Triple-Triple penalty under CoP | Page 4 | Golden Skate

Triple-Triple penalty under CoP

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Very creative attempt, I am impressed! :) But you know me, I am never easy. :biggrin: I am going to hit you back with this:

1) 3Lz+3Lo
2) 3A+3T
3) 3F
4) 2A+1Lo*+3S
5) 3A
6) 3Lz
7) 2A

ARRRGGH, you got me!

No...wait...

The stipulation (see post number 1) was for a seven triple program. :)

Ah, I see why you didn't get my intention. Because I don't believe the tiny little "GOE Potential" is real.

I agree with that, especially in regard to some of the bizarre programs that we have been coming up with.

But I think the basic idea -- as,for instance, detailed by Serious Business -- is this. Compare these two:

(a) 3Lz+3T and solo 2A

(b) 2A+3T and solo 3Lz.

(a) is much harder. So much so that only a tiny handful of women in the world are capable if doing it at all. As for GOEs, the extra .2 in potential (if all jumps are worth +3 GOE in both cases) is not very important, but the possibility of getting negative GOEs for wonky landings, not to mention downgrades, is greater for (a) than for (b).

I agree that it is possible that the judges will be so impressed with a satisfactory 3Lz+3T that they might give it higher GOE than it deserves, and I also beliebve that this judges' good will might be carried over into other parts of the scoring, like PCSs.

Still, giving a really hard element a positive GOE when it deserves a 0, and giving extra points in Interpretation because the skater did a really hard element, is not the way the CoP is supposed to work.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Mathman, I must admit the examples wallylutz gave are tricky--but notice how it's essential that there be a sequence involving a triple in the layout, and a curve ball double jump like a double lutz. I certainly never thought a skater would ever plan a non-axel double to occupy an entire jumping pass.

All listed layouts contain only jump cobminations, no sequences. The inclusion of double Lutz is nothing new. When you have an extra jumping pass to spare, you can easily work that in, spice it up like hands over head, in the middle of your footwork or right out of a spin, or delayed rotation in the air, something like that to make sure it becomes an integral part of the choreography, which helps to earn higher component marks and no to mention, very good chance to earn +3 GOE since with such an easy jump, you can really be creative with it and leave judges no choice but giving you high GOE marks. It's worth about as much as a simple Level 3 spin when executed well.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
ARRRGGH, you got me!

No...wait...

The stipulation (see post number 1) was for a seven triple program. :)

No problem, take this:

1) 3Lz+3Lo
2) 3A+3T
3) 2Lz
4) 2A+1Lo*+3S
5) 3A
6) 3Lz
7) 2A

Now, it's really game over. 7 Triples in this layout, containing two 3/3 and two repeated Triples making it impossible to connect with each other.

:biggrin:

Thanks for playing, better luck next time. :)
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Another reason that people mention for wanting to change the scoring of combos is that under the current rules a 2Lo+3Lo gets the same base value as a 3Lo+2Lo, even though the first one is harder.

Well, this has been discussed before. The consensus is that judges will likely give 2Lo+3Lo a higher GOE to compensate because the Triple jump can be considered as being preceded by a creative or difficult entry. And if you do it like Midori Ito, it's hard not to give +3 GOE on that.
 

ivy

On the Ice
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
I've been reading this whole discussion in both forums with fascination. Thanks to all for such an great exchange of ideas. Over all I'd say I don't think difficult combinations are given the bonus they deserve. I'm most partial with each combo being given a certain value, since I see the combo as one element.

I'm not sure why the ISU waned to diminish the value of GoEs - maybe they worry it's too subjective. I would go the the other way and give skaters with exceptional elements even more points - be they jumps, spins or spiral/step sequences.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
(I am not sure whether this discussion is about mathematical possibliites involving the weirdest stuff we can imagine, or whether it is about things that someone might actually do.)

Clearly, it's both. You'll notice however I focus my discussion on what's actually doable or have been done by ladies before. I certainly wasn't the one who suggested ladies can do 3A+3Lo, that you have to ask Krislite in his fantasia post #1.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Haha. Well, my original point, which got sidetracked a bit, was that for any difficult layout involving one or more triple-triple combos, it is possible to rearrange the jumps in that layout to make it much easier to execute without reducing the base value. In particular, I had in mind removing the triple-triple combinations. (Hence the Triple-triple "penalty")

I believe my proposition still holds for layouts that don't have triple-triple sequences.

