The 2023 U.S. Classic was held from August 4 through August 6 in Hoffman Estates, Illinois.
Senior All-Around Results
| Rank | Athlete | FX | PH | SR | VT | PB | HB | AA |
| 1 | Asher Hong Stanford |
14.749 (+0.349) |
12.352 (+0.052) |
14.749 (+0.349) |
15.705 (+0.705) |
14.300 | 13.450 | 85.305 (+1.923) |
| 2 | Khoi Young Stanford |
14.550 | 14.872 (+0.522) |
13.200 | 15.202 (+0.202) |
12.800 | 12.800 | 83.424 (+0.724) |
| 3 | Paul Juda Michigan |
13.950 | 12.852 (+0.052) |
13.500 | 15.102 (+0.202) |
13.950 | 14.000 | 83.354 (+0.254) |
| 4 | Cameron Bock Michigan |
13.850 | 13.400 | 13.650 | 14.200 | 14.550 | 13.450 | 83.100 |
| 5 | Riley Loos Stanford |
14.314 (+0.114) |
11.650 | 14.103 (+0.053) |
14.252 (+0.202) |
14.150 | 13.550 | 82.019 (+0.369) |
| 6 | Jeremy Bischoff Stanford |
14.250 | 12.900 | 12.950 | 13.800 | 12.950 | 13.300 | 80.150 |
| 7 | Donnell Whittenburg Salto |
14.033 (+0.183) |
9.650 | 14.661 (+0.261) |
14.300 | 14.050 | 13.250 | 79.944 (+0.444) |
| 8 | Colt Walker Stanford |
13.400 | 13.550 | 13.700 | 13.050 | 13.150 | 12.500 | 79.350 |
| 9 | Toby Liang Nebraska |
13.750 | 12.700 | 12.700 | 13.050 | 13.600 | 12.900 | 78.700 |
| 10 | Solen Chiodi Mini-Hops |
12.900 | 11.100 | 13.000 | 14.100 | 13.650 | 12.800 | 77.550 |
| 11 | Kellen Ryan Minnesota |
12.500 | 12.050 | 12.650 | 14.450 | 13.150 | 12.750 | 77.550 |
| 12 | Ian Gunther Stanford |
12.200 | 11.900 | 12.150 | 13.650 | 14.000 | 13.200 | 77.100 |
| 13 | Maxwell Odden North Valley |
12.400 | 11.350 | 13.000 | 13.650 | 13.250 | 13.400 | 77.050 |
| 14 | Michael Jaroh Penn State |
10.850 | 12.050 | 12.950 | 13.800 | 13.500 | 13.800 | 76.950 |
| 15 | Taylor Burkhart Stanford |
12.449 (+0.349) |
10.350 | 12.250 | 14.255 (+0.055) |
14.000 | 12.752 (+0.202) |
76.056 (+0.606) |
| 16 | Evan Hymanson Stanford Boys |
12.250 | 10.750 | 12.900 | 13.100 | 13.750 | 13.300 | 76.050 |
| 17 | Kazuki Hayashi Ohio State |
13.900 | 10.050 | 11.650 | 14.000 | 13.000 | 11.950 | 74.550 |
| 18 | Dallas Hale Cypress Aademy |
11.814 (+0.114) |
10.829 (+0.229) |
12.750 | 14.850 | 12.000 | 11.450 | 73.693 (+0.343) |
| 19 | Mike Fletcher Illinois |
10.900 | 12.450 | 12.600 | 14.350 | 12.350 | 10.700 | 73.350 |
| 20 | Colin Flores Oklahoma |
13.400 | 12.500 | 12.850 | 13.450 | 11.350 | 9.550 | 73.100 |
| 21 | Matt Cormier Penn State |
13.250 | 10.550 | 11.600 | 13.600 | 11.300 | 12.700 | 73.000 |
| 22 | Jesse Lee Pakele Ohio State |
11.850 | 13.150 | 11.350 | 14.050 | 12.100 | 10.350 | 72.850 |
| 23 | Nick Yeatts Oklahoma Gym Center |
12.000 | 9.900 | 12.150 | 13.700 | 13.150 | 11.900 | 72.800 |
| 24 | Dominic Ramalho Springfield |
12.600 | 12.050 | 11.100 | 14.050 | 10.750 | 11.650 | 72.200 |
| 25 | William Pearce SC United |
11.750 | 10.800 | 11.200 | 12.950 | 12.650 | 12.750 | 72.100 |
