Last updated11 Apr 2026, 3:22 pm SGT
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Kimi K2 vs Gemini 3.1 Pro

tree_0009 · Understanding USAG Gymnastics Levels: A Complete Guide (2024)

Gemini 3.1 Pro · Better
WIDE
3
Rounds
0 - 2
Final Score
59,220
Tokens
$0.59
Cost
Onboarding R1
Mode
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Round 1 of 3

Round Context

Depth 2Width 2Backtrack
Logic Chain
Root

Understanding USAG Gymnastics Levels: A Complete Guide (2024)

Step 2

Our Gymnastics Team Programs

Question

Within the context of the USA Gymnastics (USAG) Development and Junior Olympic pathway, identify the specific gymnastics organization that offers athlete evaluations and multiple competitive team tracks beyond standard developmental levels. For this organization, compare all of its distinct team program options by explaining: (1) which program competes exclusively in-house and its intended age or purpose, (2) which travel program allows limited weekly training to accommodate other activities and how many days per week it trains, and (3) which higher-commitment program requires more weekly training, restricts outside sports participation, and leads to state, regional, and national championships. Additionally, summarize the organization’s stated outcomes regarding college scholarships and describe the focus and purpose of its published guide aimed at parents supporting competitive gymnasts.

Answer length: 200-300 words.

Show hidden checklists
Depth checklist
  • Gold Medal Gymnastics & Ninja (GMGC) identified as the organization offering evaluations and the Club Team, USAIGC, and Junior Olympic programs
  • Correct differentiation among Club Team (in-house), USAIGC (lower commitment travel team), and Junior Olympic Program (higher commitment USAG pathway)
  • Recognition that the parent guide is a published resource designed to help parents understand and support their gymnast’s competitive development
Width checklist
  • Description of the in-house Club Team and its non-travel, low-pressure competitive structure
  • Purpose of the Club Team (e.g., preparation for high school teams, minimal additional travel/expense)
  • Identification of the USAIGC travel program and its 2–3 days per week maximum training structure
  • Explanation that the USAIGC program allows participation in other sports and activities
  • Identification of the Junior Olympic (USA Gymnastics Development Program) team
  • Statement that the Junior Olympic program may require 3–5 days per week and limits outside sports
  • Mention of progression to State, Regional, and National Championships for travel teams
  • Reference to reported college athletic scholarships and national-level success
  • Summary of the parent-focused guide emphasizing strength, flexibility, resilience, and supporting a child’s competitive journey
Examiner rationale

The question uses the USAG level progression as contextual logic to filter for a specific gym that provides structured pathways aligned with Developmental and Junior Olympic systems (Deep reasoning). It then requires aggregating details about three distinct team programs, scholarship outcomes, competition structure, and a separate parent-focused guide (Wide aggregation), ensuring the respondent must synthesize information across multiple sections rather than rely on a single fact.

Judgment

Tie
BOTH
Score 0 - 0

First, Deep Logic check: The correct organization is Gold Medal Gymnastics & Ninja (GMGC). Agent A identifies Capital Gymnastics Academy (incorrect). Agent B broadly identifies USA Gymnastics and its member clubs (also incorrect). Therefore, BOTH fail the core entity requirement. Width/Completeness: Because both selected the wrong organization, neither accurately describes the specific Club Team, USAIGC (2–3 day travel option), and Junior Olympic/Development Program structure as implemented by GMGC. While both provide plausible descriptions of gymnastics pathways, they are generic or fabricated relative to the required organization. This results in major checklist failures (entity, program distinctions, outcomes, and parent guide specifics). Presentation & UX: Both responses are well-formatted and readable, with structured bullet points and citations. However, strong formatting cannot compensate for incorrect entity identification and misaligned details. Conclusion: Since BOTH agents failed Deep Logic and missed key required specifics tied to the correct organization, this is a LOW quality tie.

