W E E K LY E D I T I O N | A P R I L 19 - 2 5 , 2 0 2 2 | O U D A I LY. C O M
OU gains first Blackowned beauty studio ¡ 3
OUDAILY
The University of Oklahomaâs independent student voice since 1916
The Sooners celebrate after winning the meet against Florida, Utah and Auburn in the 2022 NCAA womenâs gymnastics chamionship final on April 16.
RAY BAHNER/THE DAILY
Sooners claim 5th NCAA title Gymnasts motivated by preseason criticism, make record comeback NATHAN AKER nathanchristian@ou.edu
FORT WORTH â K.J. Kindler held up a sheet of paper, the script of which had fueled Oklahomaâs fire all season. âIf there is a year when it is actually safe to predict Oklahoma not winning, this is the year,â the highlighted white parchment read. Moments earlier, Ragan Smith had proved that prediction wrong by dialing in and transferring her focus solely to nailing her beam routine and bringing home the Soonersâ fifth NCAA Championship. âI didnât even hear it,â Smith said of the roaring crowd before she began her performance. âI was so locked in and just focused on myself that I didnât hear a thing.â Holding no awareness of the four teamsâ running marks, the former U.S. National Team member and Olympic alternate delivered a near-perfect score in the biggest meet of her gymnastics career. With practically no lapse in time, Smith sprinted into a hug with Kindler, her teammates and assistant coaches, whoâd all but clinched the national championship win.
The Sooners awaited the final tallies with anticipation, just like they did the year prior when Michigan closed them out on beam in heartbreaking fashion. However, this was a distinct kind of anticipation on Saturday afternoon. Once Smithâs 9.9625 was revealed, screams of elation echoed through Dickies Arena. Oklahoma notched its second NCAA Championship victory in four seasons with a 198.200 over No. 2 Florida, No. 4 Utah and No. 7 Auburn, and spited the bulletin board material that had lingered inside its locker room for months. Florida placed second, scoring a 198.0875 and Utah placed third with a 197.7500 while Auburn placed fourth with a 197.3500. The win also avenged OUâs regular season losses to the Gators and Red Rocks. âIâve never experienced this much team love before, and everyone having my back,â Smith said following the Soonersâ championship victory. âIâve never experienced it until this year, and especially the moment we just had together. It was so special to me.â Clearly, blocking out the external noise worked for the junior, as Smith recouped from a subpar 9.7375 on floor to notch that vital score on beam. Staying composed and locked in seemed a recurring theme for OU throughout the competition. Oklahoma found itself in a massive hole at the end of the first rotation after posting a subpar 49.1875.
But the Sooners buckled down, sharpened their skills and scratched their way back to victory. âThey had to fight and fight and claw their way back into this meet,â Kindler said on the ABC broadcast directly after the competition. âI am so impressed with their mental stability and their strength. I just canât even tell you, Iâm just so proud of them.â In the second rotation on vault, a 9.9 from senior Allie Stern got OU rolling. Then, a 9.975 in the No. 2 spot from sophomore Katherine LeVasseur sparked much-needed momentum for Oklahoma, priming a 9.9375 from freshman Jordan Bowers and a 9.9625 from senior Olivia Trautman. With four scores of 9.9 or higher, the Sooners posted their highest vault score ever in an NCAA Championship meet with a 49.6625 and catapulted themselves into third place behind Utah and Florida. âThere wasnât a lot that needed to be said, I felt,â Kindler said of prepping her team for vault following their off performance on floor. âTheir heads were in the right spot. âIt wasnât about, âOh, no,â it was more about, âLetâs go.ââ From there on, Oklahoma was seemingly infallible, carrying that momentum through the third event with its No. 1 ranked bars lineup. That ranking certainly held its validity, as five of the six routines were 9.9s or higher, the best being
a career-high 9.975 from freshman Danielle Sievers. The Soonersâ bars lineup is accustomed to making history. In OUâs final home meet this season, its bars lineup broke a program record for highest score on the event in school history with a 49.825. On Saturday, the highest score ever on an event in the NCAA Championships added to the record books. âReally proud of the way they just kept feeding off each other,â Kindler said. âThey do these kinds of routines in practice all the time, but getting it out of yourself in a moment like that is something special.â The Sooners have stayed close to each other all year despite undermining comments made about the group before the 2022 season began. Back in the winter, fifth-year senior Carly Woodard was searching online, reading about the Sooners and their perceived potential coming into the season, and found the quote Kindler vengefully referenced after Saturdayâs meet. That and other similar remarks gave Woodard and her roommates, seniors Allie Stern and Emma LaPinta, the idea to print quotes from skeptics and post them around the Soonersâ practice facility for motivation. The now infamous aforementioned quote, from a gymnastics website called âThe Balance Beam Situation,â was posted on the refrigerator in the Soonersâ locker room. Woodard and Oklahoma took it
