more experience in competing and receiving judge feedback, without worrying about scores. Ishino will be competing all-around for the first time ever with her exhibition performance on the floor. The exhibitions will also prepare the team for a Jan. 24 meet against UCLA.

    The beam stands out as a sore point for the Cardinal, after several rushed routines against Georgia weren’t necessarily up to standard. They look to enhance and tighten their beam work for Arizona. At the same time, the women will ideally repeat their very strong performances on their vault, floor and bars routines.

    The Cardinal looks to improve its current 0-1 record to 1-1, as it faces a team that Smyth says is “always strong and well-prepared.” Each event will be run individually, so the fans will be able to see every routine as it occurs. The team sees this location as advantageous and the gymnasts are eager to compete in what Smyth calls a “small, intimate atmosphere.”

    And though the gym may be small, it holds plenty of room for spectators. In order to increase student turnout, the meet will include competition between the freshman dorms to see which can provide the most fans and the loudest cheers. The winners will win pizzas, but they will also see fantastic gymnastics and, if all goes as planned, they will witness a Cardinal victory.

    Events will start at 2 p.m. in Burnham Pavilion this Sunday.

  • W. Gymnastics: Gymnasts looking to fly

    Cardinal hopes to erase pain of last year’s near miss

    For the members of the 2009 Stanford women’s gymnastics team, 0.075 is not a lucky number. It was by this very narrow margin, 0.075 of a point, that the squad missed qualifying at last year’s NCAA preliminaries, thus losing a spot in the Super Six team finals. A fraction of a point had stood between them and their goal of reaching the championship, yet failure to come through in the clutch resigned the disheartened Cardinal athletes to seats in the bleachers, as they watched the top six teams compete on the floor below.

    Senior Co-captain Carly Janiga will lead a young but talented Stanford gymnastics team in the 2010 season, with the goal of reaching the nation’s Final Six and competing for the national championship. (Stanford Daily File Photo)

    Senior Co-captain Carly Janiga will lead a young but talented Stanford gymnastics team in the 2010 season, with the goal of reaching the nation’s Final Six and competing for the national championship. (Stanford Daily File Photo)

    It was this frustrating finale to last year’s season, however, that has so far proven to be the best thing that could have happened to the Farm’s gymnastics program. This year’s team knows exactly what is at stake and the gymnasts are back with an intense fire and optimistic outlook on the road ahead. Their motivation to realize their full potential is stronger than ever and their goal is clear: be one of the six teams that competes on the last day of the season

    First, however, the team plans to focus on what head coach Kristen Smyth calls a “meet-by-meet basis.” This will require clean execution of all 24 routines per meet, as well as a strong focus on the aspects of the competition that the gymnasts can control.

    And the team has no time to waste, as the first meet of the season will undoubtedly be the most significant. This coming weekend, it will head to Georgia to face the five-time defending national champions in a stadium filled with 10,000 fans. Though the competition will certainly be a challenge, Coach Smyth sees it as the perfect opportunity to immediately “test ourselves against the best.” Because of grueling preseason workouts and contributions from several key returning team members, the girls can definitely show Georgia how it’s done on the Farm.

    Senior co-captain Carly Janiga is one such critical returner, who her coach deems “one of the top all-rounders in the nation.” Janiga is a not only a six-time All-American, but also the reigning Pac-10 conference balance beam champion. Her new floor routine will tremendously contribute to the team’s efforts this year, but more importantly, so will her strong leadership skills. Smyth describes Janiga’s presence to her teammates as “calming,” which sets the tone for workouts and the team’s overall mentality.

    Junior Shelley Alexander and senior Allyse Ishino are the two remaining co-captains and Smyth has high expectations for both, noting Alexander’s remarkable work ethic and passion, as well as Ishino’s “show-stopping” floor routines. Ashley Morgan, a standout freshman, is also expected to create a serious impact on the team with her spectacular talents on the beam and solid vault and floor performances.

    But as the entire team acknowledges, their success this year will not be a product of individual efforts. Rather, they will utilize what Janiga calls their “unique team chemistry” to earn each win.

    “We have a special ability to give and receive constructive criticism that most other teams do not have,” Janiga said. “We are able to listen to what our teammates have to say and we can feel comfortable saying anything to each other without getting a negative response.”

    In fact, team bonding has been an important aspect of this season, as the coaches and the players treat each other as members of a close-knit family. This is consistently emphasized by Smyth, who always tries to ensure that a fun and comfortable energy is being maintained in the gym. Her success is certainly evident as she enters her ninth season as head coach: she has been named Pac-10 Coach of the Year four times.

    Yet this year in particular is special, because never before has a class made three Super Sixes in its four years at Stanford. This year’s seniors could be the first. Furthermore, as a whole, the team is younger than in past years, including several sophomores who were unable to compete last season due to injuries, as well as three freshmen who are entirely new to the realm of collegiate gymnastics. Yet Coach Smyth sees the team’s youth as a strong suit; it will be hard for competing teams to keep up with the Cardinal spirit and enthusiasm.

    Thus, looking forward, the 2010 team is well deserving of four sold out home meets in Burnham Pavilion. It is an exciting time to be a part of the up and coming program and with dynamic performances and no shortage of all-around talent, it doesn’t seem that 0.075 points will stand in the way of anything that Stanford women’s gymnastics sets out to accomplish