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Thread: Can Takahashi Close The Gap On Patrick Chan?

  1. #511
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    Takahashi yes, but I'd say Abbott is a medal contender BEHIND Chan, Takahashi, Fernandez, Hanyu, and Kozuka. Fernandez and Hanyu because they have quads in SP and FS (Javi has 2 in FS), Takahashi because his PCS are even higher than Abbott's and seems a little more consistent with his jumps, and Kozuka because he has his World silver medal from last season to back him up. I would add Brezina to this group because he has 2 quads, but I'm unsure if he will be going for 4s in the SP and both in the FS, or just 3-3 in the SP and one quad (4s) in FS, his layout is always changing it seems, and also his PCS aren't as good as Abbott, he has also been inconsistent with jumps this season, and his scores haven't been stellar yet. But, he does always seem to do well at Worlds so who knows. Jeremy has a shot at a medal but it's a long shot IMO. Top 5 is more feasible but he'll have to skate well to even manage that.

  2. #512
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    The PCS gap between Takahashi and Abbott is surprisingly narrow, actually. A clean Abbott will beat a flawed Takahashi in PCS (see the GPF sp) - and even a flawed Abbott is being scored within a couple points now. Last season, at NHK, Takahashi had a ten point lead on Abbott re: PCS (both short and long programs combined). This year, that's dropped to one point (GPF). That said, Abbot's most recent skate does not fill one with confidence.

  3. #513
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    Quote Originally Posted by silverlake22 View Post
    Takahashi yes, but I'd say Abbott is a medal contender BEHIND Chan, Takahashi, Fernandez, Hanyu, and Kozuka. Fernandez and Hanyu because they have quads in SP and FS (Javi has 2 in FS), Takahashi because his PCS are even higher than Abbott's and seems a little more consistent with his jumps, and Kozuka because he has his World silver medal from last season to back him up. I would add Brezina to this group because he has 2 quads, but I'm unsure if he will be going for 4s in the SP and both in the FS, or just 3-3 in the SP and one quad (4s) in FS, his layout is always changing it seems, and also his PCS aren't as good as Abbott, he has also been inconsistent with jumps this season, and his scores haven't been stellar yet. But, he does always seem to do well at Worlds so who knows. Jeremy has a shot at a medal but it's a long shot IMO. Top 5 is more feasible but he'll have to skate well to even manage that.
    Very well said. Even if Jeremy skates well (and predicting whether he skates well is always a crapshoot), the sheer depth of the men's field makes a medal far from a guarantee despite Jeremy's talents as a skater. However, as a medal contender, I would say Jeremy is behind Chan and Takahashi, but in the Fernandez-Hanyu-Kozuka mix as Jeremy's strong PCS gives him a cushion despite his lesser jumping arsenal. Note that Jeremy beat Fernandez and Hanyu in PCS at the GPF in both the SP and LP despite considerably skating worse than both in the LP, and Kozuka's international PCS this year are certainly nothing to shout about.

  4. #514
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    I think you can expect, if all skate well, the japanese men to take 3 out of the top six spots as very best possible results. It would be a huge upset if any Japanese man took gold. If Takahashi and Hanyu skate perfectly clean, I think they could take silver and bronze. This would be amazing. Somehow I think Takahashi will be silver or bronze, and Hanyu will if he skates lights out finish no lower than fifth, with a bronze medal possible.

    I think Hanyu might get held down this because he is new and there will be several possible sentimentally judged skaters - he has time - he is Japan's future, not present. But he is capable of deserving a silver or bronze. Will he get it. I think not. I don't personally enjoy Kozuka's skating but technically he is a strong skater, but he has no style, flair, history like Dai. I think he is dull so far. He needs fire like Hanyu or great style like Dai to be Japan's number 1. I think by next season, Hanyu will pass both Dai with great effort and luck and Kozuka (much more easily) if he is not injured, has strong programs and continues to improve his artistry. I think Japanese federation will assess his medal hopes for Sochi and will promote him or hold him down in Japan all depending on how Dai is skating, competing and most importantly scoring. If Japan sees strong international results for Hanyu on GPF they will invest in him heavily. Sad to say Dai would need quads, less flamboyant programs, and an injured Chan to catch up and surpass Chan. Chan has momentum like Yuna though is not as good as Yuna was with consistency, and everyone knew yuna would win despite 3 triple axels from Mao.