quite personally. âWe read the internet, all of us do, whether we admit to it or not,â Woodard said. âI saw that (quote), and immediately sent it to my senior class. I was like, âWhatâre we going to do about this?ââ For Woodard, reaching the pinnacle of competition in Fort Worth took many sacrifices. But, after opting for a fifth year after being provided extra eligibility due to COVID-19, the super senior has achieved just what she set out to do in January â win another ring. âGetting this opportunity in this fifth year is something that Iâm incredibly grateful for,â Woodard said. âTo go out on top was obviously a goal of mine from the beginning. Itâs a surreal experience.â As Woodardâs career comes to a finish, there stands a bright future for the underclassmen and the continuity of Kindlerâs championship pedigree in Norman. With Sievers, Bowers and freshman Danae Fletcher heading into their sophomore seasons and LeVasseur, Davis and sophomore Bell Johnson heading into their junior seasons, they will continue to hone their skills as they enter the 2023 season as champions. âI canât say enough about how great this team was today,â Kindler said. âAnd again, fighters âtill the end when it wouldâve been easy to count themselves out.â
Graduate Student Senate defines purpose Organization leaders aim to amplify graduate student voices KALY PHAN kaly.n.phan-1@ou.edu
Leaders in the OU Graduate Student Senate are striving to bring the organization out of âoblivionâ by creating better communication and bridging the gap between undergraduate and graduate students. The GSS, like the Undergraduate Student Congress, is a legislative body which seeks to represent its student constituentsâ interests and goals. Claire Burch was elected as
GSS chair in April 2021 and she said one of her main goals as chair is to create more awareness of the senateâs place and purpose at OU. Over the past couple years, the GSS has âfallen into oblivion,â Burch said, and she hopes to change that with outreach between the senate, the other branches and other student organizations. She said the senateâs reach to build relationships with the OU administration and the graduate student population isnât being used to its fullest extent. There is more they could be doing to help graduate students on campus, she said. âI recognize that past chairs have been very insular, and we are working really hard to kind of break that culture,â Burch said. âThereâs a pretty good chance that (graduate
students) donât know that we exist currently. (For example), if they see articles that only mention the Undergraduate Student Congress, that creates the perception that they donât have a voice. They do.â Burch and her vice chair, Rin Ferraro, said they are seeking to have a direct connection to administration through the graduate college to express graduate studentsâ interests. Departments donât always offer the best way to voice concerns, so the senate acts as an alternative made of peers rather than staff or faculty, Burch said. Ferraro said everyone on campus wants a voice, which is âespecially difficultâ for graduate students, and the senate hopes to fix this. âSometimes (graduate students
are) forgotten in student affairs,â Ferraro said. âWeâre considered students or staff, and usually whatever it is doesnât benefit us. Weâre one of the few universities that has a specific branch dedicated just for grad students, and itâs just a great opportunity for us to be heard and be part of different, like Student Affairs on campus.â Ohio University, the University of Iowa and Texas Christian University offer a separate entity for graduate students within their student governments. Other universities, like the University of Texas, only have a âGraduate At-Large Representativeâ position in its legislative branch. Burch said she has been approached with the question of why GSS â which has many of the same
responsibilities as congress â is needed at OU, where only 22 percent of the student population are graduates. She said that, no matter the percentage, every voice deserves to be heard and considered in decision-making. The senate represents graduate students so the undergraduates donât have to, Burch said, since they donât necessarily always understand what a graduate studentâs experience looks like. Ferraro said graduate students exist in a âweird roleâ where theyâre both staff and students, with many of their peers being enrolled full-time while also teaching course sections. âOne of the things that we had see SENATE page 2