I'm surprised all top level athletes don't always have a sports psychologist on hand and not just when things go south. Being an elite athlete is mentally and physically taxing, and the least you can do is have a therapist/psychologist to talk to.
I remember a couple of years ago around the Sochi Olympics reading a piece about Mikael Kingsbury (a Canadian moguls skier who was a gold medal contender). It was basically about him being sort of extraordinarily mentally strong and how his whole team decided it was best to just not mess with that, so he didn't do anything with a sports psychologist. He's now one of the most decorated moguls skiers of all time, so I guess it worked for him.
I mention this not to say that other athletes should be like that, but because I remember having the distinct impression reading that article that it was considered at least somewhat rare that he not be working with a sports psychologist. He seemed very much to be the exception. Now different sport, I know, but being pre-Olympic coverage, it had a fairly general lens of winter athletes IIRC.
Back on Gracie, I hope she's able to put in a good performance at Nats. It's not fun to watch an athlete struggle.