A
Anonymous (43af)
I want to open a discussion about whether the TOPS program still makes sense as a structure in 2026, and I'm genuinely curious what people who follow the sport think.
The late specialization research is pretty settled at this point. Athletes who specialize early face higher rates of overuse injury, burnout, and shorter careers. The sport with the most to gain from this research should arguably be gymnastics, where career longevity has historically been brutal. And yet TOPS is still built on the premise that elite potential must be identified before a child turns 10.
What I find hard to reconcile is that gymnastics itself has started to disprove this. Over the last 15 years or so we have seen adult women — not teenagers — competing and winning at the highest levels of the sport. The 2024 Paris Olympics made that very clear. So the old assumption that the body can only perform elite gymnastics in a narrow window of early adolescence is no longer holding.
It's also worth comparing gymnastics to other Olympic sports with very similar physical demands:
— Diving requires the same spatial awareness, air sense, body control, flexibility, and fearlessness. Elite women divers compete well into their late 20s and are not identified through intensive programs at age 8.
— Rhythmic gymnastics shares the same governing body as artistic gymnastics and demands identical qualities — flexibility, strength, body control, and artistry. Yet elite rhythmic gymnasts consistently peak later than their artistic counterparts, which raises an obvious question about why the development models are so different within the same sport.
— Artistic swimming requires extraordinary flexibility, spatial body awareness, breath control, and physical strength. It is one of the most physically demanding Olympic disciplines and yet its athletes regularly compete at elite levels into their late 20s without being funneled into identification programs as young children.
— Freestyle skiing aerials demands the same air sense, spatial awareness, and fearlessness required for vaulting and release moves in artistic gymnastics. Athletes in that discipline specialize and reach their peak considerably later than artistic gymnasts.
So the question I keep landing on is this: if comparable Olympic sports can produce world-class athletes without intensive early identification programs, what specifically does TOPS offer that justifies the model? Is it producing better outcomes for athletes, or is it a legacy structure that persists because the sport has always done it this way?
Research shows the average age at which children drop out of competitive artistic gymnastics is just 9 years old — meaning the majority of children being fast-tracked never even make it to their tenth birthday in the sport. The overwhelming majority of children funneled into accelerated tracks will not have elite careers — but they will have had those additional hours extracted from childhood.
I'm also curious whether anyone thinks the culture that enabled systemic abuse within USAG — which relied heavily on total control over very young athletes — has genuinely been interrogated when programs like TOPS remain structurally unchanged. Or is that too uncomfortable a question for the sport to sit with?
Looking forward to hearing from people with more history in the sport than I have.
The late specialization research is pretty settled at this point. Athletes who specialize early face higher rates of overuse injury, burnout, and shorter careers. The sport with the most to gain from this research should arguably be gymnastics, where career longevity has historically been brutal. And yet TOPS is still built on the premise that elite potential must be identified before a child turns 10.
What I find hard to reconcile is that gymnastics itself has started to disprove this. Over the last 15 years or so we have seen adult women — not teenagers — competing and winning at the highest levels of the sport. The 2024 Paris Olympics made that very clear. So the old assumption that the body can only perform elite gymnastics in a narrow window of early adolescence is no longer holding.
It's also worth comparing gymnastics to other Olympic sports with very similar physical demands:
— Diving requires the same spatial awareness, air sense, body control, flexibility, and fearlessness. Elite women divers compete well into their late 20s and are not identified through intensive programs at age 8.
— Rhythmic gymnastics shares the same governing body as artistic gymnastics and demands identical qualities — flexibility, strength, body control, and artistry. Yet elite rhythmic gymnasts consistently peak later than their artistic counterparts, which raises an obvious question about why the development models are so different within the same sport.
— Artistic swimming requires extraordinary flexibility, spatial body awareness, breath control, and physical strength. It is one of the most physically demanding Olympic disciplines and yet its athletes regularly compete at elite levels into their late 20s without being funneled into identification programs as young children.
— Freestyle skiing aerials demands the same air sense, spatial awareness, and fearlessness required for vaulting and release moves in artistic gymnastics. Athletes in that discipline specialize and reach their peak considerably later than artistic gymnasts.
So the question I keep landing on is this: if comparable Olympic sports can produce world-class athletes without intensive early identification programs, what specifically does TOPS offer that justifies the model? Is it producing better outcomes for athletes, or is it a legacy structure that persists because the sport has always done it this way?
Research shows the average age at which children drop out of competitive artistic gymnastics is just 9 years old — meaning the majority of children being fast-tracked never even make it to their tenth birthday in the sport. The overwhelming majority of children funneled into accelerated tracks will not have elite careers — but they will have had those additional hours extracted from childhood.
I'm also curious whether anyone thinks the culture that enabled systemic abuse within USAG — which relied heavily on total control over very young athletes — has genuinely been interrogated when programs like TOPS remain structurally unchanged. Or is that too uncomfortable a question for the sport to sit with?
Looking forward to hearing from people with more history in the sport than I have.