Men - Short Program | Page 13 | Golden Skate

Men - Short Program

ks777

Record Breaker
Joined
Aug 15, 2003
I feel sorry for Chan actually. Skate Canada has been throwing these crazy marks at him for a while and I don't think he likes it cuz it just turns people against him. It's not like he asked for it eh.

You must not have seen his interviews.
 

skatinginbc

Medalist
Joined
Aug 26, 2010
But how is it showing good skating skills if you're falling in your footwork?

Chan isn't the only skater with good skating skills. Oda & Rippon are both extremely skilled in this department. Did you see the brackets leading up to Oda's 3A? And unlike Chan, he actually landed it. What kind of a performance can you give when you spend half of the time with your butt on the ice? Would any other skater in this competition been held up as massively as Chan was with this turd of a performance?

It's ridiculous that someone can be within gold medal distance when bombing nearly half of the required elements. Especially when others skated so well.

Oda and Rippon are both excellent in skating skills. However, compared to Chan, Rippon seems slower, Oda seems somewhat lacking in choreographical complexity. Who am I to judge? I am just stating my humble opinion, if you ask me. Chan's skating (not jumping) wowed me even with the three falls. I can only say it did not surprise me nor anger me when his PCS remained the highest.
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
We know about the CoP and the defenders of it for certain skaters, but Can anyone tell me what Patrick did on the PLUS side that other skaters did not? I mean, like Preaubert and Fernandez did not do any of the 'things' that Patrick was so good at as he wiped up the ice?

I can understand FALLs being a minus in the Tech, but they also disrupt the choreographed program. No? Should not the PC scores show this as minus also?

BTW. I'm a big fan of Patrick and to be honest, this was not his night and the scores were ludicrous.
 

gmyers

Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 6, 2010
I was also wondering if he could get step level 4 in spite of falling.

I can't wait to see what that step sequence was given in levels and if the judges gave him all plus threes for it on GOE because forget about his PCS his TES is astonishing.
 

skatinginbc

Medalist
Joined
Aug 26, 2010
The new "choreographical step sequence" is only skated in the FS so Chan did fall on a required step sequence.

I watched the performance on the Youtube again, and I think he successfully completed his required step sequence, which was the one with extensive one-foot skating. Under the revised rule, only one step sequence is counted in the short, am I right (Note: I am not familiar with it)?
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Number of falls is irrelevant with respect to Skating Skills. Someone could fall 6 times yet has amazing SS. But PE should take a hit depending on recovery and etc.
hmmm. You seem to be implying that Preaubert, Fernandez and others did not have SS. We had lengthy discussions on Skating Skills when CoP firs appeared, and we reached no conclusion as to what they were and the breakdown in the rules are so vague. We decided it could be used as an adjunct for the 6.0 system to keep favorites from meltdowns.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
hmmm. You seem to be implying that Preaubert, Fernandez and others did not have SS. We had lengthy discussions on Skating Skills when CoP firs appeared, and we reached no conclusion as to what they were and the breakdown in the rules are so vague. We decided it could be used as an adjunct for the 6.0 system to keep favorites from meltdowns.

uh...did I even mention Fernandez anywhere? :unsure:
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Based on people here, it seems like most people only care about the jumps not the overall quality.
Not true! The discussion is about Falls be they on Jumps, Spins, or Footwork. Falls are penalized in the Tech but that's not the end of it. Falls also disrupt the PC Flow of the Program. No?
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Since you didn't mention him I used the word implication. The sudden appearance of Skating Skills is a remnant of the 6.0 system to save favorites from a meltdown.

Fernandez was in the competition and didn't fall. He just turned out on the landing of a 3A. I can't believe that's bad overall SS for 1 jump.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Since you didn't mention him I used the word implication. The sudden appearance of Skating Skills is a remnant of the 6.0 system to save favorites from a meltdown.

What makes you think I "implied" Javier Fernandez in my posts here? Really, I want to know b/c you seem to know something about me that I don't even know.
 
Joined
Jul 11, 2003
Other than the automatic deductions in the Tech, we do not know whether judges consider Falls as poor performance. But if a ballerina falls in Swan Lake and I've seen it happen, the performance is not good and the audience lets her know it, and that is not even a competition. It's obvious too in skating - poor performance.
 

Blades of Passion

Skating is Art, if you let it be
Record Breaker
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Country
France
Base value of 4 toe is much higher than 3 lutz even with mistake under the current system, precisely because people complained last year about skaters not taking enough risk. So now Chen adds 4 toe in his program, the same people now stick it to him b/c he falls...and complained about him being overscored...

I can only say you got what you asked. You want 4 toe in SP? then don't complain if things don't go your way.