| 26 | Brendan Strom Gym Olympica |
12.650 | 10.850 | 10.150 | 13.700 | 13.600 | 11.050 | 72.000 |
| 27 | David Grossman Libertyville |
12.150 | 11.300 | 12.250 | 14.000 | 11.450 | 10.650 | 71.800 |
| 28 | Arthur Ashton Ohio State |
11.600 | 11.500 | 12.150 | 13.550 | 12.350 | 9.900 | 71.050 |
| 29 | Troy Nuesca Gym Olympica |
12.900 | 9.200 | 11.500 | 13.400 | 12.450 | 11.100 | 70.550 |
| 30 | Gavin Zborowski 5280 Gymnastics |
10.900 | 11.150 | 10.000 | 13.700 | 12.750 | 11.950 | 70.450 |
| 31 | Andrew Layman Washington |
12.200 | 8.650 | 10.750 | 13.850 | 12.650 | 11.850 | 69.950 |
| 32 | Landon Simpson Penn State |
12.850 | 9.350 | 10.950 | 12.350 | 12.700 | 11.650 | 69.850 |
| 33 | Tucker Yasunaga Champaign |
12.600 | 10.400 | 10.500 | 12.650 | 12.200 | 10.900 | 69.250 |
| 34 | Saran Alexander ACE Gym |
12.150 | 9.900 | 10.500 | 12.450 | 12.400 | 11.750 | 69.150 |
| 35 | Evan Wenstad Gym Olympica |
13.200 | 9.200 | 11.900 | 13.750 | 11.700 | 9.350 | 69.100 |
| 36 | Jacob Harmon Ohio State |
11.650 | 6.950 | 11.900 | 13.450 | 13.100 | 11.650 | 68.700 |
| 37 | Brandon Nguyen Stanford |
—— | 13.150 | 13.700 | 14.500 | 13.450 | 13.122 (+0.122) |
67.922 (+0.122) |
| 38 | Michael Artlip Penn State |
14.050 | 12.500 | —— | 14.450 | 13.500 | 12.850 | 67.350 |
| 39 | Crew Bold Michigan |
13.750 | —— | 13.300 | 12.900 | 13.850 | 13.200 | 67.000 |
| 40 | Carson Eshleman Michigan Elite |
12.900 | —— | 13.450 | 13.250 | 13.500 | 12.950 | 66.050 |
| 41 | Micah Puckett Northern Illinois |
11.950 | 10.900 | 9.950 | 12.350 | 11.800 | 8.250 | 65.200 |
| 42 | Vahe Petrosyan Gym Olympica |
—— | 12.050 | 12.600 | 14.050 | 12.700 | 13.550 | 64.950 |
| 43 | Samuel Phillips Nebraska |
13.600 | —— | 13.050 | 13.450 | 13.650 | 11.000 | 64.750 |
| 44 | Leo Koike Oklahoma |
13.250 | 10.000 | —— | 14.150 | 13.000 | 12.800 | 63.200 |
| 45 | Hunter Brunett Arizona State |
12.700 | 13.100 | 12.300 | —— | 13.250 | 11.750 | 63.100 |
| 46 | Brigham Frentheway Oklahoma |
10.550 | —— | 12.800 | 13.750 | 13.350 | 11.350 | 61.800 |
| 47 | Asher Cohen Nebraska |
—— | 8.550 | 13.150 | 13.300 | 12.000 | 12.900 | 59.900 |
| 48 | Jordan Kovach Premier |
11.700 | —— | 11.650 | 13.000 | 12.150 | 11.100 | 59.600 |
| 49 | Drake Andrews EVO Gymnastics |
12.150 | 6.500 | —— | 13.400 | 12.750 | 13.100 | 57.900 |
| 50 | Evan Manivong Illinois |
13.950 | 13.000 | —— | 14.550 | —— | 13.250 | 54.750 |
| 51 | Daniel Simmons Oklahoma |
13.500 | —— | 13.350 | 13.800 | 13.650 | —— | 54.300 |
| 52 | Izaiha Mlay West Coast |
—— | 9.300 | 9.450 | 13.050 | 11.300 | 10.850 | 53.950 |
| 53 | Fuzzy Benas Oklahoma |
—— | 12.400 | 13.150 | —— | 13.950 | 13.400 | 52.900 |
| 54 | Matt Burgoyne Oklahoma |
13.350 | —— | 12.300 | 13.400 | 13.550 | —— | 52.600 |
| 55 | Luke Esparo Penn State |
13.600 | —— | 13.100 | 14.200 | 11.450 | —— | 52.350 |
