Hamilton Shares His Thoughts on Judging System | Golden Skate

Hamilton Shares His Thoughts on Judging System

Zazanuka

Rinkside
Joined
Mar 19, 2006
http://www.ifsmagazine.com/forum/

In a recent interview with IFS, "Skate God" Scott Hamilton shared his thoughts on the new judging system, how the viewing public is reacting to it and offers some insightful tips for young skaters when conducting interviews.
IFS: Do you think that the new judging system has changed the way skaters and coaches approach the development of competitive programs? If so, what are your thoughts on that?

Hamilton: “Absolutely. Now skaters have to conform to the expectations and limitations of the system. The new judging system was created to make skating more of a sport. Philosophically, Ithink it is great but, in practice, does anybody care? There is not one step in any program that does not matter but does that translate to a viewing audience that will support the industry? No it doesn’t. It is confusing and it excludes the viewing public because now the judging process is disguised.”


note from mod: please remember to not post material in its entirety. Thanks.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Zazanuka

Rinkside
Joined
Mar 19, 2006
You are not really allowed to be different anymore.

I disagree. Sasha, Irina, Weir, Brian, Denkova, Navka – ALL these people are different.
 

Zazanuka

Rinkside
Joined
Mar 19, 2006
When I saw what Evgeni Plushenko did at the Olympic exhibition it blew me right out of my chair. Both hairs on my head were standing straight up because it was awesome.

I agree!! :clap: :clap: :clap:
 

nymkfan51

Medalist
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
There is a lot of truth to most of what he said, IMO. My main complaint of the NJS is the same as his. The component scores have been laughable. Just because a skater scores well in one of those marks, does not mean he/she should get high scores across the board. Each category should be judged as a separate entity. Now I understand the argument that the judges don't have the time to look at each one individually, so hopefully that can be rectified. Aren't they going to experiment this year with a different set of judges looking at just the components? Or did I just dream that up in one of my fantasies? :laugh:

And I also agree that the programs looked so alike this season ... and not necessarily for the better. The skaters spent so much time trying to squeeze as many elements as they could into a program, that there seemed to be less connection to me as part of the audience. Maybe not in every single case, but more often than not.
I don't hate the NJS and think it could work better if they changed some things. Hopefully they will.
 

hockeyfan228

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton]:You know it used to be apples, oranges, pineapples, plums – all those amazing colours, dimensions, textures and flavors. Now it is pretty much apples.”
Because Joubert is exactly the same as Lambiel. Because Weir is exactly the same as either of them. Because Sandhu is just a cog in an assembly line. Because if you put the strip across their eyes and watched them skate, you couldn't tell the difference between Plushenko, Lambiel, or Buttle, the Olympic podium. Or Savoie, Smith, Ward, Othman, Pfeifer, Zelenka, Nurmenkari, Dobrin, Griazev, Klimkin, Oda, Takahashi, Sawyer, Young, Craig, Li, Smalun, Lindemann, Contesti, Preaubert, Berntsson, Chiper, Dinev, or van der Perren. And that's just the men.

Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton] What Plushenko did athletically and artistically on the ice in his gala performance was what I was expecting from him in the Olympic competition. But he did not have to do any of that in the actual competition to win.
And neither did Hamilton when he underwhelmingly defied expectations and won his Olympic medal. And I seem to remember that was under 6.0.

Zazanuka said:
“Right now the judges are not really looking at the transitions, compared to choreography, compared to execution. They are looking at them all the same. If you have great choreography you have great transitions – not true. They are judging them all the same. “
ITA. Preaching to the choir. Same as 6.0, and need improvement more than anyone else.

Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton:]You can only be different in exhibition skating because the whole sport is based on Olympic eligibility, which essentially makes the exhibitions insignificant. No one takes them seriously anymore.”
Is he smoking? The cost of the exhibition at TEB was as much as tickets to the rest of the competition combined. Exhibitions are the only performance in which all of the healthy top skaters appear in one batch. The only reason exhibitions aren't completely packed is because they are on Sunday afternoon, and many people have to leave early. This, in my opinion, is the reason to make people pay for it separately: when it was part of the competition ticket package, there were empty seats because of people who had to leave early to catch planes. At least now, the seats can be purchased by locals, if the visitors opt out, but there's not a lot of good marketing to the local community for the exhibitions.

Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton:] “Before, earning an Olympic medal was your kind of diploma. From there you stepped into a world where you had to learn how to touch an audience. The programs today do not have the same impact as what Torvill and Dean or Kristi did or what Kurt does as a professional.
So why is he complaining about eligible programs now? Sounds like the same as in his time, except that skaters don't have to leave eligible competition and go pro for financial reasons .

Based on his current exhibition material, Plushenko could go pro and blow away today's Pro field, which is something that only Curry, Cranston, and Torvill and Dean could do in their time. A healthy Kwan would have dominated, unless Slutskaya joined her in the professional ranks. It's not like Browning or Gordeeva/Grinkov or Yuka Sato stepped into professional skating and morphed immediately into their best professional selves. While there are lots of boring girl programs among the eligibles (men and women), the pro ranks had one The Sweater to every 15 Celine Dion-like ballad. In my opinion, many current eligible skaters have improved their exhibitions to a level that would be highly competitive in a pro field, which was rarely the case a decade or two ago.

And whom is Hamilton hiring now? Jennifer Robinson, Todd Eldredge, Ina/Zimmerman, Michael Weiss. Not exactly the most interesting or innovative skaters in the lot. I don't see Hamilton making an offer that they couldn't refuse to Rohene Ward, Savchenko/Szolkowy (especially now that Steur has taken the spotlight with his issues), Delobel/Schoenfelder, Drobriazko/Vanagas, Petrova/Tikhonov (who do great exhibition skates), Ryan Bradley, Kristoffer Berntsson, or any of the Mexican skaters, like Moyron and the Cantu sisters, who are superb showmen and have no less technical skills than Rory Burghart or Caryn Kadavy or Nicole Bobek in their pro days. Or to Neil Wilson, who had no 3A or 3L, but whose spins make Eldredge's look like Joubert's pre-CoP and would have been competitive with Lambiel's. Let alone Abt, Murvanidze, and Lobacheva/Averbukh, who are doing just fine on the Russian tours.

Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton:] “I understand the ISU changed the system for the sport and I like many things about it. But I am hoping that this judging system will diminish the revenues on the amateur side of the sport enough so that skaters will turn professional and actually skate for an audience.
That's the gist of the issue: he doesn't have and hasn't made a ready pool of professional skaters, in which pro competitions and shows grow the audience for each other. But on the other hand, how many people got bored with professional skating, not because the skaters were the same, but because they performed the same routines over and over again, in shows and countless "Wars"?


Zazanuka said:
[Hamilton:]If you fall you lost a jumping pass. Now we have something that is dramatic.
No, what you get are reliable 3/3's.
 

Ptichka

Forum translator
Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 28, 2003
Zazanuka said:
“Yes. When I saw what Evgeni Plushenko did at the Olympic exhibition it blew me right out of my chair. Both hairs on my head were standing straight up because it was awesome. What Plushenko did athletically and artistically on the ice in his gala performance was what I was expecting from him in the Olympic competition. But he did not have to do any of that in the actual competition to win. He had no transitions in his free skate – none! But he got higher scores than Matt Savoie for transitions – and Matt Savoie is the transition king! So are you judging it or not? Component scores is a muscle that will build over time and once skaters are getting true feedback, hopefully the results will become more colourful.

“Right now the judges are not really looking at the transitions, compared to choreography, compared to execution. They are looking at them all the same. If you have great choreography you have great transitions – not true. They are judging them all the same. “

In other words, the components score is just as subjective today as it was under the old system. No improvement, but nothing became worse either. As to what Plushenko had to do to win - yes, he could have that non-program for his free because he was just so much stronger than the competition. Had Lambiel jumped as well as Plushenko, the latter would have had to put out the more complex choreography out there.

