Australia Qualifies WAG and MAG Team to Worlds at Oceania Championships

The Australian senior teams

The Oceania Championships held in Brisbane, Australia yesterday saw both the WAG and MAG teams from the host nation qualify to world championships, while four all-arounders from New Zealand earned individual berths.

In the women’s competition, veteran Georgia Godwin – who returned post-2024 Achilles injury at the Gymnova Cup last fall – had a stunning day, competing on every apparatus except floor and winning the titles on each. She was close to top form across the board, with a 14.0 on vault, a 14.066 with the debut of a new routine on bars, and a 13.133 on beam, leading the team to an 18-point win ahead of New Zealand to easily get them the team title and the worlds berth.

We also saw strong all-around performances from two-time Olympian Emily Whitehead and Lucy Stewart, who landed in the top two spots on the all-around podium with scores of 50.998 and 50.299, respectively. This was Whitehead’s first international competition since the Paris Olympics, and she looked great, putting up the second-best scores on vault, bars, and floor, while Stewart led floor with a 13.0 and was also strong on her other apparatuses.

First-year senior Audrey Hawkins also competed in the all-around, with good vault and floor work earning her a 46.866 in the all-around, good enough for fourth place. Unfortunately, the fifth member of the team, Asher Bayles, was injured on vault, her first apparatus of the day, and she couldn’t finish the meet.

For New Zealand, Jun McDonald and Freya Reid competed well in the all-around, with McDonald earning the bronze medal with a 48.398 while Reid finished fifth with a 46.399. With the Australian team qualifying to worlds, both McDonald and Reid were then eligible to pick up the two individual spots available at this meet.

Also representing New Zealand were Sienna Shields, who was the sixth-best all-arounder with a score of 40.432, Reece Cobb with routines on beam and floor, and Olympian Courtney McGregor made an appearance on vault, putting up the third-best score of the day with a 13.433. Though McGregor won’t make it to worlds here, she’s currently ranked 22nd on vault in the world cup series, and with many athletes ahead of her likely to qualify through other means, she’ll be on the bubble for a worlds berth through this route.

The Australian MAG team had four all-arounders, all of whom finished in the top four, and with no two-per-country rule in play here, it meant the men saw a podium sweep led by Jesse Moore with an 80.165 for gold, ahead of James Hardy with a 75.331 for silver and Ritam Malik with a 74.698 for bronze.

It was a fantastic day for Moore, who also won the titles on floor, pommel horse, vault, and high bar to help the program to a 234.294, nearly 30 points ahead of New Zealand. Malik, who won the recent Commonwealth Games trial meet following a great freshman season at Penn State, was also mostly strong here, though a weak p-bars routine held him back from a higher total. In fourth place was Ben Foster with a 74.464, while Heath Thorpe competed three events, tying Moore for the top score on vault with a 14.0.

New Zealand’s best all-arounders were Alexander Istock in fifth with a 73.165 and Daniel Stoddart in sixth with a 66.098, both qualifying to worlds ahead of teammate William Fu-Allen, who was seventh with a 57.398. Stoddard had the top score of the day on rings with a 12.9, while Mikhail Koudinov, who competed two events here, won parallel bars with a 13.433. The team also saw Keegan Greene on two apparatuses.

Australia also swept the junior WAG and MAG podiums here in addition to winning both junior team titles.

For WAG, Alice Johnson won the all-around with a 49.399 in addition to taking the bars title with a 12.6, while Madelyn Fazio won silver with a 48.532 while winning the beam title with a 13.0, and Olivia Meaney won bronze with a 47.765 in addition to taking the vault and floor golds. New Zealand’s top all-arounder was Ella Thomas with a 44.031 for fourth place.

Elijah Wu won the MAG all-around title with a 71.299, ahead of teammates Oscar Scott with a 70.465 for silver and Josef Neumann with a 69.498 for bronze, with Wu also winning the rings, vault, and parallel bars titles, Scott winning floor and high bar, and Neumann winning pommel horse. New Zealand’s best here was William Davies with a 69.164 for fourth place.

Results: Senior WAG | Senior MAG | Junior WAG | Junior MAG

Article by Lauren Hopkins

7 thoughts on “Australia Qualifies WAG and MAG Team to Worlds at Oceania Championships

  1. Can we talk about how ridiculous it is to have two teams competing for one spot with one winning by double digits? It drives me bonkers they aren’t added to another continental championship.

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    • Yes, absolutely. I’ve long wanted them to join Asian Championships…just add a team spot to that continental meet and then Australia can earn it there instead of being the only country in the world to basically automatically get a spot (for WAG, anyway)!

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      • Why –

        Australia tends to be much stronger than New Zealand just like the USA is much stronger than the rest of the region, I don’t see you saying basically the USA get an automatic spot! Remember funding really makes a difference. The qualification is split to ensure all continents can be representative. A change of 1 or 2 people in a team can make a huge difference!

        Looking at the number of teams for each region and then the spots. Based on 2025/2026 continental championships, it doesn’t seem too unfair unless you are from an African nation!

        Europe 13 spots – 15 teams – 52% chance of qualifying

        Americas 5 spots – 8 teams – 62.5% chance of qualifying

        Asia 4 spots – 10 teams – 40% chance of qualifying

        Africa 1 spot – 5 teams – 20% chance of qualifying

        Oceania 1 spots – 2 teams – 50% chance of qualifying

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        • With other continents there’s more variety and won’t always be the same exact 5 teams for the Americas or 13 teams for Europe, so no team is really guaranteed in the way Australia is. Yes, some programs like the United States, Italy, and China will always secure spots in their continental championships even if they send B teams, so they also don’t have to try as hard, but for Oceania it’s always going to be the same one team for WAG qualifying over and over again which is like…why are we having a qualifier at all? They’d still be among the top programs if Asia and Oceania were combined, but there’d be a bit more variety and excitement to the competition.

          But this aside, I actually think even worse than the Australia automatic team concern is that until Oceania adds more elite-level programs, New Zealand will always automatically then get two all-around spots by default! They could have athletes go up and do bare minimum two-skill 0.5 D-score routines on every apparatus if they wanted but as long as they put up two athletes on all four events, they’re going to get those spots. Basically, a competition where two countries are competing and two countries are eligible to qualify to worlds means 100% of those nations will qualify which is unfair compared to every other continental qualifier (at African Championships, in contrast, eight countries sent Senior WAG athletes and only four of those countries qualified via team or individual pathways).

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