Orser and Wilson - just go back to Hanyu's 2012 LP and Fernandez's 2013 LP | Page 3 | Golden Skate

Orser and Wilson - just go back to Hanyu's 2012 LP and Fernandez's 2013 LP

Kelly

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Mar 20, 2004
............

As for the title of this thread. It is to be expected really, consider just how absolutely mind blowing his original R&J is like a typhoon level FOUR, nearly knocked my socks off. Anything is certainly going to pale in comparison, I am just thankful this current R&J is better than last year's Notre Dame program, although certainly I am very disappointed he is compromising his artistry for a gold medal, since what was so exciting about watching him perform was the no holding back approach and constant attack, now it seems he is more careful and controlled. In anycase he is just doing what Mao and many are doing for their Olympic year program, playing safe, to stay well within their comfort zone rather than taking risks. It may or may not pay off... we will see.

Mao's eight-triple FS for the Olympic season is playing safe? I prefer Hanyu's new R&J to the original one artistically. I guess that's because I don't like a level Four Typhoon style but appreciate a more gentle and lyrical way to emote. I also found that Hanyu's better posture makes me like his new R&J much more.
 

yyyskate

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Airin and Yude, we have almost the same thought on this. His old R&j is a great program but it not just the program that make old r&j so emotional. It is his journey that season - earth quake, no place to train , knee injuries, mistake in sp and the fall before 3a that why the performance at world is so memorable - it like he send message that don't worry about him anymore no matter what happen he will rise up. The magic like that will not likely to be replace again.

I think it great that he doesn't return to the program; it is a time for change and keep finding challenges; although the new program might not be as emotional there so many good aspect and is a bit more mature than the old one.

Sorry for a fan rant! :biggrin:
agreed and well said!:thumbsup:
 

Blades of Passion

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I also found that Hanyu's better posture makes me like his new R&J much more.

That doesn't really have anything to do with the programs, though. It's a personal improvement that can be applied to any program he skates.

I think the most interesting counterpoint so far is "Hanyu wouldn't be able to skate his 2012 program with the same emotion again." I don't believe that's true, at least not by the time the Olympics come, but it's an worthwhile consideration.

-----

BTW, I'm more worried about Fernandez.
 

Skater Boy

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Fernandez is looking great don't worry. He is developing just nicely. He will podium and with the 4s wow he will probably win OGm. lIFE IS ABOUT TIMING AND BEING AT YOUR TOP INT HE OLYMPIC CYCLE Sadly Dai and Patrick were at the wrong time but imho more "deserving' of winning OGM but I am thinking Javier will win it.
 

yyyskate

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I just watched old R&J and new R&J back to back, I have to admit I prefer the old one. He has so much speed and better extension/lines in the old R&J. Well, the new R&J do have more difficult transitions, and several genius highlights, e.g. that counter 3A-rippon 2T etc. But as a whole, the old R&J tells a story so affecting, every segments seamlessly woven together. Yuzu definitely has more feeling and connection to the music. (From Finlandia practice video, which is better performed than competition, you can tell Yuzu is intentionally trying to feel and interpret new R&J and amazing musicality there too:)). I think this is because, this old R&J has accompanied him 60 shows when his rink was damaged by earthquake and has became a part of him...
As Yuzu get more experience with the new R&J, it may feel different. One thing about Yuzu is that, he tends to change whatever into his own (or put his own imagination into his performance or character), not strictly follow choreography. So as we all saw from Finlandia SP, Yuzu apparently showed much better controlling/commanding of this SP now. I will wait and see how he gets into his new R&J, which may evolve into a great program in the future. Last season, he is kinda completely lost in the choreography and could not find his orientation. This new R&J, I think will be better.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

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Fernandez is looking great don't worry. He is developing just nicely. He will podium and with the 4s wow he will probably win OGm. lIFE IS ABOUT TIMING AND BEING AT YOUR TOP INT HE OLYMPIC CYCLE Sadly Dai and Patrick were at the wrong time but imho more "deserving' of winning OGM but I am thinking Javier will win it.

Fernandez is indeed looking great. It is a tall task to ask him to skate 3-quad programs over and over and over again. Hopefully he doesn't save his best for before the Olympics and burnout.
 

Jaana

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Fernandez is indeed looking great. It is a tall task to ask him to skate 3-quad programs over and over and over again. Hopefully he doesn't save his best for before the Olympics and burnout.

Yes, and I also hope that he will not "waste" his best performance at the 2014 Europeans like he did this year (but fortunately he still got the World bronze medal). He needs to peak at the Olympics.
 

lcd

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Mar 11, 2007
For Javier, I think the campy playful acting style is very much inline with his fun and at times musical theater flirty fun personality. It will entertain for sure. Importantly, I think the structure and pacing is very very clever as the placement of his money-jumps allows him the kind of rest that a more over-the-top dramatic or full-body requiring choreography would demand. It is fractions of a second and moments to sip more oxygen that will fuel the success or hit rate on the elements that equal points. That is where the leverage is in the men's side of the sport right now. This program is designed smart. Being able to pull it off so successfully so early in the season only bodes well in my book. Kudos for the choreographers actually for engineering a program that he can succeed with. To be clear, I do not see it as any masterpiece for the ages. I just smile as I see how 'smart' it is.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

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Yes, and I also hope that he will not "waste" his best performance at the 2014 Europeans like he did this year (but fortunately he still got the World bronze medal). He needs to peak at the Olympics.