“Look at Philippe Candeloro who won two Olympic medals on personality alone. He became a huge favorite in the U.S., Japan and Europe. Why? Because he was different. Could he skate? That was debatable. Could he go from one end of the rink to the other on one foot? I am not convinced. I loved watching him skate. He made an impression on people because he was different. You are not really allowed to be different anymore. You can only be different in exhibition skating because the whole sport is based on Olympic eligibility, which essentially makes the exhibitions insignificant. No one takes them seriously anymore.”
What exactly is the point? That it was right for Candeloro to have gotten his medals over Barna in '92? In '94 he got his bronze because Victor, Brian B. and Kurt all melted down. A skater can still be different, but he should have better skills to win medals in this sport.

Hamilton: “Before, earning an Olympic medal was your kind of diploma. From there you stepped into a world where you had to learn how to touch an audience. The programs today do not have the same impact as what Torvill and Dean or Kristi did or what Kurt does as a professional. Look at what Gordeeva and Grinkov did as professionals. What I tried to do as a professional. There is not that same depth of artistry and unique impact because skaters are all being forced into the same little box.”
Hmmm... CoP only affects eligible skating, so what does professional programs have to do with this? Also, I'd argue that Denkova & Stavijski's FD, Sasha Cohen's SP, Plushenko's exhibition are all as good artistically as anything done a decade ago.

Hamilton: “I understand the ISU changed the system for the sport and I like many things about it. But I am hoping that this judging system will diminish the revenues on the amateur side of the sport enough so that skaters will turn professional and actually skate for an audience. Skaters have never been so athletically accomplished yet they have never been looked upon with greater indifference by the general public.”
As it is, people are turning pro after their major medals. Without those credentials (a "diploma" as Hamilton calls it) they can't get good pro deals. I've read an interview with Valova where she said that from a sports perspective she did not regret that she and Vasiliev did not go pro after '84 since they did a lot of great skating in the next 4 years, but that when they did go in '88 they weren't nearly as marketable because they were no longer the reigning Olympic champions. So I think Scott is being rather naive here.

Hamilton:“The sport is doing just fine – it is really becoming a sport – however, does anybody really care? I watched the Olympics and said wow! If you fall on that quad you don’t get 5 points – it is not the same as landing a triple flip. If you fall you lost a jumping pass. Now we have something that is dramatic. We are not going to reward someone for falling anymore. You can’t. I think that sends a message that you are going to see some pretty solid routines and once the judges understand the component scores and judge them properly we will see a difference. “
OK, I do agree with him there. I do, however, hope that it's the CoP growing pains. Those things are, after all, not too difficult to iron out (I don't want to go into more detail on this since it has already been discussed to death on GS).
 

Ptichka

Forum translator
Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 28, 2003
hockeyfan228 said:
And whom is Hamilton hiring now? Jennifer Robinson, Todd Eldredge, Ina/Zimmerman, Michael Weiss. Not exactly the most interesting or innovative skaters in the lot. I don't see Hamilton making an offer that they couldn't refuse to Rohene Ward, Savchenko/Szolkowy (especially now that Steur has taken the spotlight with his issues), Delobel/Schoenfelder, Drobriazko/Vanagas, Petrova/Tikhonov (who do great exhibition skates), Ryan Bradley, Kristoffer Berntsson, or any of the Mexican skaters, like Moyron and the Cantu sisters, who are superb showmen and have no less technical skills than Rory Burghart or Caryn Kadavy or Nicole Bobek in their pro days. Or to Neil Wilson, who had no 3A or 3L, but whose spins make Eldredge's look like Joubert's pre-CoP and would have been competitive with Lambiel's. Let alone Abt, Murvanidze, and Lobacheva/Averbukh, who are doing just fine on the Russian tours.
Great point! Rohene would have made an excelent addition to the tour. The audiences would love him - but of course his name wouldn't exactly sell tickets!
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
ita nymkfan51. It's those PCS components. The judges do not have the time limit to peruse that fascit of the scoring system for proper correct judging. I agree with the proviso that there should be two sets of judges one for the technical and one for the PCS scores.

Mind you, those PCS components - all of them - are subjective in kind. It's not a question of honest judging, it is a question of cultural differences and in some case fan prejudices.

for example, choreography by Wilson has gotten raves from some and others have just thought him overrated. Similarly with Morozov.

