Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Photo

<p>The No. 3 UCLA gymnastics team struggled on the bars during its
loss to No. 2-ranked Michigan.</p

The No. 3 UCLA gymnastics team struggled on the bars during its loss to No. 2-ranked Michigan.

Gymnastics: Gymnastics struggles against No. 2 Michigan

UCLA gets off to bad start on bars, comeback try falls short

Suddenly, the powerhouse isn’t so powerful.

Having mowed down its competition early in the year, the No. 3 UCLA gymnastics team continued its recent struggles on Friday as it dropped a highly anticipated meet against No. 2 Michigan 196.25-195.25 in front of a record crowd of 5,039 at Cliff Keen Arena.

A week removed from a victory against Arizona State where they committed numerous falls, the Bruins (6-2) traveled to Michigan (6-1) determined to perform flawlessly.

And despite climbing back into the meet after stumbling out of the blocks early, UCLA was unable to complete the comeback.

Led by a 9.9 score from Kristin Maloney and a 9.875 from Kate Richardson, UCLA finished the third rotation with a 49.175 and found themselves in a tie with the Wolverines as the fourth and final rotation commenced.

The meet would be decided with UCLA on the beam and Michigan on the floor. With the Bruins ranked No. 3 on the beam and the Wolverines No. 15 on the floor, UCLA looked primed to steal the win. Unfortunately for the Bruins, they chose the wrong time to flub their beam routines.

While Michigan recorded a season-high 49.275 during its floor performance, sophomore Ashley Peckett scored a low leadoff 9.675 for the Bruins on the beam. UCLA quickly found itself with no further room for error. Facing those prospects, Richardson and freshman Jordan Schwikert both suffered falls that effectively sealed a Wolverine victory.

“We had great floor routines and were doing really well,” Richardson said. “It was disappointing because we thought we really had the win.”

Had UCLA gotten off to a better start in its opening rotation on bars, it may not have found itself in such a difficult predicament at the end. In her first meet since returning from suspension, sophomore Lori Winn showed signs of rust as she fell and scored a lowly 9.1. Normally a stalwart on bars, freshman Lindsey Vanden Eykel followed suit and also took a plunge during her routine, which garnered a score of 9.225.

The pair of falls coupled with a string of subpar bar routines left UCLA with a season-low 48.5 bar score and nearly a full point deficit after the first rotation.

However, the Bruins responded with solid vault routines during the second rotation. Freshman Tasha Schwikert landed a 9.925 while senior Kristen Maloney and junior Kate Richardson added a pair of 9.875s. By the end of the second rotation, UCLA had closed the gap to a .6 deficit, but floundered yet again down the stretch.

“Compared to earlier in the season, we’re doubting ourselves right now,” Richardson said. “We have the talent, but we’re having trouble being comfortable right now – we need to be more relaxed.”

The loss marked the second consecutive meet in which UCLA has been plagued with falls and deductions. With their national standing likely to drop yet again, the Bruins are left looking for a way to regain their dominant form.

“After this meet, we’re just trying to pull everything back together,” Richardson said.