Everything You Need To Know About the Exciting 2026 NCAA Women’s Gymnastics Season
If you thought last yearโs NCAA gymnastics drama was wild, buckle up. The 2026 NCAA Womenโs Gymnastics season is about to kick off, and honestly? Itโs looking like pure chaos in the best way possible. Weโve got revenge tours, intense rivalries, and enough sparkle to blind a satellite.
Oklahoma Wants Their Crown Back (Again)
Letโs just address the elephant in the room for the gymnastic season: The Oklahoma Sooners have snagged seven national titles since 2014. If you aren’t familiar with the sport, that is bordering on ridiculous dominance. After a shock exit in the 2024 semis, they played the “underdog” card all the way to a title last year.
Going into 2026, they are ranked No. 1 again. Even though they lost heavy hitters like Jordan Bowers and Audrey Davis, theyโre reloading with the top recruiting class in the country. Itโs almost annoying how good they are. Almost.
The Chasers: Who Can Actually Stop Them?
Here is where it gets spicy in gymnastics. The rest of the field isn’t exactly rolling over.
- LSU (No. 2): The defending SEC champs are still riding high. Theyโre dealing with some roster turnover, but Konnor McClain is back and expected to be an all-around force after her Achilles injury. They want that natty just as bad as OU does.
- Florida (No. 3): On paper, the Gators look terrifying. They reportedly have 11 vaulters with 10.0 start values. That is absurd depth. They haven’t won the big one since 2015, and you can practically feel the hunger coming off this roster.
- UCLA (No. 4): This is the storyline everyone will be watching. Jordan Chiles is back for her final year, and she has accomplished literally everything in the sport except winning an NCAA team title. After finishing runner-up last year, the Bruins are looking dangerous.
New Faces To Obsess Over
Itโs not just about the seniors. The freshman class is absolutely stacked this year.
The name you need to know? Ana Barbosu the Romanian gymnast involved in the heartbreaking bronze medal controversy at the Paris Olympics. Sheโs competing for Stanford now, and seeing her go head-to-head against Jordan Chiles (UCLA) on March 7 is going to be must-see TV. The tension might actually melt the beam.
Also, keep an eye on Charlotte Booth at Auburn and Scarlett Sonnenberg at BYU. These rookies are coming in hot and ready to disrupt the rankings immediately.
The NQS Rule Change That Changes Everything In Gymnastics
Okay, this part is boring but super important. The NCAA changed how they calculate the National Qualifying Score (NQS). Previously, you needed six meets to get your score. Now? Itโs nine.
Why does this matter? It forces teams to be consistent over the entire season, not just turn it on at the end. It also neutralizes the advantage teams get from scoring 198s at home every weekend. If you canโt hit your routines on the road, your ranking is going to tank.
Key Gymnastics Meets You Can’t Miss
Clear your schedule for these dates, because the drama will be high in gymnastics:
- Feb. 20: Oklahoma vs. LSU (ESPN2): The last two national champs facing off. This is going to be a bloodbath.
- March 7: Stanford vs. UCLA (BTN): Chiles vs. Barbosu. The storylines write themselves.
- March 8: Florida vs. LSU (SECN): The loudest rivalry in the SEC. The energy in the arena is going to be absolutely feral.
Where to Watch
The coverage this year is actually decent for gymnastics. ESPN is promising “wall-to-wall” coverage across their networks (ABC, ESPN, SEC Network, etc.). If you are a Big Ten fan, youโll probably need a B1G+ subscription (sorry to your wallet). For scores and nitty-gritty stats, Road To Nationals is still the holy grail.
So, grab your popcorn. The road to Fort Worth starts now, and if history is any indication, itโs going to be a bumpy, beautiful ride.