Transitions, Musicality, Interpretation, etc., all have their drawbacks with cultural ties in life. This passion one speaks of is basically what one learns as a child in whatever environment he/she grew up in. Some people cry at funerals, others are stoic. I believe they both feel emotional but show it differently.

A separate order of PCS judges for the Cop would alleviate some but not all of these cultural differences.

Joe
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
As for Plushenko since he was pointed out. His Oly LP was dismal but I still would have placed him first but not with such high scores. The guy for me is a weak uninteresting spinner. It was another drab Tosca. No interpretation. Choreography was standard. I was not impessed with the performance but as a sport he did what he had to do to win. He has high up/down jumps and perfectly executed.

This jumping skill sells the whole program for most judges. Goes for the 3x3s of the ladies, too.

Joe
 

nymkfan51

Medalist
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Joesitz said:
As for Plushenko since he was pointed out. His Oly LP was dismal but I still would have placed him first but not with such high scores. The guy for me is a weak uninteresting spinner. It was another drab Tosca. No interpretation. Choreography was standard. I was not impessed with the performance but as a sport he did what he had to do to win. He has high up/down jumps and perfectly executed.Joe

I agree Joe. The point is that if the judges were marking the components correctly, Plushenko wouldn't have been that far ahead of everyone all season and at the Olympics. I agree he deserved the gold, but how do we know he would have landed all his jumps as well as he did if the point difference between him and the others wasn't so great? I think most people would agree that the more stress there is on a skater, the more likely it is that they will make a mistake. He may have done just as well anyway, but we will never know.
 

hockeyfan228

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
Ptichka said:
Great point! Rohene would have made an excelent addition to the tour. The audiences would love him - but of course his name wouldn't exactly sell tickets!
So he had to wait for an invitation from Plushenko to skate in Russia...
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
“Look at Philippe Candeloro who won two Olympic medals on personality alone. He became a huge favorite in the U.S., Japan and Europe. Why? Because he was different. Could he skate? That was debatable. Could he go from one end of the rink to the other on one foot? I am not convinced...
:rofl: OK, sorry, but that was funny.

Ptitchka, I don't think Scott was making any particular point except that in the good old days there were some real characters around, whereas now everyone is just blah (in Scott's opinion).

“I understand the ISU changed the system for the sport and I like many things about it. But I am hoping that this judging system will diminish the revenues on the amateur side of the sport enough so that skaters will turn professional and actually skate for an audience."
I agree with Hockeyfan that this is the main thrust of Hamilton's editorializing. I think he has a point. Scott himself wanted to "make figure skating more like a sport" when he was competing, and to prove it he wore a speedskater's suit instead of a sequined bolero jacket.

The CoP does weigh in on the side of "more like a sport," at the cost of "less like the Ice Capades." What killed professional skating more than anything else was the change in the eligibility rules that allowed skaters to continue competing as athletes while still making a living in the business. A skater like Michelle Kwan, for instance -- she could skate as long as she wants, and make as much money as she wants, while still satisfying whatever creative and performance interests she might have by going on tour and skating in shows and exhibitions. She doesn't need to go anywhere to "go pro."

I think Scott will get half his wish. Revenue for the sport as a whole will continue to decline. Just one of those things. As far as the public is concerned, interest in anything ebbs and flows, for no discernible reason. Why was NASCAR so hot a couple of seasons ago, and now it's not?

The part about, "then skaters will be forced to turn to professional shows to make money, which will spark a rebirth of interest in pro skating" -- maybe not.
 
Last edited:

Tonichelle

Idita-Rock-n-Roll
Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 27, 2003
Ptichka said:
Great point! Rohene would have made an excelent addition to the tour. The audiences would love him - but of course his name wouldn't exactly sell tickets!


the problem is - SOI isn't sanctioned by the US... while skaters outside the US can join the tour and still keep their eligibility, US skaters can't without special permission... and that doesn't work all the time...
 