No, you don't. Because there were no sequences in any of the presented layouts. In fact, some of the Mathman's counter-examples, in his futile attempt to defend his modified theorem actually ended up making it much harder to execute, like the 3Lz+Half Loop+3F combination. If my memory is correct, I have only seen it done a few times in the 6.0 era, roughly 10 years ago and that's in a men's competition, not ladies.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Even ruling out that sort of thing I think there is still a problem in getting rid of both triple-triples by substituting in the two double Axels.

3Lz+3T
3Lz
3F+3Lo
3F
2A+2T+2Lo
2A
3S

Exactly, all it does at best, is knocking off the 2Lz, hardly the end of the world. But it's illogical not to use the half Loop option when it's now legal building bloc of jump combination.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
But I think the basic idea -- as,for instance, detailed by Serious Business -- is this. Compare these two:

(a) 3Lz+3T and solo 2A

(b) 2A+3T and solo 3Lz.

(a) is much harder. So much so that only a tiny handful of women in the world are capable if doing it at all. As for GOEs, the extra .2 in potential (if all jumps are worth +3 GOE in both cases) is not very important, but the possibility of getting negative GOEs for wonky landings, not to mention downgrades, is greater for (a) than for (b).

I agree that it is possible that the judges will be so impressed with a satisfactory 3Lz+3T that they might give it higher GOE than it deserves, and I also beliebve that this judges' good will might be carried over into other parts of the scoring, like PCSs.

Still, giving a really hard element a positive GOE when it deserves a 0, and giving extra points in Interpretation because the skater did a really hard element, is not the way the CoP is supposed to work.

I don't think doing a really hard element would gather positive GOE when it deserves 0, you haven't seen how Asada's 3A has been scored by the judges. The element still needs to be really well executed in order to get positive GOE, regardless of the technical difficulty performed. A hard element that is less than perfect will still be scored as such. But to get to +2 and +3 in GOE, some emotional stimulus always help. Judges are humans too. When you see 15 3Lz+2T combos in the competition but one person did a 3Lz+3T and did it really well, it just stands out no matter what.

PCS does have a tendency to go up slightly with reputation and clean skate despite the best intentions. However, that's just part of being human unless you want robots to score figure skating competitions.
 

Krislite

Medalist
Joined
Sep 22, 2010
Clearly, it's both. You'll notice however I focus my discussion on what's actually doable or have been done by ladies before. I certainly wasn't the one who suggested ladies can do 3A+3Lo, that you have to ask Krislite in his fantasia post #1.

Let me make this clear: the fantastic example of two 3A+3L combos is meant to demonstrate not any realistic program doable by a male or female figure skater, but to show how UNJUST CoP is with respect to difficult combinations. I wanted to come up with the most absurdly difficult non-quad combinations in a ladies long program and show how it's hardly anywhere near the maximum technical score possible, and can be bested by easier layouts. You demonstrated this point yourself by constructing an easier layout but with MORE base value, namely

1) 3Lz+3T
2) 3A+3Lo
3) 3F
4) 3A
5) 3Lz
6) 2A+2Lo*+3S
7) 2A

Here you have only one 3A+3L instead of the 3A+3L, 3A+3L, and 3Lz+3T+2L combos all in one program. Yet you yourself calculated a much higher base value for your own example.
 

wallylutz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Let me make this clear: the fantastic example of two 3A+3L combos is meant to demonstrate not any realistic program doable by a male or female figure skater, but to show how UNJUST CoP is with respect to difficult combinations. I wanted to come up with the most absurdly difficult non-quad combinations in a ladies long program and show how it's hardly anywhere near the maximum technical score possible, and can be bested by easier layouts. You demonstrated this point yourself by constructing an easier layout but with MORE base value, namely

1) 3Lz+3T
2) 3A+3Lo
3) 3F
4) 3A
5) 3Lz
6) 2A+2Lo*+3S
7) 2A

Here you have only one 3A+3L instead of the 3A+3L, 3A+3L, and 3Lz+3T+2L combos all in one program. Yet you yourself calculated a much higher base value for your own example.

