Wouldn't that be really difficult to judge? (I'm not a judge and am in complete awe of judges who are able to count number of tumbling skills performed all at once, etc, so maybe I just don't understand the specifics of how it would be done.) But how would you judge eight counts of, say, tosses, or pyramids? Do you count the transitions to the skill, load in, cradle, hold, etc? All of it? What if to "max out" the skill those transitions/holds/etc were held for an extended period? What if you have different things going on at the same time? How would you count that? Would, then, a team conceivably be able to max out totally if parts of the team did different things at the same time? Would judges have to count it, say, as half an eight count if only half of the team performed the eight count of the skill at the same time?
I think it is an interesting idea, and would likely result in additional creativity (and routines looking less "compulsory" than they do now, because, let's face it - although there is creativity in skills performed, almost everyone's routines have the running tumbling/stunt/pyramid/dance sections in nearly the same place/time) I'm not sure how it would be implemented. I'm definitely no expert, however. I'm interested in your take on it.