Ptichka

Forum translator
Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 28, 2003
Tonichelle said:
the problem is - SOI isn't sanctioned by the US... while skaters outside the US can join the tour and still keep their eligibility, US skaters can't without special permission... and that doesn't work all the time...
Notice that Hockeyfan said "offer they can't refuse"; I took that to mean an offer so good that it would be worth the skater's while to say "bye bye" to eligible sport and just turn pro. And I chose Rohene as an example because, much as I love his skating, I don't believe he has any future in competitive sport (though I'd love to be proven wrong on that one).
 

Zuranthium

Match Penalty
Joined
Mar 30, 2006
His comments were intelligent and insightful, as always.

I am SOOOOO glad that he brought up the issue of still getting 5 points if you fall on a Quad Toe. The negative GOE scale needs to continue on a sliding scale, not just stop at 1 for all jumps from 3Toe and up. I was a bit unsure of my own skating knowledge when I judged it wasn't fair, but it turns out the professionals agree with me and I really do understand this sport/art.
 

soogar

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 18, 2003
Zuranthium said:
His comments were intelligent and insightful, as always.

I am SOOOOO glad that he brought up the issue of still getting 5 points if you fall on a Quad Toe. The negative GOE scale needs to continue on a sliding scale, not just stop at 1 for all jumps from 3Toe and up. I was a bit unsure of my own skating knowledge when I judged it wasn't fair, but it turns out the professionals agree with me and I really do understand this sport/art.

What's wrong with a skater getting points for risk. At least Buttle had the guts to try a quad and know that most likely he will fall and have to skate the rest of his program out. Evan, Matt and Weir could have done that tactic as well and most likely Evan would have gotten an Olympic medal. The only reason people are b!tching about Buttle is because Buttle was very open about trying a quad as a tactic even though he doesn't have one. However it's not any different than another skater like Joubert or Lambiel trying a quad and falling on it (or a 3 axel in Lambiel's case). I don't think anyone would argue that there should be some credit in trying risk. Under 6.0, Midori fell on her first 3 axel in the Olympics and then landed a 2nd one toward the end of a lackluster program and was awarded 5.9's.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
soogar said:
What's wrong with a skater getting points for risk.
I think the objection is that there is no risk. A fall on a quad toe gets you 5.0 points. A successful triple toe gets you 4.0 points. Where's the risk?

True, the judges might lower your PCSs if the fall disrupts the program. Nah, ask Zhang and Zhang. The judges are more likely to reward you for giving it a go.

A quad also carries an extra reward because it does not count in with your triples, Zayak-wise. You can do quad-toe/fall/omit the triple toe that you had planned in combo, then triple flip/triple toe, then quad toe (fall) -- get credit for a phantom "+combo" even though you didn't do one -- then solo triple toe. You've got a ton of points, no Zayak problems, you're on your way to a medal!
 

soogar

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 18, 2003
Mathman said:
I think the objection is that there is no risk. A fall on a quad toe gets you 5.0 points. A successful triple toe gets you 4.0 points. Where's the risk?

!

Well there are a lot of skaters who don't skate well after they take a fall. Personally I think Buttle is one of the toughest competitors out there because he can plan a fall and then continue with his program. If falling on a quad wasn't such a big deal, then how come Weir was so chicken to try one in the LP. Especially since he was knocking out 4-3-3 and 4-3 in practice at the Olympics and they were beauties. Looking at Weir in the Games, not doing an element threw his whole program off. Other skaters made mistakes and then made even more (ie Sandhu).

The risk is that a skater can fall on a hard element and then wind up messing up an easier element because of the earlier fall.
 

attyfan

Custom Title
Medalist
Joined
Mar 1, 2004
I have to agree with Scott regarding eliminating the "reward" for falling on a quad. Unless the ISU likes TV ratings and ticket sales in the "abysmally low" rang, the ISU needs to encourage clean programs. No one likes to watch splat fests. One thing that stimulates interest in skating after a strongly skated Olys is the idea that "I want to see more of this..." However, no one is going to watch skating to see falls -- especially after these Olys when the falls (especially
D & L) posed the risk of serious injury (if people want to watch athletes get hurt, they will watch boxing or rugby, instead). Furthermore, a lot of people get their idea of skating from Olys -- if the programs are not clean, no one will want to watch pro shows, either, since they have no way of knowing how the pro shows/events differ from the Oly eligible.
 
Top