| 56 | Nicky Franz Arizona State |
12.700 | 11.750 | 12.200 | 13.400 | —— | —— | 50.050 |
| 57 | Tyler Shimizu Berkeley |
13.100 | 11.900 | —— | —— | 12.900 | 12.100 | 50.000 |
| 58 | Caden Peacock Arizona State |
—— | —— | 12.750 | 12.900 | 12.000 | 11.850 | 49.500 |
| 59 | Ethan Boder Illinois |
9.950 | —— | 13.250 | 13.402 (+0.202) |
12.850 | —— | 49.452 (+0.202) |
| 60 | Kristian Grahovski Ohio State |
—— | 12.450 | 11.900 | —— | 13.000 | 11.900 | 49.250 |
| 61 | Tate Costa Illinois |
12.000 | 12.300 | —— | —— | 13.350 | 11.050 | 48.700 |
| 62 | Ryan Swatscheno Arizona State |
11.800 | —— | 10.550 | 12.550 | —— | 11.650 | 46.550 |
| 63 | Caden Spencer Ohio State |
—— | 9.250 | 11.800 | —— | 12.600 | 12.100 | 45.750 |
| 64 | Curran Phillips EVO Gymnastics |
—— | —— | —— | 14.750 | 15.456 (+0.706) |
13.162 (+0.412) |
43.368 (+1.118) |
| 65 | Brandon Briones Stanford |
—— | —— | 14.100 | 14.600 | —— | 14.062 (+0.412) |
42.762 (+0.412) |
| 66 | Shane Wiskus EVO Gymnastics |
—— | 13.400 | —— | —— | 15.061 (+0.111) |
14.150 | 42.611 (+0.111) |
| 67 | Blake Sun Stanford |
—— | 13.850 | —— | —— | 15.194 (+0.244) |
13.150 | 42.194 (+0.244) |
| 68 | Javier Alfonso Michigan |
14.300 | —— | 14.200 | —— | 13.400 | —— | 41.900 |
| 69 | Zachary Nunez Oklahoma |
—— | 13.807 (+0.107) |
—— | 13.850 | 13.950 | —— | 41.607 (+0.107) |
| 70 | Jackson Harrison Arizona State |
14.250 | —— | —— | 13.900 | —— | 12.800 | 40.950 |
| 71 | Ryan Vanichtheeranont Illinois |
—— | 5.600 | 11.700 | —— | 11.400 | 12.100 | 40.800 |
| 72 | J.R. Chou Stanford |
—— | 12.100 | —— | —— | 15.050 | 12.750 | 39.900 |
| 73 | Yul Moldauer 5280 Gymnastics |
—— | 12.250 | —— | —— | 14.950 (+0.405) |
12.400 | 39.605 (+0.405) |
| 74 | Aiden Cuy William & Mary |
—— | —— | 12.100 | 13.800 | 13.100 | —— | 39.000 |
| 75 | Kelton Christiansen Oklahoma |
12.800 | 12.100 | —— | —— | —— | 13.300 | 38.200 |
| 76 | Isaiah Drake Navy |
—— | 11.750 | 12.850 | —— | —— | 13.300 | 37.900 |
| 77 | Mac Seyler Oklahoma |
—— | 12.907 (+0.107) |
12.850 | 12.100 | —— | —— | 37.857 (+0.107) |
| 78 | Cailen Walker Oklahoma |
—— | 11.800 | —— | 13.450 | —— | 12.600 | 37.850 |
| 79 | Syam Buradagunta Navy |
14.050 | 12.150 | —— | —— | —— | 11.500 | 37.700 |
| 80 | Johnny Jacobson 5280 Gymnastics |
13.000 | —— | —— | —— | 12.250 | 12.400 | 37.650 |
| 81 | Sam Lee William & Mary |
—— | —— | —— | 13.300 | 12.700 | 11.400 | 37.400 |
| 82 | Tyler Flores Oklahoma |
—— | 10.600 | —— | 13.950 | 12.300 | —— | 36.850 |
| 83 | Ethan Thomas Oklahoma Gym Center |
12.850 | —— | 10.650 | 13.200 | —— | —— | 36.700 |
| 84 | Kameron Nelson Ohio State |
—— | —— | 11.850 | —— | 12.150 | 11.750 | 35.750 |
| 85 | Christian Marsh William & Mary |
—— | 10.450 | 12.400 | —— | 12.500 | —— | 35.350 |
| 86 | Nate Warren Penn State |
