Well, I'm all in favor of CoP. I think it is a much better system than the old politically subverted 6.0 system. First of all, there IS NO SUCH THING AS PERFECTION! People are fallible, they cannot do anything perfectly. A score of 6.0 is so subjective as to be ludicrous IMO. Maybe the 6.0 system was easier to understand, but do you want to cheapen a sport with simplistic scoring or allow the sport to truly reflect the complexity and difficulty of its true nature? Figure skating is a sophisticated, highly demanding, very athletic, technical and artistic enterprise that deserves a scoring system capable of reflecting that. I don't think the simplistic and naive 6.0 system met that criteria.
When you revisit CoP scores for skaters 25 years from now, a combined score of say 250 for ladies, will reflect programs that are more accomplished than the programs of today - and that reality would be there for all to see (just look at YouTube or it's successor). With the 6.0 system, there is noway to see any progress, a 30 year old 6.0 program is as good as a 6.0 program of today - that is just ridiculous. Peggy Flemings beautiful 1968 OGM programs were lovely, but they do not compare to Yuna Kim's 2010 OGM programs in technical content or in the complexity of combining artistic elements within a more difficult technical framework. If the CoP existed in Peggy's time we would at least have a metric to help distinguish what was superior in Yuna's programs and what was superior in Peggy's. I think that is valuable information. No system is perfect and CoP is still reliant on many subjective judgments (which at least are made visible in the detailed breakdown of the actual scoring), but figure skating is not as simple to score as the high-jump or javelin throw either.
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