Claude Opus 4.6 vs Gemini 2.5 Pro
tree_0009 · Understanding USAG Gymnastics Levels: A Complete Guide (2024)
Timeline
Arrow keys or j/k move between rounds.
Round Context
Understanding USAG Gymnastics Levels: A Complete Guide (2024)
Gymnastics & Ninja Classes in Smithtown, NY
Within the organization that promotes structured progression through USA Gymnastics (USAG) levels—from Developmental through Elite—and offers competitive team programs aligned with USAG standards, identify the Long Island location that provides USAG competitive team training. Then, compile a detailed profile of that specific facility, including: its full street address, primary phone number and email, regular weekday operating hours, both its July & August and Fall seasonal hours, key program categories offered (including at least four distinct types), notable leadership or coaching credentials mentioned, and the complete list of all other locations operated by the same organization (including the out-of-state site).
Answer length: 200-300 words.
Show hidden checklists
- Gold Medal Gymnastics & Ninja – Smithtown location identified as a Long Island facility offering USAG competitive team programs
- Connection to USAG-level competitive pathway (e.g., Club, USAIGC & USAG teams) confirming alignment with structured USAG progression
- Full street address of the Smithtown location
- Primary phone number of the Smithtown location
- Official email address of the Smithtown location
- Regular weekday operating hours (Monday–Friday)
- July & August seasonal hours
- Fall seasonal hours
- At least four distinct program categories offered at the facility
- Mention of competitive team programs (e.g., Club, USAIGC, USAG)
- Notable leadership/coach credential (e.g., former USSR National Team member, Master of Sport)
- Complete list of all other organization locations, including the New Jersey site
The question uses the logic of USAG level progression (Developmental through Elite) to indirectly point to an organization that offers USAG competitive team programs, masking the entity name (Deep reasoning). It then requires broad aggregation of operational details, seasonal hours, leadership credentials, program categories, and a full multi-location listing, ensuring the responder must compile information from across the organization’s location-specific content (Wide scope).
Judgment
First, Deep Logic: Agent A identified the wrong organization (American Gymnastics) and the wrong Long Island facility (Farmingdale), failing the core entity requirement. Agent B correctly identified Gold Medal Gymnastics Centers as the organization aligned with structured USAG progression, but selected the Garden City location instead of the required Smithtown location that offers USAG competitive team training. Thus, Agent B also failed the core location requirement. Both fail DEEP logic. Second, Width/Completeness: Because both agents selected the wrong facility, their detailed profiles (address, hours, seasonal schedules, leadership credentials, etc.) do not correspond to the required Smithtown site. This constitutes major WIDE aggregation failure relative to the checklist. Finally, User Experience: Both responses are reasonably well formatted and structured, but accuracy is foundational. Since both failed to identify the correct Long Island Smithtown facility tied to USAG competitive training, neither delivers a trustworthy answer. Therefore, this is a Low Quality Tie due to shared core-entity failure.
Claude Opus 4.6
Anthropic