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Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

In front of a record crowd at Breslin, MSU Gymnastics' Nikki Smith finishes runner-up to UCLA's Jordan Chiles

Michigan State gymnastics delivered a season-high performance on FOX against UCLA.

By David Harns
Published on January 26, 2026

The snow arrived steadily throughout the day, threatening to derail the large turnout Michigan State Gymnastics had prepared for in the Breslin Center. It was the kind of mid-Michigan snow that closes schools, empties roads, and dares you to stay home. Instead, nearly 10,000 people chose otherwise, filing into the Breslin Center on Sunday afternoon to watch Michigan State gymnastics on a national stage.

Because this wasn’t just another meet.

With cameras rolling for a live national broadcast on FOX, the Spartans welcomed one of the sport’s bluebloods in the UCLA Bruins — a familiar measuring stick that has shaped Michigan State’s rise over the past two seasons. The crowd knew it. The teams knew it.

Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

Michigan State didn’t win the meet, but what unfolded felt bigger than a single result.

The Spartans pushed UCLA on three of the four apparatuses, posting a season-high score and coming within striking distance of the 197 mark head coach Mike Rowe identified as where the program needed to be today.

“We’re catching up,” Rowe said afterward, regarding his program's upward trajectory.

Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

These two programs have been circling each other for a while now. They traded blows last season — tight duals, championship implications, postseason collisions. UCLA edged Michigan State in Los Angeles by a tenth. They finished one-two again at the Big Ten Championships. They crossed paths once more on the sport’s biggest stage at nationals. Sunday was the next chapter.

And for the second straight season, FOX decided it was worth putting gymnastics front and center.

Last year’s meeting in Los Angeles marked the network’s first-ever live gymnastics broadcast. Sunday’s return, this time in East Lansing, said something just as important: this rivalry — and this sport — has earned a wider audience.

The meet itself carried that same sense of elevation.

Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

Michigan State opened confidently, attacking vault with intent and precision. UCLA answered with its own polish on bars, and the margin stayed narrow enough to keep the building engaged from the start.

Bars remains the event Rowe wants tightened, and he didn’t dodge that. But even there, progress showed. Fewer giveaways. Cleaner transitions. Smaller misses. The kind of improvement that doesn’t always jump off a box score but changes how a meet feels.

Beam was the turning point. Michigan State delivered one of its sharpest rotations of the season, steady and composed under real pressure. Every hit routine drew a response from the stands, a reminder that this record-setting crowd of 9,887 knew what they were watching.

Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

Floor closed the afternoon with another season-best number for the Spartans, even after UCLA had created separation.

Michigan State didn’t fade. Instead, it finished strong — an important detail against a program built on closing power.

At the center of it all was Nikki Smith. Coming back from injury, balancing readiness with restraint, she looked fully herself again — confident, composed, and impactful across all four events.

She finished second in the all-around, trailing only Jordan Chiles, one of multiple Olympians competing on the floor Sunday.

Michigan State’s own Lilia Cosman was part of that Olympic presence, sharing the stage with athletes whose careers stretch beyond college gymnastics.

Rowe noticed the environment immediately. The buzz. The energy. The way his team fed off it.

Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated

“When the competition comes in here, the tickets sell like crazy,” he said. “The energy (at Breslin) is electric.”

That electricity mattered. It showed in the performances. It showed in the scoring. It showed in the way Michigan State competed — not cautiously, not hopefully, but assertively, like a program that expects to be in these moments now.

The final score still favored UCLA. That’s reality. But the larger picture tilted toward progress.

Two programs that have won championships the past few seasons. Two Olympians sharing the floor. A national audience watching. A snowstorm outside. A packed Breslin Center inside.

Michigan State didn’t just host a meet Sunday afternoon. It hosted a statement about where this program is — and where it’s going.

More photos by Spartans Illustrated's Marvin Hall:

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