Gymnasts win Pac-12 championship, receive several honors

Katelyn Ohashi was named the Pac-12 Specialist of the Year and earned first team All Pac-12 honors for floor exercise and balance beam. The junior scored three perfect 10s on floor exercise and posted a season-high of 9.975 on balance beam. (Daniel Leibowitz/Daily Bruin staff)

Well before the national championship trophy will be handed out, Bruin gymnasts have already taken home a fair amount of hardware for their efforts this season.

No. 3 UCLA gymnastics (18-2, 4-1 Pac-12) had eight athletes earn a total of 14 All Pac-12 honors with two of them earning major conference awards for their performances during the regular season.

Redshirt senior Peng-Peng Lee, junior Katelyn Ohashi, sophomore Kyla Ross, senior Napualani Hall and redshirt freshman Grace Glenn all earned first-team All Pac-12 honors. Ross received first-team honors on the all-around and uneven bars, averaging a 9.942 on the latter. Hall earned her place on the first team for vault with a 9.779 average, while Glenn averaged a 9.871 to earn first-team honors on the balance beam.

Ross also earned second-team honors on the vault and balance beam. Second-team honors were awarded to sophomore Felicia Hano in vault and floor exercise, freshman Nia Dennis in uneven bars and freshman Pauline Tratz in floor exercise.

Lee also came away with the Pac-12 Women’s Gymnastics Scholar-Athlete of the Year award. As a sociology major, Lee has a 3.49 cumulative GPA over her time at the university.

Lee also has scored five 10s in competition this season, four of them on the balance beam and one on the uneven bars. She is averaging a 9.943 as the anchor on the balance beam. Before her last home meet, Lee said her hope for this season is to end it with a ring.

“Personally, (my goal is) to win a national championship,” Lee said. “I’d love to graduate with a ring and do it with this team because this team is so special. I couldn’t have asked for a better season.”

Ohashi took home the Pac-12 Women’s Gymnastics Specialist of the Year award. Although she competed on every event, her best was the floor routine. She averaged a 9.925 score, with three perfect 10s and only one under a 9.8.

Ohashi said this year’s team has a bond that has helped her reach new heights.

“This is one of the more positive teams I’ve been on,” Ohashi said. “I remember my freshman year, it was negative energy a lot of the time. This is probably the best team that I’ve been on, and I feel like we’re very cohesive.”

In addition to these awards, the Bruins picked up 10 Pac-12 Specialist of the Week accolades with five going to Lee, two for Ohashi and one each for Hano, Glenn and Hall. Ross also won one Pac-12 Gymnast of the Week, while redshirt freshman Anna Glenn won one Pac-12 Freshman/Newcomer of the Week award.

Coach Valorie Kondos Field led the team to its second Pac-12 title in three years. In February, she said the team drove itself to reach its goals and pursue individual titles and a national championship.

“I’ve always said that you’re never going to be able to create that magic if they don’t do it for themselves or each other,” Kondos Field said. “When coaches can step back and the athletes drive the energy, that’s when the magic happens. And I haven’t felt this magic for about eight years.”

Read more here: http://dailybruin.com/2018/04/05/gymnasts-win-pac-12-championship-receive-several-honors/
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