Gymnastics team rallies around words of day
Desire. Phenomenal. Believe. Heart.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Independent Florida Alligator's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
162 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Desire. Phenomenal. Believe. Heart.
For the UF gymnastics team, travel isn't all business en route to the next meet. There is certainly some leisure to be found.
The UF gymnastics roster has 12 names on it. Only seven of those names were able to compete at the Southeastern Conference Championships on Saturday.
You may have heard, but in case you haven't: The UF gymnastics team is hurting. Bad.
When Amanda Castillo stung her ankle against Utah on Friday, UF (6-4, 3-3 Southeastern Conference) could only hope it was a minor injury.
The injury bug didn't just bite the UF gymnastics team. It's setting up house.
On a night Corey Hartung envisioned waving to the crowd after her floor exercise, she instead will face the harsh reality of not competing, waving to the crowd from the floor with her family, dressed up to cheer and coach while wearing a protective boot.
A white Hyundai Sonata cruises onto the turnpike blaring country music through scenic Pennsylvania.
You know the feeling you get when you're trying to impress somebody, and you're hoping more than anything else you don't mess up?
The Gators had a good meet. The Bulldogs had an exceptional one.
UF and Georgia. Two schools that just don't like each other. A textbook example of rivals. Be it on the gridiron, in the pool, on the hardwood, even in a spitting contest.
It's a minute and a half of pure euphoria and a demonstration of personality unlike any other gymnastics event.
UF coach Rhonda Faehn said last week that the Alabama meet might provide the best gymnastics the O'Connell Center saw all year.
Gators fans may be in for a treat tonight at 7 at the O'Connell Center when UF hosts No. 8 Alabama.
The Southeastern Conference is more than just a football conference. It's also a hotbed for gymnastics.
Some things truly are better late than never, and that includes a first road win.
For Elizabeth Mahlich, the trip north to East Lansing, Mich., this weekend is more of a homecoming than a road meet.
Out of the frying pan that is Baton Rouge, La., and into the fire that is East Lansing, Mich.
If there is such thing as a home away from home, Baton Rouge, La., is not that place for the UF gymnastics team.
The first road meet of the season for the No. 8 UF gymnastics team didn't go nearly as well as the team would've liked: They lost for the first time in series history against Arkansas.