    I have no idea the machinations or politics of Japanese federation - this is just my look at how I see things playing out regarding the top three Japanese men. There might be another shooting star out of Japan before Sochi to make things even harder but anyone who thinks Chan will lose his title this year to any skater is not looking at his results, the trends, the clear favor he has at every international competition. I think other skaters besides Dai could out jump Pat (Javier) and put two better skated programs at WC, but Daisuke is the only skater they might shower favor on if Chan skates poorly, and Dai is clean with 2 quads. Is that likely? No.

    Reading the math threads, it appears to be Chan repeating unless he skates like Jeremy did at CC. I think Chan improves through the season usually and his last two outings have been very good-he has momentum, favor and a mistake cushion due to his so called superior skating skills. Maybe a bad skate by Chan and a three quad skate by Javi and some European judging help could cause a huge upset. I don't believe Dai can take back his title-not this year.

    I think with al the stars aligning and lots of men on ice, Jeremy could take bronze, but it is not looking great for him I agree with whoever said Jeremy looks like he'd be lucky to do a top 5 finish this year. Mathman has done all the math in many threads and we all know it's Chan, playing out the possibilities many times with any other skater. Daisuke is to Chan, as Mao was to Yuna.

    Placements 2-10 should make the mens at Nice very interesting. I would love an upset, but CoP math and the last year of comp results say Ka Ching, Ka Chan. I just hope I have a puter to watch the action! May the skate gods just give us good skating and not a splatfest. As a general fan, that is all I ever ask for now in any competition. We non-judges/non fed politicos can just hope for good ice, good luck and good health for all the skaters in Nice. Not much longer to wait.

  5. #515
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    Quote Originally Posted by evangeline View Post
    Very well said. Even if Jeremy skates well (and predicting whether he skates well is always a crapshoot), the sheer depth of the men's field makes a medal far from a guarantee despite Jeremy's talents as a skater. However, as a medal contender, I would say Jeremy is behind Chan and Takahashi, but in the Fernandez-Hanyu-Kozuka mix as Jeremy's strong PCS gives him a cushion despite his lesser jumping arsenal. Note that Jeremy beat Fernandez and Hanyu in PCS at the GPF in both the SP and LP despite considerably skating worse than both in the LP, and Kozuka's international PCS this year are certainly nothing to shout about.
    This is true, but Fernandez and Hanyu have been getting quite good PCS all season, only a bit below Abbott, and technically they have been a lot stronger, which is why I put those two ahead. I would put Jeremy in the group consisting of Brezina, Gatchinski, Joubert, Verner, and Amodio - outside shot at medaling, but probably not very likely. He has a PCS advantage over all these guys and none of them are likely to fill their programs with multiple quads (though except for Amodio they all have quads that are more consistent than Jeremy's), but with a good skate any one of them could sneak onto the podium should a few from the Chan, Javi, Japanese men group falter.

  6. #516
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    Quote Originally Posted by silverlake22 View Post
    This is true, but Fernandez and Hanyu have been getting quite good PCS all season, only a bit below Abbott, and technically they have been a lot stronger, which is why I put those two ahead. I would put Jeremy in the group consisting of Brezina, Gatchinski, Joubert, Verner, and Amodio - outside shot at medaling, but probably not very likely. He has a PCS advantage over all these guys and none of them are likely to fill their programs with multiple quads (though except for Amodio they all have quads that are more consistent than Jeremy's), but with a good skate any one of them could sneak onto the podium should a few from the Chan, Javi, Japanese men group falter.
    I see your point, and I do admit that my reluctance to group Abbott with the Brezina-Gatchinski-Amodio-etc bunch at least partially stems from the fact that I view Abbott's finesse, programs and general blade-to-ice skills as significantly superior to the skaters listed in that bunch.

  7. #517
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    Abbott certainly is way above the group of Brzina - Gachinski- Amodio. Abbott is the Dai of the USA, and his FS program this year is just superb and profoundly moving. Easily among the best there is, and Jeremy deserve extra credit for choreographing this beautiful FS himself along with his coach and to express what he considers as great skating. He owned this program like no one can, effortless, stirring, quietly moving, refined and sophisticated.

    A clean Takahashi based on his Japanese National standard certainly deserve to topple Emperor Chan from his cushioned seats prone to shock absorbing multiple falls. Though I suspect fairy tales arn't usually made at world championships. I'd be happy if the gap is much closer than before if that is the case.

    Hanyu and Abbott are my prediction for 3rd place and I would very chuffed if either of them manage this. In fact I don't really care about the ranking at this point but hope all the mens do their best. The can come in later. This year's mens is super exciting, there's so much talent and upgraded content from years before, it could go either way. It is how sport spectating should be about and make watching the world champion worth while.

    (post edited, i mean of course Japanese National)
    Last edited by os168; 03-25-2012 at 12:05 PM.

