- Mar 31, 2025
- 20
- 10
Are there any cons to xcel besides less college recruitment opportunities?
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Yeah I’ve noticed this too but, thankfully, my gym is has a big xcel team and is more focused on xcelIn general, no, but at some gyms there is a culture of treating Xcel as less important or just generally worse than dp. Some gyms also put less experienced or less favored coaches in this program.
But the same can be said for some of these for DP too. It's not necessary an Xcel only thing but a gym philosophy thing. There are gyms that hold DP girls back in compulsory levels to get high scores. I've personally seen that happen at gyms that we competed against. DP gyms also create routines that score the highest. Our girls were doing back handsprings on beam in L7 while another team was doing roundoffs.Yes. The ability to bypass difficult skills and compete the easiest ones from the list means gymnasts will choose to not be challenged and learn the higher skills so that they will always win at meets. Choosing more difficult skills is not rewarded at meets. The requirements for the levels are lower than the requirements at comparable levels in Development Program. Gymnasts can be and are being held back in lower Xcel levels for years to increase team scores so gyms will always dominate, which means a lot of girls age out or burn out or get bored and quit before they ever get a chance at optionals or even the highest Xcel levels. Emphasis is not on perfecting base skills that harder and higher skills will build on, emphasis is creating routines that will score the highest (usually with the most basic skills, like a pullover instead of a kip, for example).
Sorry if this comes off as snarky, but it was easier to reply into the original than to respond to the individual points below it.Yes. The ability to bypass difficult skills and compete the easiest ones from the list means [SOME ] gymnasts will choose to not be challenged and learn the higher skills so that they will always win at meets [EVEN THOUGH THEY DON'T ALWAYS WIN]. Choosing more difficult skills is not rewarded at meets [IT IS REWARDED IN SAPPHIRE, AND IT ISN'T REWARDED IN DP UNTIL LEVEL 9]. The requirements for the levels are lower than the requirements at comparable levels [THEN THEY AREN'T REALLY COMPARABLE, ARE THEY? Xcel Gold is higher than L3 for the most part, but L6 routines are common too, for example.] in Development Program. Gymnasts can be and are being held back in lower Xcel levels for years to increase team scores so gyms will always dominate [THIS IS GYM DEPENDENT AND HAPPENS IN DP TOO], which means a lot of girls age out or burn out or get bored and quit before they ever get a chance at optionals or even the highest Xcel levels. Emphasis is not on perfecting base skills [EXCEPT THAT THE EMPHASIS IS ON PERFECTING THE SKILLS - THAT'S HOW THEY ARE SCORED] that harder and higher skills will build on, emphasis is creating routines that will score the highest [DON'T THEY DO THAT IN DP ... PUT TOGETHER THE HIGHEST SCORING ROUTINES???] (usually with the most basic skills, like a pullover instead of a kip [A KIP ISN'T REQUIRED IN XCEL UNTIL PLATINUM, SO THERE IS NO REASON TO DO IT EARLIER ... JUST LIKE DP ... THE KIP IS NOT REQUIRED UNTIL L4 ... SO MOST L3 DO NOT COMPETE THE KIP EVEN THOUGH THEY CAN] , for example).
I've been around that long as well. I have been through the change from Prep Op to Xcel, the many rewrites of the Code, the constant updates, and judged thousands and thousands of routines. Plus I have a kid in Xcel, I had one in Prep Op and One in Jr Olympic. I stand by my opinions.Sorry if this comes off as snarky, but it was easier to reply into the original than to respond to the individual points below it.
I have been around since BEFORE Xcel existed, and I started helping with it the year before it went national.
I know it is used in different ways by different gyms (and states and regions). Because of this, we can't generalize about Xcel.
You only mentioned some of the things I said. But it's not the same to hold girls back in Compulsory as it is in Xcel. In Compulsory, the routines are scripted and everyone does the same routines and the same skills. In Xcel, the "easiest" skills can deliberately be chosen to ensure really high scores. In Optionals, starting at level 9, they get rewarded for doing higher skills alone and in combo, but not in Xcel. In Sapphire there some bonus for higher skills. It's somewhat similar like you said, but not mostly similar.But the same can be said for some of these for DP too. It's not necessary an Xcel only thing but a gym philosophy thing. There are gyms that hold DP girls back in compulsory levels to get high scores. I've personally seen that happen at gyms that we competed against. DP gyms also create routines that score the highest. Our girls were doing back handsprings on beam in L7 while another team was doing roundoffs.
I see what you are saying but this is a blanket statement and not always true. And of course if the gymnast executes the higher skills with minimal deductions they too can win at meets.Yes. The ability to bypass difficult skills and compete the easiest ones from the list means gymnasts will choose to not be challenged and learn the higher skills so that they will always win at meets. Choosing more difficult skills is not rewarded at meets. The requirements for the levels are lower than the requirements at comparable levels in Development Program. Gymnasts can be and are being held back in lower Xcel levels for years to increase team scores so gyms will always dominate, which means a lot of girls age out or burn out or get bored and quit before they ever get a chance at optionals or even the highest Xcel levels. Emphasis is not on perfecting base skills that harder and higher skills will build on, emphasis is creating routines that will score the highest (usually with the most basic skills, like a pullover instead of a kip, for example).
I also think some of this is true but I’ve also seen a lot of Xcel gymnasts push to compete more difficult skills even in levels where they don’t get bonus points. I also disagree that the “lack of challenge” means they will quit earlier. If anything, I think xcel encourages gymnasts to stay in the sport longer!I've been around that long as well. I have been through the change from Prep Op to Xcel, the many rewrites of the Code, the constant updates, and judged thousands and thousands of routines. Plus I have a kid in Xcel, I had one in Prep Op and One in Jr Olympic. I stand by my opinions.
I have a senior, LSS, in Xcel Platinum who 100% would have quit if she had to stay in JO/DP. She switched over after L4 to Xcel Gold because her training group wasn't the best for her mental health. She has upgraded skills where she could, but has been dealing with niggling injuries for 4 years.I also think some of this is true but I’ve also seen a lot of Xcel gymnasts push to compete more difficult skills even in levels where they don’t get bonus points. I also disagree that the “lack of challenge” means they will quit earlier. If anything, I think xcel encourages gymnasts to stay in the sport longer!