—— | —— | 13.150 | —— | 10.800 | 9.950 | 33.900 |
| 87 | Will Fleck Penn State |
—— | 10.700 | —— | —— | 12.200 | 10.600 | 33.500 |
| 88 | Connor McCool Illinois |
14.833 (+0.183) |
—— | —— | 13.800 | —— | —— | 28.633 (+0.183) |
| 89 | Jack Freeman Oklahoma |
14.000 | —— | —— | —— | —— | 12.850 | 26.850 |
| 90 | Adriel Perales-Valencia Oklahoma |
—— | —— | 12.850 | —— | 13.900 | —— | 26.750 |
| 91 | Patrick Hoopes Air Force |
—— | 14.392 (+0.442) |
—— | —— | 12.000 | —— | 26.392 (+0.442) |
| 92 | Amari Sewell Illinois |
11.850 | —— | —— | 14.450 | —— | —— | 26.300 |
| 93 | Christopher Hiser Nebraska |
13.250 | —— | 12.900 | —— | —— | —— | 26.150 |
| 94 | Zachary Marckx Oklahoma |
12.850 | —— | 13.100 | —— | —— | —— | 25.950 |
| 95 | Charlie Larson Minnesota |
11.550 | —— | —— | 14.250 | —— | —— | 25.800 |
| 96 | Kyle Walchuk Infinity |
—— | 13.145 (+0.295) |
—— | —— | 11.600 | —— | 24.745 (+0.295) |
| 97 | Tas Hajdu Oklahoma |
—— | —— | 10.900 | —— | 12.400 | —— | 23.300 |
| 98 | Nikolai Kolesnikov Oklahoma |
—— | —— | 12.600 | —— | —— | 10.600 | 23.200 |
| 99 | Ignacio Yockers Oklahoma |
—— | 11.945 (+0.295) |
—— | —— | 10.950 | —— | 22.895 (+0.295) |
| 100 | Ayden Johnston 5280 Gymnastics |
—— | —— | —— | —— | 12.350 | 9.950 | 22.300 |
| 101 | Danny Beaupre Arizona State |
10.300 | —— | —— | 12.000 | —— | —— | 22.300 |
| 102 | Tyler Tran Gymnastics USA |
—— | —— | —— | —— | 10.500 | 10.150 | 20.650 |
| 103 | Stephen Nedoroscik EVO Gymnastics |
—— | 15.157 (+0.607) |
—— | —— | —— | —— | 15.157 (+0.607) |
| 104 | Matthew Underhill Penn State |
—— | —— | 13.550 | —— | —— | —— | 13.550 |
| 105 | Ashton Anaya Illinois |
—— | —— | 13.400 | —— | —— | —— | 13.400 |
| 106 | Brandon Dang Illinois |
—— | 13.366 (+0.366) |
—— | —— | —— | —— | 13.366 (+0.366) |
| 107 | Ronan McQuillan Navy |
—— | 13.200 | —— | —— | —— | —— | 13.200 |
| 108 | Troy Lipis Gym World |
—— | —— | 13.083 (+0.183) |
—— | —— | —— | 13.083 (+0.183) |
| 109 | Parker Thackston Ohio State |
—— | 12.607 (+0.107) |
—— | —— | —— | —— | 12.607 (+0.107) |
| 110 | Maddox Pabellon Army |
—— | 12.050 | —— | —— | —— | —— | 12.050 |
| 111 | Reuven Anderson Mini-Hops |
—— | —— | 11.650 | —— | —— | —— | 11.650 |
| 112 | Clayton Cunningham Arizona State |
—— | 10.950 | —— | —— | —— | —— | 10.950 |
Junior All-Around Results
| Rank | Athlete | FX | PH | SR | VT | PB | HB | AA |
| 1 | Xander Hong Cypress Academy |
12.400 | 12.400 | 12.650 | 13.000 | 12.150 | 12.500 | 75.100 |
| 2 | Oleksandr Shybitov Lakeshore |
12.900 | 11.450 | 11.750 | 13.550 | 13.050 | 12.150 | 74.850 |
| 3 | Wade Nelson SCATS |
12.850 | 10.450 | 12.200 | 14.500 | 12.500 | 12.050 | 74.550 |
| 4 | Jesse Hanny Cypress Academy |
12.700 | 11.750 | 13.000 | 13.000 | 13.300 | 10.700 | 74.450 |
| 5 | Tristen Nye Above the Barre |