  8. #518
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    Quote Originally Posted by os168 View Post
    Abbott certainly is way above the group of Brzina - Gachinski- Amodio. Abbott is the Dai of the USA, and his FS program this year is just superb and profoundly moving. Easily among the best there is, and Jeremy deserve extra credit for choreographing this beautiful FS himself along with his coach and to express what he considers as great skating. He owned this program like no one can, effortless, stirring, quietly moving, refined and sophisticated.
    Jeremy deserves, is overdue, to be on the Worlds podium, if he is able to do his best a la 2010 US Nationals.

    A clean Takahashi based on his Japanese Open standard certainly deserve to topple Emperor Chan from his cushioned seats prone to shock absorbing multiple falls. Though I suspect fairy tales arn't usually made at world championships. I'd be happy if the gap is much closer than before if that is the case.
    Takahashi did poorly at Japan Open. Maybe you mean Japanese Nationals. No he will not win with that standard, nailing the SP with a 4/3 and then falling 3 times in the Free. Even combining his best SP from the NAT and best LP from the GPF will not guarantee a win unless Chan brings at least one of his worst performances, which have been left behind from early season. Takahashi has to duplicate his season best SP and rise above his season's best LP. He has to take big risk to win whereas a more conservative approach would almost assure him of a medal.

    BTW, Takahashi has fallen more than Patrick in both recent seasons.

    Chan is with me in considering Takahashi and Abbott his biggest rivals this year.

    Patrick Chan talks about figure skating worlds

  9. #519
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    Quote Originally Posted by evangeline View Post
    I see your point, and I do admit that my reluctance to group Abbott with the Brezina-Gatchinski-Amodio-etc bunch at least partially stems from the fact that I view Abbott's finesse, programs and general blade-to-ice skills as significantly superior to the skaters listed in that bunch.
    A lot of people feel this way, but the international judges maybe don't as much. At Euros Flo and Michal both got PCS over 80 for the FS and even Tomas with that messy performance got 78+, as did Babou, skating in the penultimate group, and Artur. I like Jeremy, but the international judges have yet to hand him marks that suggest he's significantly "better" than the men in this group. It's the same thing with Adam, people talk about how he's so superior to Ross or whatnot, and Nationally he does get better marks, but internationally the judges are always giving him virtually the same PCS marks as Miner so it's clear they don't see Adam as being any better. Jeremy has gotten great PCS marks this season, even for not so great performances, but his TES is holding him back. I don't think it would be wise for him to try the 4t in the SP, and even just trying one quad on its own in the FS seems to mess with his head, so really, that is why I put him in this group rather than the group with Javi, Hanyu, and Kozuka - because they are very strong skaters on the PCS side and have mastered how to do the quads in their programs without it messing up the rest of the performance should they miss it. For Jeremy, it seems like if he goes down on the quad, the rest of the performance is nearly always nervy and his TES suffers. He needs the quad to be more consistent or learn to put it behind him if he misses it to challenge for the podium at Worlds. Now, maybe he has mastered one or both of these things in the past weeks, and if he has and delivers, he has a very good shot, but I have my doubts...

  10. #520
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    Quote Originally Posted by ImaginaryPogue View Post
    Olympia, after the 2011 year and the way this season is heading, I'm a little surprised by your POV.

    1. The top ladies skater is probably Carolina Kostner, who doesn't have the body of a ten year old, and is able to win because her skills all around are incredible, and her jumps are pretty far up there in terms of quality. Should she win Worlds, she'll be the oldest skater to do so since Slutskaya won her second title. Kostner is successful because she does skate to the rules.

    2. Yes, Tukatmisheva did wonderfully on the GP circuit heralding the age of the Russian Baby Brigade. But we also saw Suzuki land her first triple-triple combination at age 26. Should she win, she'd be the oldest skate to win worlds since Butyrskaya.

    3. Indeed, should the podium have three of: Czisny, Wagner, Kostner, Suzuki or Asada we'll have a podium full of ladies in their twenties
    Pogue, somehow I missed this response to a comment I made earlier (which was rather downhearted about the possible future of CoP skating). You make an interesting point, and I should keep this in mind as I watch the skating, this season at least. Thanks for putting things this way. I just hope that at Sochi the podium features ladies of a similar variety of ages and sizes and shapes. (And Mao!) But for now, I should relax. As you say, things are pretty interesting right in front of our faces.

