
Originally Posted by
Sk8n Mama
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The argument that he couldn't know because they'd always given him the PCS anyway is irrelevant. PLushenko had to have known that guys like Chan were getting higher PCS. Not to mention, the rules are the rules. In other sports, you can't argue that the last referee didn't call it as a penalty last time so it's not a penalty this time. If the rules say it's a penalty, it's a penalty. If the rules say, to get a good transitions score you need minimal crosscuts then you can't expect to do crosscuts between elements for the vast majority of your program and get a strong TR score, no matter what happened last time.
To me, Dan Hollander is right on. Ryan Miller was an outstanding goalie in men's hockey and star of the tourney but no gold for him because it's not about the most and best saves, it's about the most goals scored. The most goals scored generally shows the overall ability of the team. Dale Begg-Smith had the best turns in the moguls but he did not win the gold because it's about the best overall performance, which was given by Alex Bilodeau. And the biggest jump does not win in figure skating because it's about the overall ability of the skater. I come back to the argument I hear repeatedly that since Plushy didn't win, it's not sport. Baloney. Sports are about overall performance for the duration of the event/race/game. Plushy won the first 30 seconds of the LP, but Evan won the rest of the 4 minutes. That's how Evan became the champion. Just like you don't win the Superbowl because you had the longest pass of the game, you don't win World Series just because your player hit a home run, or in the US Open you have one great long drive that ends up right on the green. Those things are harder than a regular pass, a regular run, and an average drive....but it doesn't equate to a win, you have to put it together with everything else needed to win. Like Evan did and PLush did not.
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