12.750 | 11.750 | 12.450 | 13.850 | 12.700 | 10.700 | 74.200 |
| 6 | Wyatt Reynolds Gym Olympica |
12.550 | 11.950 | 10.750 | 13.150 | 13.050 | 12.100 | 73.550 |
| 7 | Divier Ramos Interstate |
12.950 | 12.150 | 10.550 | 13.400 | 12.750 | 11.600 | 73.400 |
| 8 | Gage Kalley Roswell |
12.250 | 11.750 | 11.250 | 12.950 | 12.050 | 11.900 | 72.150 |
| 9 | Misha Romo SCATS |
12.350 | 11.350 | 12.500 | 13.250 | 12.050 | 10.600 | 72.100 |
| 10 | Michael Scheiner Capital (VA) |
12.350 | 10.600 | 12.150 | 13.600 | 12.200 | 11.000 | 71.900 |
| 11 | Joseph Hale Crenshaw’s |
11.400 | 12.000 | 11.700 | 13.650 | 12.350 | 10.200 | 71.300 |
| 12 | Kyler Hinson Axcelerate |
12.150 | 10.550 | 11.550 | 12.850 | 12.400 | 11.700 | 71.200 |
| 13 | David Moroney United |
12.200 | 10.200 | 11.550 | 13.100 | 12.250 | 11.550 | 70.850 |
| 14 | Grey Westmore Gym Olympica |
11.450 | 11.500 | 11.500 | 13.100 | 12.300 | 10.850 | 70.700 |
| 15 | Emilio Bracken Serra Head Over Heels |
12.200 | 9.950 | 11.100 | 13.500 | 12.350 | 10.850 | 69.950 |
| 16 | Maddox Kinderdine GTC Ohio |
11.350 | 7.700 | 11.850 | 12.700 | 12.100 | 12.100 | 67.800 |
| 17 | Lukas Ross GTC Ohio |
12.400 | 7.450 | 10.350 | 13.200 | 12.350 | 11.650 | 67.400 |
| 18 | Dean-o Roberts Stanford Boys |
12.350 | 10.750 | 10.250 | 11.700 | 10.200 | 10.950 | 66.200 |
| 19 | Nick Deng Gym Olympica |
12.350 | 10.450 | 9.250 | 13.000 | 11.800 | 8.100 | 64.950 |


So without the bizarre overinflation bonuses, Khoi and Paul are actually closer to their true scores and not that fair behind Asher, right?
I still think incentivising good technique will benefit the USA MAG more than this bonus system.
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Yes they are…and I definitely agree with that, but the reason the U.S. men are so far behind Russia, China, and Japan is difficulty, so they made it a priority this quad to add skills first and then focus on refining them. I think they were similarly inconsistent with lower difficulty as they have tended to be with higher difficulty, so I guess in that sense it’s moot…but they did lower the difficulty bonuses between last year (where they were OUTRAGEOUS) and this year. My conspiracy theory is that they were like, “oh god, we said the top two at nationals auto-qualify for worlds and then we gave Donnell 6+ points in bonus over two days (at least 2 points more than anyone else got) and now we have to take him even though we didn’t want to.” As a Donnell fan, loved that for him, but I feel like the team would have worked out much differently had he not auto-qualified due to his difficulty. But I do agree that last year’s bonuses were ridiculous, and am glad they’ve at least reeled it in a bit so bonus isn’t everything, and so the standings still mostly reflect accurate rankings.