Yeah, I felt really bad for him. I was really hoping he could have pulled it together and won. But hopefully not winning means he doesn't have as much expectation piled on him and he can just do his own thing. How amazing it would be though if Spain were to win Olympic men's gold!
 

Blades of Passion

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I also hope that he will not "waste" his best performance at the 2014 Europeans like he did this year (but fortunately he still got the World bronze medal). He needs to peak at the Olympics.

The problem is that even if he peaks at the Olympics, this program may not get him on the podium. It makes him look like an amateur next to Chan and he will be taken less seriously than Hanyu/Takahashi/D-Ten and maybe even Plushenko as well, if they deliver.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

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[SUB][/SUB]
The problem is that even if he peaks at the Olympics, this program may not get him on the podium. It makes him look like an amateur next to Chan and he will be taken less seriously than Hanyu/Takahashi/D-Ten and maybe even Plushenko as well, if they deliver.

I think he's at a point where his program is rather negligible and his PCS won't go down, especially if he skates his 3 quad program cleanly. There comes a point that if you're an elite skater, your PCS won't fluctuate no matter how you skate (with some exceptions like Joubert and Suzuki).

ISU has been itching for a skater like Fernandez to renew interest in the sport. A skater from an atypical skating country with excellent tech content, i.e. who can land 3 quads a la Goebel but still have good artistry. Sounds familiar, eh Yu Na? ;)
 

Blades of Passion

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I think he's at a point where his program is rather negligible and his PCS won't go down, especially if he skates his 3 quad program cleanly. There comes a point that if you're an elite skater, your PCS won't fluctuate no matter how you skate.

That's a terrible mentality to have with regards to how the sport is judged.

And yes it is somewhat true with the current standard of judging, but not completely. Either way, Fernandez has not yet reached the same level as the very top elite, and his PCS will not be as held up. He needs the Chaplin program to do it. PCS are trending higher and higher. Patrick Chan could be getting 95 in PCS if he skates really well and others can be nearly that high too. Fernandez getting 85-87 range won't cut it. With a great performance of the Chaplin program he should be capable of 90-92. That could be enough to beat Patrick, since Fernandez's extra Quad gives him the technical advantage.

In the Olympics especially the judges are very sensitive about rewarding someone they feel would be a "proper" champion. They will not look upon Fernandez as someone who should win Olympic Gold if he keeps this program.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

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That's a terrible mentality to have with regards to how the sport is judged.

And yes it is somewhat true with the current standard of judging, but not completely. Either way, Fernandez has not yet reached the same level as the very top elite, and his PCS will not be as held up. He needs the Chaplin program to do it. PCS are trending higher and higher. Patrick Chan could be getting 95 in PCS if he skates really well and others can be nearly that high too. Fernandez getting 85-87 range won't cut it. With a great performance of the Chaplin program he should be capable of 90-92. That could be enough to beat Patrick, since Fernandez's extra Quad gives him the technical advantage.

In the Olympics especially the judges are very sensitive about rewarding someone they feel would be a "proper" champion. They will not look upon Fernandez as someone who should win Olympic Gold if he keeps this program.


Fernandez has reached a similar level of the very top elite.. his PCS at Euros 2013 was 89.42, which is higher than Plushenko got in Euros 2012 for a perfect skate. Neither has the skating skills and intricate choreography of a Chan or the artistry of a Takahashi, but they're certainly in the same ball park. As you said, the 3 quads FS essentially closes the gap between Fernandez and Chan, and particularly if Fernandez were to do 2 quads in his SP he would have an even better chance to win.

I think if Fernandez were to hit all 3 quads and a perfect skate, and Chan or the others were to have errors, it wouldn't matter how "proper" Fernandez's program was, he'd still win gold (or at least the FS) based on TES scores and his PCS at least being 89-90 points. I mean, look at Totmianina/Marinin... one of the worst (IMO) pairs programs to ever win, but they were the cleanest and other favourites made errors, so even though their program wasn't the greatest, it still deserved gold.
 

Blades of Passion

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Fernandez has reached a similar level of the very top elite.. his PCS at Euros 2013 was 89.42

Those PCS were because of that program and performance (and the momentum he had in the competition) specifically. You have to keep delivering quality for the judges to consider you at the very top. Fernandez hasn't reached the level where he'll pull huge PCS simply based on name. He delivered the technical side of his program extremely well at Japan Open and the PCS were 84. If Patrick Chan had delivered that kind of technical content he would have received at least 90 regardless of the artistry of the program.

I think if Fernandez were to hit all 3 quads and a perfect skate, and Chan or the others were to have errors, it wouldn't matter how "proper" Fernandez's program was, he'd still win gold (or at least the FS) based on TES scores.

