
The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships will kick off on April 16 in Fort Worth, Texas, featuring the top eight teams in high-stakes competition. Fans can anticipate exceptional talent and impressive scores as teams vie for a spot in the National Championship.
CORVALLIS, OREGON - APRIL 5: Jordan Chiles of the UCLA Bruins poses after receiving a perfect ten on the floor exercise during an NCAA Regional Final gymnastics meet at Gill Coliseum on April 5, 2026 in Corvallis, Oregon. (Photo by Ali Gradischer/Getty Images)
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When NCAA Gymnasticsâ top eight teams take to the floor this Thursday in Fort Worth, Texas, fans can expect a few things: high-level talent, high stakes, and even higher scores.
The competition begins on Thursday, April 16, with two National Semifinals â effectively, the sportâs âElite Eightâ round. Four teams will compete in each semifinal, and the top two finishers will advance to the NCAA National Championship on Saturday.
This yearâs field is both unique in its composition and uniquely talented. While the sportâs powerhouses â Oklahoma, LSU, Florida, and UCLA â return for another battle on the national stage, surging programs like Georgia, Stanford, Arkansas, and Minnesota head to Texas ready to shake up the standings.
But most of all, the eight programs will need to weather the storm.
Former ESPN Commentator and U.S. Olympic medalist Kathy Johnson Clarke describes the current collegiate climate as a âperfect storm.â Itâs a storm that pulls from many sources, both good and bad.
The storm brings increased television coverage to a growing sport (good). With increased visibility and growth, so has come an âobsession with huge scores" (bad).
Scoring has skyrocketed in recent years, in proportion with increased coverage and athlete visibility in the new era of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). Since 2022, perfect tens have become more common than not. In 2024, judges awarded almost 90 perfect scores, the highest amount awarded since 2004.
Line chart of the number of perfect tens awarded in NCAA Women's Gymnastics over the last two decades.
Caroline Price
In 2024, an attempt was made to tranquilize the lenient evaluations. The Womenâs Collegiate Gymnastics Association (WCGA) announced a judging evaluation system established âto create a level playing field of scores across the country.â Dubbed the âSCORE Board,â the proposed system would evaluate the quality of the judges.
Though the gymnastics community had high hopes for progress, the WCGA has been slow to roll out the program due to financial and logistical constraints.
In the fall of 2025, the board confirmed to me that the program remains in its "pilot stage" and âwill not be used as criteria for ranking or assigning officials to the 2026 NCAA postseason.â
Though judges awarded 45 perfect scores in 2025 and 44 thus far in 2026 â a marked decrease from 87 in 2024, many experts maintain that the scoring remains inflated across the board.
Though the conversation surrounding perfect scores remains contentious, perfect tens can often catalyze program growth. The score is now synonymous with womenâs college gymnastics, with perfect-ten routines garnering millions of views across TikTok, X, and Instagram.
Though the scores might be inflated and highly contested by the sportâs most dedicated fans, perfect tens bring new eyes to college gymnastics. Broadcasters have responded accordingly.
The sportâs growing popularity has led to distinct changes in how fans and spectators interact with it. Organizers have helped make gymnastics âmore like a game,â Johnson Clarke tells me.
BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - MARCH 13: Kailin Chio of the LSU Tigers scores three perfect 10's against the Arkansas Razorbacks at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center on March 13, 2026 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Photo by LSU Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)
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With judges only penalizing obvious errors: a fall, a wobble, a step on a landing, even the most inexperienced fan can watch a balance beam routine and logically anticipate its score. âFans can get excited because they do know how a game is played,â Johnson Clarke adds.
Fans can now view the sport like they would football: offense and defense (weâll forget special teams for a moment). The athlete competing is on offense, trying to score as high as possible. The defense is the Code of Points.
The defense has been underperforming. "Since [the defense] is not in play â at least not in any huge senseânothing is being deducted that the casual fan canât see," Johnson Clarke admits, chuckling.
For the avid fans who mourn gymnasticsâ withering defensive line, Johnson Clarke also has a message: find the joy in watching your sport.
âEnjoy the athletes. Enjoy the sport. View it as a gameâan exciting gameâand see who comes out on top... or just who has their best meet. Thatâs to be celebrated.â
Over the last decade, weâve seen countless records fall. In 2017, the Oklahoma Sooners posted the highest NCAA Championship score in the sportâs history (198.3875). From 2016 to 2025, all but one NCAA team champion scored a 198 or above â thatâs an average of a 9.9+ on each routine. In the previous decade, only one winning team reached that golden benchmark.
The 2026 NCAA Championships in Fort Worth represent a pivotal moment and a pivotal question: Will the 'defenseâ finally fight back, or will the 'offenseâ continue to run up the score?
This article was originally published on Forbes.com
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The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships start on April 16, 2026.
The 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships are being held in Fort Worth, Texas.
Eight teams are competing in the 2026 NCAA Gymnastics Championships.
The competition features two National Semifinals, with four teams in each, and the top two from each semifinal will advance to the National Championship.


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