That was a direct response to your "ultimate ladies FS layout" example. If you haven't gone that route, I would not have replied in kind in order to make a point re: the secondary benefit of 3/3 combos aside from freeing up jumping passes. Although in my example, I have to say that if I switch the 3Lo to be with 3Lz and give the 3T to 3A, then women have been shown to be able to do all the listed jumps in the past.
 

Blades of Passion

Skating is Art, if you let it be
Record Breaker
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Country
France
IMHO Blade of Passion’s idea is the right one. Each combination separately should be evaluated as to difficulty and given a base value as a unit. In execution, this would not make the scoring system more complicated for technical specialists and judges (although fans would have to memorize a longer scale of values :) ), because the arithmetic is all done in the computer anyway.
It is too complicated, requiring a revamping of the entire scoring system plus change of requirements. Jumps still commend much higher points than other elements so the 3 proposed elective elements would be elected to be jumping passes.

It's not too complicated at all (Mathman provided some illumination earlier) and you've also not done the math correctly. There wouldn't be incentive for all of the elective elements to be extra jumping passes and extra jumps in combination unless the skater is a truly phenomenal jumper. For example, let's look at the technical layout of Evan Lysacek's Olympic program:

3Lutz+3Toe
3Axel
3Sal
CSSp
CiSt
3Axel+2Toe
3Loop
3Flip+2Toe+2Loop
3Lutz
2Axel
FSSp
SlSt
CCoSp

This is the maximum amount of elements allowed under the current rules. Under the revised rules, this would be too many jumps performed. In order to include both footwork sequences, he would have to take out either the 2Axel or the 2Loop in combination. A 2Axel would be worth 2.5 points and a 2Loop done on the end of a relatively easy 3Flip+2Toe combination would be worth less than 2.5 points. Why would he choose to include one of those jumps instead of a Footwork sequence that would score him 4+ points?

In fact, he would likely take out two jump elements and include an extra spin (or even a 3rd footwork sequence) in the program, because those would also score higher than simply throwing that 2Toe onto the end of the 3Flip. His program would instead be more like this:

3Lutz+3Toe+2Loop (a 3-jump combination would mainly only be worthwhile if it was more difficult; we wouldn't be seeing superfluous Triple-Double-Double or 2Axel-Double-Double combinations)
3Axel+3Toe (more points for doing the 3Toe on the end of the Triple Axel; this difficult combination would become standard again in Men's skating)
CSSp
3Sal
CiSt
FCCoSp
3Axel
3Loop
FSSp
2Axel
SlSt
3Flip (there would also be an incentive for placing a jumping pass very late in the program, especially a jump more difficult than a 2Axel, so he would likely save this until later given how his stamina was a strength)
CCoSp

A program like this would be FAR more exciting/satisfying and that's what the revised rules would promote - jumping passes with a higher degree of difficulty and jumps spread out more throughout the program, as well as less jumps in total, rather than just cramming a bunch of jumping passes and relatively easy combination jumps directly after the 50% mark of the program.
 
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antmanb

Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 5, 2004
Just on the 3A/3Lp question - did Eric Millot ever do that combination in the mid 90s? I seem to recall a 3Lp/3Lp from him and think he was attempting 3A/3Lp i'm just not sure he ever attempted or landed on competition.

Ant
 

gkelly

Record Breaker
Joined
Jul 26, 2003
I don't think so. He did attempt 3F+3Lo, though.

As far as I know, the only guys who were trying 3A+3Lo were Hollander, Denommee, and Abt. The Abt example linked above looked pretty good, maybe 0 GOE. :)
 

Serious Business

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 7, 2011
Blades of Passion, I forgot to say that I LOVE your idea of having wildcard element slots in the FS (and less required elements). It's needed to put more of the free back in free skate, and would encourage a wider variety of programs and skaters to succeed. In fact I wager that some form of this will inevitably happen in the COP. The choreographed step and spiral sequence without level requirements is a step in that direction. I'd also wager that sooner or later jump combinations will get a bonus. I just wish all this could happen sooner because skaters and fans deserve those improvements now.
 
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