I cannot be the only one that sees several of these posts as "bashing" and heavily critical of this young gymnast. And honestly, I also hear a lot of jealousy, negativity and this-process-isn't-fair beneath the facts. "we have girls in our gym age 7-8 who are competing level 8 with same level of skills as her", "We have girls in our gym who are the same age, made it to easterns/nationals and they aren't being looked at", "we can't assume she will graduate early until she actually does". Really go back and read some the posts. The tone is "why does she get to commit so young and ours don't" "She obviously isn't as good as SO many others out there" "there is no way she will be able to pull this off". Life (and particularly gymnastics) isn't fair. Get over it. From the tone of these posts, I truly get the feeling that many will be watching this girl (and others like her) just waiting for it all to fall apart so you can say - "see? we were right". The Coaches at UTAH saw something in this girl that they thought would benefit their program. Are there other girls that have a better track record, more skills, at this point in their career? sure. But they chose her. There will always be girls who are better, more skilled, older, etc than what a college has chosen as a recruit. Stop trying to figure out the reasoning. You will go crazy. Just be happy for this girl and wish her the best.
That being said, at the same time we absolutely should be discussing how we can affect a change in NCAA policy in regards to recruiting so young. And honestly, I think it needs to go the route of what is best for the athlete - picking a school so young, having to train at such a high level at such a young age just to get noticed and then risking major injury during the 5+ years of high intensity training.