Interesting the focus is whether or not a program is turning out college gymnasts. Is that really our goal here? Or is it that sport is to be used as a vehicle to create kids who are good citizens, resilient, and learn some fitness and life lessons along the way.
That said, we seem to keep saying the problem is with how Xcel is or isn't being used, but maybe Xcel isn't the problem. Maybe the problem is what the JO compulsory levels have turned in to. I watched a kid on our team do a very solid floor routine at a meet (L4), with NO major errors, pull a 7.85 score. Blew everyone away. Now, were there little details that needed addressing? Of course, but how beneficial is it when a kid cannot even tell you where their errors were because they were so slight ends up last behind kids who fell on back handsprings or whatever. While I understand JO is designed to be tough, it seems that in some areas, it's designed to beat these kids down to see if they can handle it, forgetting that they are 7,8 years old. In no other sport is such absolute perfection the only acceptable option. Xcel gives kids who are talented a fighting chance at success, while still learning the resilience that comes with getting back up when you fall, literally and figuratively.
Rather than attacking Xcel and how gyms are using it to bypass compulsories, maybe we need to focus more on WHY gyms would rather bypass compulsories, and I don't believe the answer is just that the scoring is easier. I think USAG may need to look at compulsories and make some changes as well.
*Edited to add that the coach discussed the routine with the judges who told her that all the "errors" were text errors/details that added up, no major issues. Things like, oh her foot was slightly turned in instead of turned out.