Evolution step
Determining Next Step...
TIE (Both Bad): BACKTRACKING.
[BACKTRACK] Moving up to Parent Node

Kimi K2

Moonshot AI

113.6s
**Capital Gymnastics Academy** (operating within the USAG pathway) offers athlete evaluations and three distinct competitive tracks beyond foundational levels [1]. (1) **Kinder Team**: This in-house program serves 4-6 year-olds, focusing on foundational skill development and performing exclusively at internal showcases to build competition readiness without travel demands [2]. (2) **Xcel Program**: The travel track accommodating multi-sport athletes trains **2 days per week** (typically 6-8 hours total), allowing participation in outside activities like soccer or dance while competing at local and invitational meets [3]. (3) **Junior Olympic (JO) Program**: This high-commitment track requires 4-5 days weekly training (16-20 hours), mandates gymnastics as the primary sport, and directly qualifies athletes for USAG state, regional, and national championships through progressive Levels 4-10 [4]. The organization reports that 85% of its Level 8-10 athletes receive NCAA collegiate offers, emphasizing scholarships as a measurable outcome of elite development [5]. Their published **Parent’s Guide to Competitive Gymnastics** focuses on mental health support, realistic goal-setting, managing training-family balance, and understanding USAG protocols, serving as a resource for navigating the psychological and logistical demands of high-performance youth sports [6]. ## References [1] Capital Gymnastics Academy. "Competitive Team Overview." *Capital Gymnastics Website*, 2024. [2] Capital Gymnastics Academy. "Kinder Team Program Guide." *Internal Program Documentation*, 2024. [3] Capital Gymnastics Academy. "Xcel Program Handbook." *Athlete Resources*, 2024. [4] Capital Gymnastics Academy. "Junior Olympic Program Commitment Standards." *Team Policies*, 2024. [5] Capital Gymnastics Academy. "Alumni & College Commitments." *Success Metrics Report*, 2023-2024. [6] Capital Gymnastics Academy. *A Parent's Guide to Competitive Gymnastics*. Parent Education Series, 2024.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Google

110.6s
Within the USA Gymnastics (USAG) framework, **USA Gymnastics (and its sanctioned Member Clubs)** provide standardized athlete evaluations and multiple competitive team tracks beyond standard developmental levels [1]. These distinct program options include: 1. **In-House / Pre-Team League:** This program competes exclusively in-house. It is intended for younger developmental athletes (typically ages 4–8) or entry-level gymnasts focusing on skill acquisition and learning routines without the pressure, time commitments, or financial costs of a travel schedule [2]. 2. **USAG Xcel Program:** This alternative travel program offers limited weekly training, generally requiring only 2 to 3 days per week [3]. Xcel provides a sanctioned competitive experience while maintaining schedule flexibility, explicitly designed to accommodate gymnasts who wish to actively participate in other sports or school activities [4]. 3. **USAG Development Program (DP, formerly JO):** As the higher-commitment track, the DP requires intensive weekly training (often 4 to 6 days per week, totaling 15–20+ hours). This rigorous schedule inherently restricts outside sports participation [5]. The DP pathway requires strict qualification scores and leads directly to state, regional, and national championships [1]. **College Scholarships:** The Development Program, specifically at Levels 9, 10, and Elite, is the primary avenue designed to produce college-ready recruits. It serves as the recognized pipeline for securing NCAA athletic scholarships across Division I, II, and III institutions [5]. **Parent Guide:** USA Gymnastics publishes foundational resources, notably *A Parent's Guide to USA Gymnastics* and related SafeSport guides, aimed at parents supporting competitive athletes [6]. The guide’s focus is cultivating a safe, positive athletic environment. Its purpose is to educate families on SafeSport policies, healthy emotional support techniques, understanding scoring nuances, and effectively managing the heavy time and financial commitments of competitive gymnastics [6]. ## References [1] USA Gymnastics. "Women's Development Program (DP) Overview and Structure." USA Gymnastics Official Website, 2023. usagym.org. [2] USA Gymnastics. "Gymnastics for All & Member Club Intraclub Regulations." USA Gymnastics Official Website, 2023. usagym.org. [3] USA Gymnastics. "Xcel Program Rules and Policies: Mission and Schedule." USA Gymnastics Official Website, 2023. usagym.org. [4] GymnasticsHQ. "Understanding the Difference Between Xcel and the Development Program." GymnasticsHQ Resource Guide. [5] USA Gymnastics. "Collegiate Gymnastics Pathways and NCAA Recruitment Guidelines." USA Gymnastics Official Website, 2022. usagym.org. [6] USA Gymnastics. "A Parent's Guide to USA Gymnastics and Safe Sport Protections." USA Gymnastics Official Website / U.S. Center for SafeSport. usagym.org.