I find it hilarious that you said "sometimes I really wish some skating fans would shut up and learn a bit more about the sport before complaining about anything and everything aside from jumping counting and stating the obvious" when you don't seem to know what you're talking about. You can't even determine that Chan fell on his footwork sequence without looking at the protocol, when it is obvious he did if you watched the performance. :rolleye:

I've going to have to use the "eyeroll" emotion a lot in this thread, I can see.

Part of the reason why people stopped risking Quads was because of (A.) how much the Double Axel was worth in comparison to the Quad, and (B.) How overpenalized downgrades used to be. If you did a Quad, but underrotated it, you used to get less points than if you had done an easy 2Axel. A top skater could easily get 4.5+ points from a Double Axel whereas an underrotated Quad, a move which takes FAR more energy and places FAR more stress on the skater going into their performance, would only get 4 points at most (and likely a lot less given that other errors on the landing are more frequent for a Quad).

Even if you did land the Quad, fully rotated and cleanly, it wouldn't necessarily help you. Doing a Quad takes more energy and forces your mind to focus on that different technique, which can make the rest of the jumps in your program more difficult. Doing a good Double Axel out of a transition easily got you 4.5+ points, allowed you to focus more energy on other jumps in the program so that they get better +GOE and are more consistent, and also meant there was extra incentive to make a case for your Transitions program component.

The new rules have fixed the problem of how underrotations are scored and also increased the point difference between the Quad and easier jumps. However, the new rules have also been changed such that MESSY jumps are penalized less. This is a big problem because the penalties for mistakes were already too lenient in many cases! So now we will see people falling on Quads and receiving more points for that jump than if they had done a good Triple Flip.

Now, back to your post, Patrick didn't just fall on a Quad. If that had been his only mistake and he had skated the rest of the program up to his full potential, then I probably would have put him ahead of Adam Rippon. That wasn't his only mistake, though. He fell on his Triple Axel (a tilted, barely rotated attempt), which really sucked the life out of the program. And then when he was starting to get it back on the footwork sequence, he fell again and the performance was left with an extremely unsavory aftertaste.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
You can't even determine that Chan fell on his footwork sequence without looking at the protocol, when it is obvious he did if you watched the performance. :rolleye:

I was distracted at that precise moment with when two people required my immediate attention and I haven't been able to review what happened on tape. I didn't see, what do you expect me to say? In any event, I am not alone here in saying I am not sure re: the 3rd fall in case you haven't noticed. A regular poster here who reviewed the youtube clip posted here to say he/she believes the element was already completed and contradicted your admant observation.

When the protocol comes out and the panel determined the fall wasn't part of the element, would you then apologize for your very impolite and accusatory dismeanor?
 

Tonichelle

Idita-Rock-n-Roll
Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 27, 2003
I can understand FALLs being a minus in the Tech, but they also disrupt the choreographed program. No? Should not the PC scores show this as minus also?

IIRC it used to reflect the fall in the one point deduction and PCS (or was it GOE?) and then people whined that it was double jeopardy and unfair and they changed the rules. I could be mistaken. There are too many changes over the last eight or so years for me to keep up lol
 

gmyers

Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 6, 2010
Chan started the step sequence near the end of the SP and he fell after a Twizzle and then picked up the step sequence after he fell. I thought he was ending with the required step sequence.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
...so far, I am unable to substantiate the cries of outrage here however.

I think what people are outraged about is the fact than Patrick skated terribly yet received a high score nonetheless.

In any sport the scoring system must reward good performance and penalize bad. Looking at the protocols to see exactly how Patrick's awful performance managed to add up to so many points is just a further indictment of the scoring system -- and, indeed, of the sport itself.
 

gottadance

On the Ice
Joined
Jul 27, 2009
the bigger issue

I think the issue of the marks has been well covered - my question is why cant Patrick Chan stay upright - when was the last time he did a totally clean perofrmace? He is an outstanding skater and athlete but even his 2 world silver medals included flaws in his performance especially last years worlds. His great SS , spins and FW sequences keep him " up there " for sure , but why cant he land the jumps in the first place - is it a focus issue , a tecnical issue a nerves issue or what? I really love his skating but the constant falls or over rotations or step outs give me ulcers ? Can on eof you tecnical experts enlighten me ?
:bang:
 

enlight78

Medalist
Joined
Nov 2, 2005
After watching the Chan's program i have no quarms about his score, his skating skill are comparable a level above the rest, Oda program his empty, and adam is slow and still sophmorish, he really performed and i enjoyed the program a lot, especially the ftwk, the jumps where not there at all, chan makes gains ,speed , and flow so easily as if he dancing and not skating almost make albert looks like he is lumbering across the ice
 
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