  11. #521
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    Quote Originally Posted by silverlake22 View Post
    A lot of people feel this way, but the international judges maybe don't as much. At Euros Flo and Michal both got PCS over 80 for the FS and even Tomas with that messy performance got 78+, as did Babou, skating in the penultimate group, and Artur. I like Jeremy, but the international judges have yet to hand him marks that suggest he's significantly "better" than the men in this group. It's the same thing with Adam, people talk about how he's so superior to Ross or whatnot, and Nationally he does get better marks, but internationally the judges are always giving him virtually the same PCS marks as Miner so it's clear they don't see Adam as being any better. Jeremy has gotten great PCS marks this season, even for not so great performances, but his TES is holding him back. I don't think it would be wise for him to try the 4t in the SP, and even just trying one quad on its own in the FS seems to mess with his head, so really, that is why I put him in this group rather than the group with Javi, Hanyu, and Kozuka - because they are very strong skaters on the PCS side and have mastered how to do the quads in their programs without it messing up the rest of the performance should they miss it. For Jeremy, it seems like if he goes down on the quad, the rest of the performance is nearly always nervy and his TES suffers. He needs the quad to be more consistent or learn to put it behind him if he misses it to challenge for the podium at Worlds. Now, maybe he has mastered one or both of these things in the past weeks, and if he has and delivers, he has a very good shot, but I have my doubts...
    I just compiled the Men contenders' LP scores of the season and Euro's PCS look inflated. I'm starting a new thread with the data and analyses as it is really OT in this thread. However, I would classify Abbott in an elite group with inconsistent quads with the likes of Takahashi but also as one who can't put behind a failed quad in competition, unlike Takahashi, Kozuka, and Chan. Fernandez, Hanyu, and Chan have dependable quads so they do not suffer bad effects.

    Adam made one splash at a non ISU event and generated a lot of buzz and many people have held on to that but he is far from a top tier skater internationally.

  12. #522
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    Jeremy is elegant and has two good programs. He is very gentle to the ice. Great performance and 2 or 3 others skating poorly would have to happen for him to get bronze. I think agree again with poster who guessed 5th spot. He is not a good competitor, but his PCS marks will pulll him up. I hope CoP stops rewarding people who fall alot in the PCS category. # falls pretty much destroy what you are trying to accomplish. Whether its Alissa or Jeremy or Patrick Chan, the performance as a whole needs to be judged and all marks should go down with multiple mistakes on the jumps.

  13. #523
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    Quote Originally Posted by skateluvr View Post
    Jeremy is elegant and has two good programs. He is very gentle to the ice. Great performance and 2 or 3 others skating poorly would have to happen for him to get bronze. I think agree again with poster who guessed 5th spot. He is not a good competitor, but his PCS marks will pulll him up. I hope CoP stops rewarding people who fall alot in the PCS category. # falls pretty much destroy what you are trying to accomplish. Whether its Alissa or Jeremy or Patrick Chan, the performance as a whole needs to be judged and all marks should go down with multiple mistakes on the jumps.
    You forgot Takahashi. Or Takahashi never got held in PCS after multiple falls?!
    Last edited by Bluebonnet; 03-25-2012 at 11:22 PM.

  14. #524
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    Bluebonnet, I suspect Takahashi has had such a skate and he too should not get high pcs marks despite his superior skating skills. Chan is of course the poster boy for CoP judging people feel needs to be changed. But you are right, a skate will three jump mistakes, fall, step out, hand down disrupt the flow. Sasha Cohen did every element better than most other skaters, including Michelle, but she rarely won gold because the scoring system did not allow it. There may be changes afoot that will address this. I just mentioned those who came to mind as having beautiful skating skills but often failing in the jumps, by failing I mean a variety of errors, not just outright splats.

    I love Daisuke the skater and I find him an appealing and humble skater despite being Japan's first WC and an olympic bronze medalist. That said, when Patrick is landing his jumps, he is the best currently. I can see why they go gaga at his speed out of nowhere and the fast feet. He is the heir to Canada's greta male skaters, particularly Kurt. A clean Chan performance is a thing of beauty. I am not down on Pat, nor do I always prefer Dai. Can you post a youtube performance where Dai fell 3 times, or badly messed up 3 jumping passes, so we can see his scores? Thank you.
    Last edited by skateluvr; 03-25-2012 at 11:58 PM.

  15. #525
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    Quote Originally Posted by skateluvr View Post
    Can you post a youtube performance where Dai fell 3 times, or badly messed up 3 jumping passes, so we can see his scores? Thank you.
    It's so easy! I'm surprised that you forgot it so soon!

    Here you go:

    Takahashi's 2011 Japanese Nationals LP

    Three hard falls in a single program against one-fall Kozuka and clean Hanyu, Takahashi got the highest PCS of them all.

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