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Exactly I get it. The goal is to win medals,l. If the choices seem to be get 8th with a chance (even a small one) to sneak into 3rd or just be resigned to 5th (with a slightly smaller chance of still getting 8th) a federation worth its salt should go for the former. It does look weird though.
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I definitely think they improved the bonus chaos, but why bother giving Asher 0.7 bonus for his vault? He would still be one of the top gymnasts in the USA anyway.
Donnell has been royally unlucky. The overinflation of the oldest(?) US MAG’s scores vs him focusing on execution was so bad last year. His vault this year was underrotated hence the many steps, and I just want to root for him (as a Brit) but I just get disappointed.
I want US MAG to put together a good team, but is it really worth pushing difficulty when a lot of them seem to have poor technique on certain skills i.e. getting height on double fronts.
My two cents anyway.
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Agreed everywhere. I think it’s a fine line to figure out difficulty and execution and how to value them, especially when the rest of the world is so far ahead and you’re trying to catch up. But I see that they’ve tried the lower D, higher E route before and how it didn’t help them, so I guess it’s worth trying something new even if the technique isn’t always there. Maybe they’ll go back on this eventually but I guess it was about time to give it a try after being so far behind for so long?
Poor Donnell…he has a lot of “this wasn’t my day/meet” posts but at this point it’s basically EVERY meet he does, it’s hard to trust that it’s all going to come together for him. He’s probably my favorite U.S. MAG but it’s too bad he just struggles so much making it all come together at once. I’ll give him credit for hitting high bar at worlds, though!
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Problem with Donnell is that he doesn’t hit when it counts. Auto-qualifying to the World team last year wouldn’t have been a major issue had he hit his high difficult routines at Worlds.
The issue with Donell qualifying was that he only finished 2nd AA due to the bonus.
Hopefully they will fix it to top 2 AA without bonus because these athletes won’t be getting the same bonus added to their scores at Worlds.
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The last few quads have proven though that the separation in execution just isn’t worth the sacrifice in difficulty, even if, in theory, execution should be higher valued (or even equally).
Watch Carlos Yulo routines and see how it is that with almost perfection he only has .2 or .3 higher in execution than sloppy routines. Even our moderators are complaining about it these days.
I think setting standards like top 3 on 3 events or top 2 on 2 events at both nationals/selection will get you a spot; otherwise, we are choosing by highest scoring team would be smarter. Top AA guarantees you nothing. Forget the bonuses.
I can see a couple of people getting 1st AA at nationals and then we would hesitate to put them up on even 1 or 2 events they’d contribute small margins. That’s not good for the team, especially when we can’t get on the podium even with Russia being banned.
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I still want to see a full-point bonus to everyone who can find an aesthetically pleasing way to get out of the handstand.
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There’s no reason to bring 2 all arounders. The highest scoring team is all that matters.
I see Asher and Fred with excellent chances this year and Khoi, Paul and Curran making strong cases based on podium, classic and other meets.
Skeptical they’ll bring in a 1 event PH specialist if there are 3 14+ routines.
Sorry to say but Shane, Yul, Donnell, and Colt just are not hitting on the events they are needed most on and a .2 better than someone else with more events that are needed won’t cut it .
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I think Nedoroscik last year kind of proved that a one-event specialist was unnecessary when that spot could have gone to someone who could have contributed extra tenths across multiple events. I was anti-PH specialist for last year’s team, especially given how inconsistent he had been throughout last season, so I hope they’ve learned that they need to spread out their potential and not put all of their eggs into one basket.
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Asher is no question. On a 3 up situation, we’d want him on everything but PH/HB.
Fred is consistently 14+ on PH/HB, so I think he’s probably in.
Khoi, Yul, Paul and Shane have either a good PH or HB routine and 1 or 2 other events you could depend on. Curran and Blake have specialist routines, but they have to hit more often to be chosen over a 1 event PH specialist or all arounders.
If USAG is truly putting everything into the team competition, they are better off with 2 specialists even if that means only 3 going up in qualifications on some events.
I know they won’t do that though, so I predict: Asher, Fred, Khoi, Shane, Curran with Yul as alternate.
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