@bookworm - I thought you gave great advice, as always (my first piece of advice on this thread was figure out if you want to stay at this gym or figure out a new gym, so I don't see any problem with leaving if that's what someone wants and will get them better coaching/outcomes for their gymnast). My comments about threats were specifically based on the OP saying that it would devastate her daughter to leave said gym but OP would "threaten" to leave if that would help her case at the current gym. If you don't really mean it, don't say it is my motto. If you do mean it - say it by all means. And be willing to follow through. I think you and I are in agreement on this point.
When I read the OP, I thought she said her daughter doesn't yet have all her 8 skills (but has a year to get them). That should be plenty of time to get the Level 8 skills as far as I am concerned which is why I wondered in my first post on this thread why her gym was having this conversation now, as it doesn't make any sense to me.
What I was/am asking is whether those 9.5-9.7s are happening together at the same meet or if OPs daughter is having a year where she gets a 9.5 on 1 or 2 events at a meet (and 2-3 mid to high 8s on the other events) or if she is getting 9.5-9.7 across the board all at one meet. Either way - OPs daughter is a very talented young gymnast. But one possible type of scores would make the coaches suggestion to repeat Level 7 make some sense and the other possible set of scores makes the suggestion ridiculous in my mind.
Last year, I watched one gymnast (super talented, young) at Level 7 have a good but not great year because while she was able to get 9.5+ on each event (and proved it over the season) she was never able to put together a meet where she achieved those kinds of scores all together. Her AA score never went higher than mid 36s. She is repeating Level 7 this year and has consistently gotten 38s. She's at a gym with a very strong upper optional program. This year, there is no question about whether she will move to Level 8 next year, I expect she will probably dominate because her talent was never in doubt, only her ability to put everything together.
Again, in my first reply on this thread - I asked the OP why her gym would be having this conversation a year before her daughter would be competing level 8 and whether her gym has been able to get girls to Level 8, 9 and 10 successfully. My first thought on this subject was the only reason a gym would hold back a level 7 gymnast who is scoring 9.5-9.7 across all 4 events is that the gym itself is not able to get gymnasts to those higher optional levels successfully.
I've seen a lot of gymnasts in our area who are extremely strong on 1-2 events and weaker on the other two events. We've had girls consistently scoring above 9.8 on 1 or 2 events who consistently score in the mid 8s on their other events (with sometimes a low 9 on their 'weaker' events). Those gymnasts have struggled more than gymnasts who consistently scored all 9s at every meet when they hit Level 8.
And I do think there is a big difference between scoring a 9.5 on 4 events at the same meet and being able to score 9.5 on 1 or 2 events at each meet - even though it's clear both set of scores show very talented gymnasts. If the OPs daughter has gotten individual gold on all 4 events (at different meets) but not been 1st or 2nd AA regularly - I can see a coach wanting to figure out how they get help the gymnast put everything together at the same time. Some kids need more time learning how to compete on meet days. And this gymnast does have the time, we aren't talking about a 12 year old Level 7.