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NCAA TEAM CHAMPIONS
The 2004 Bruins (back row, l-r) - Aimee Walker, Ashley Peckett, Holly Murdock, Ashley Martin, Michelle
Selesky. (middle row, l-r) - Jamie Williams, Christie Tedmon, Lori Winn, Kisha Auld, Jennifer Sutton,
Kate Richardson, Courtney Walker. (front row, l-r) - Trishna Patel, Yvonne Tousek, Kristen Maloney,
Jamie Dantzscher, Jeanette Antolin, Christy Erickson.
The 2010 Bruins (back row, l-r) - Tauny Frattone, Tiffany Hyland, Lichelle Wong, Danielle Greig, Marci
Bernholtz, Brittani McCullough, Courtney Shannon, Kaelie Baer, Aisha Gerber. (front row, l-r) - Allison
Taylor, Vanessa Zamarripa, Talia Kushynski, Monique De La Torre, Anna Li, Elyse Hopfner-Hibbs, Niki
Tom, Mizuki Sato, Alyssa Pritchett.
As hosts of the NCAA Championships, the Bruins were looking
for their fifth title but first on their home turf. The “Drive for Five”
started in the preliminary session.
UCLA closed its near-perfect run in postseason competition with
a dominating 24-for-24 performance at the NCAA Super Six Team
Championships, winning its sixth NCAA title at the site of its first,
Gainesville, FL. In the team finals, the Bruins hit every routine
without any major mistakes and outscored their nearest competitor
by nearly half a point, recording 197.725 to runner-up Oklahoma’s 197.25.
2004
2010
Typical of most of UCLA’s past championship years, the Bruins
started the meet with a fall on their first routine on vault. But in true UCLA fashion, the
Bruins picked themselves up and followed through with stellar performances to discount
the low score. UCLA pulled away on uneven bars, scoring a 49.65 after counting five
scores of 9.875 or higher, including a 9.975 from Jamie Dantzscher, and finished the
session in first place with a score of 197.675.
The Bruins entered the Championships as the No. 1 seed after dominating performances
at Pac-10s and Regionals. But going in as the favorite seemed to put a bit of extra weight
on the team, who competed tight during its first two events at the NCAA Preliminaries.
At the halfway mark, UCLA was tied for third but used meet-best scores of 49.375 on
floor and 49.4 on vault to power ahead of the field in the final two rotations, finishing
with a first-place mark of 196.875.
The Bruins started the Super Six Team Finals on floor, a less than desirable rotation
order. For UCLA, however, that rotation order had seen them through NCAA titles in
2000 and 2001. The order proved to be good luck for the Bruins again, and they
exceeded all expectations with a stunning record-breaking performance to keep the
trophy in Westwood.
There was no tightness from the Bruins at the Super Six, where UCLA took the lead in
rotation one and never relinquished it.
The Bruins got off to a great start on vault in rotation one, scoring 49.475 on the strength
of career-highs from Monique De La Torre (9.85 leadoff score) and Brittani McCullough
(9.95) and a 9.925 from Vanessa Zamarripa. A 49.325 on uneven bars helped to
maintain UCLA’s lead at the halfway mark, heading into beam, the team’s nemesis
earlier in the season. The Bruins showed how far they had come from the beginning of
the year, hitting all six routines for scores of 9.8 or better. Leadoff competitor Anna Li
started with a 9.875, followed by a 9.9 from Elyse Hopfner-Hibbs. Niki Tom delivered
another strong routine with a 9.8, followed by a 9.85 from Aisha Gerber and a 9.9 from
Zamarripa. Mizuki Sato closed the set with a 9.85, bringing the Bruins’ beam score
to 49.375 and their three-event total to 148.175, .275 ahead of Alabama and 49.1
points away from a sixth national title.
After an inconsistent regular season and a relatively shaky start to the post-season
with a second-place showing at the Pac-10 Championships and a rocky final rotation
at the Regionals, the Bruins picked the best time of the year to put in a near-perfect
performance. They hit 24-for-24 routines, with 15 scores of 9.9 or higher and an NCAA
Super Six record 198.125 final score.
UCLA started the meet with a 49.525 on floor to take a slight .75 lead over Georgia
and extended the lead to .225 after scoring a 49.525 on vault for a two-round total of
99.1. The Bruins pounded out a 49.425 on bars for a three-round total of 148.525.
Georgia kept the pressure on, staying .525 behind.
With the unenviable position of finishing the meet on a bye, the Bruins knew they had
to score high on beam in rotation five before heading into the locker room. They did
that and more, tallying a meet-high 49.6 and leaving it mathematically impossible for
anyone to top their 198.125. Freshman Lori Winn kicked things off with a 9.875, and
the Bruins never looked back. Christie Tedmon scored a 9.85, Jeanette Antolin and Kate
Richardson stepped up with 9.95s, Yvonne Tousek scored a 9.9, and Kristen Maloney
slammed the door shut with a 9.925.
On floor exercise in the final rotation, Tauny Frattone led off with one of her best
performances of the year, scoring 9.875. After a 9.725 from Tom, Zamarripa and Li
each hit 9.9s, leaving it up to McCullough or Hopfner-Hibbs to score 9.7 or better to
clinch the title. McCullough had the first attempt and clinched it with a career-high tying
9.925. Hopfner-Hibbs’ 9.95 was just icing on the cake and helped bump the Bruins’
final floor total to a season-high 49.55 and its team final score to 197.725.
“This championship is especially special,” said UCLA head coach Valorie Kondos Field.
“First of all, it wasn’t easy this year. We had to come out and work hard all season.”
The victories kept coming at Event Finals, where Zamarripa won the vault title and
McCullough claimed the floor crown. Zamarripa averaged 9.925 on her two vaults,
scoring 9.95 on a stuck Yurchenko layout full and 9.9 on a Yurchenko half on, front
layout half, the most difficult vault done in the competition. McCullough earned a 10.0
from one of the six judges on her floor routine and finished with an average score of
9.9375, just above her career-high mark of 9.925.
“We may have lost meets early on, but we put our egos aside. We trained hard, and
we eventually came out on top.”
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