It depends on exactly what the errors are. If Chan just steps out of one jump, like at Worlds 2011, then Fernandez will not win this his current program. I guarantee it.

The bottom line is that you want to get as many points as you can and Fernandez with the Chaplin program can get about 5 more points in PCS. It's not a super high chance that Fernandez will deliver any LP perfectly to begin with. He is attempting so much content and doubling out on a jump or having a step-out is simply bound to happen. You want to give yourself every opportunity possible. What's the point in going with a clearly inferior program during an Olympic year?
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

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Those PCS were because of that program and performance (and the momentum he had in the competition) specifically. You have to keep delivering quality for the judges to consider you at the very top. Fernandez hasn't reached the level where he'll pull huge PCS simply based on name. He delivered the technical side of his program extremely well at Japan Open and the PCS were 84. If Patrick Chan had delivered that kind of technical content he would have received at least 90 regardless of the artistry of the program.

His PCS were 85.56, which is appropriate considering Fernandez had some jump errors and his spins were really subpar (two level 1's and a level 2 - which i wouldn't call technically performing "extremely well"). And it's the start of the season so his program will get more PCS as the season progresses.
 

Li'Kitsu

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Blades of Passion said:
You have to keep delivering quality for the judges to consider you at the very top. Fernandez hasn't reached the level where he'll pull huge PCS simply based on name. He delivered the technical side of his program extremely well at Japan Open and the PCS were 84.

His PCS dropped at worlds 2013 already too, although his mistakes were popped jumps and nothing that really disturbed his performances. So agreed to Fernandez not getting PCS based on name alone.
And his PCS really were relativly low for what he put out at JO (and I was actually under the impression that his skating skills, speed and smoothness had improved since last season, which should have his PCS rise rather than decline). So yes, his PCS here should be a little bit of a warning sign to his team, that his program is definitly not as good as it shoud/could be. Maybe they are still planing to add and change some things, at least that's what I'm hoping for, since I can't really see Fernandez going back to his old program. I definitly wouldn't mind, but he just doesn't looke like someone who would recycle an old program to me...

For the reputation-PCS discussion, I guess some really outstanding consistency could still get Fernandez up into the top PCS group. If he'd skate really good at his GPs, win the GPF and Euros with great performances, then I'm pretty sure clean skates would get him huge PCS in Sochi, no matter what program he skates. Maybe even enough to rival Chan. But that's a huge if.
 

Blades of Passion

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And it's the start of the season so his program will get more PCS as the season progresses.

Perhaps. But I very much doubt the ceiling for this program will be near the highest. We'll have to wait and see with the Grand Prix, but I will continue to say it's a mistake wasting time on it. Chaplin is a masterpiece. This program never will be, guaranteed.

I definitely wouldn't mind, but he just doesn't look like someone who would recycle an old program to me...

He skated to Pirates of the Caribbean in both 2010 and 2011.
 

OS

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Mao's eight-triple FS for the Olympic season is playing safe? I prefer Hanyu's new R&J to the original one artistically. I guess that's because I don't like a level Four Typhoon style but appreciate a more gentle and lyrical way to emote. I also found that Hanyu's better posture makes me like his new R&J much more.

Don't get me wrong, I am commenting on what is perceived as the safe route artistically but not technically. Mao even spoke herself at the recent JO interview that the reason she chose to redo Nocturne was because it is the the most well received among all her past programs, thus would make sense she chose it for its popularity and likely to be well received by the judges and the crowds based on sentimentality. It is likely the same reason Hanyu kept his World score SP, same with Patrick's SP so is Abbott with his FS etc, or the next skater opt for another war horse preferably one by a Russian composer for Sochi (I am not a fan of this way of thinking... as if next time Olympics take place in China or Japan, everyone is going to pick Yellow river/butterfly lovers/last emperor/last of the samurai/merry christmas mr lawrence/rising sun/memoir of a geisha etc. it is totally :rolleye:)

Theoretically there's nothing wrong with repeat your greatest hits since the main objectives is to maximize the chance of winning. In doing so, you excuse yourself from learning new interpretations as part of the routine in order to focus entirely on the COP content based on tried and tested formulas. However personally I watch skating for the thrills, the excitement and unpredictability and always looking to be surprised. I enjoy watching talented skaters progress and evolve, to see how they mature and advance and push beyond themselves year after year... and on super rare occasions- manage to reach transcendence (which imo is more important than a gold medal). Many seems to have disregarded Ashley's R&J program this year for the unfamiliar music cut, but I am actually excited by the potential of it. It is a program that gives enough room for her to breathe and develop her own unique expressions and improve her artistry. A ponderous piece is hardly a bad thing for someone like Ashley ... it is when you have a program that is challenging, you get to push and develop as a performer, and assuming you are up to the task, the audience will be rewarded with something deeper and even more satisfying if you are successful. I fully expect the program to grow as the season progresses. It is about filling the gaps, as oppose to spoon feed audience with familiar master pieces of expected highs and lows with ready built instructions and expected emotions. To some, pile on the butter, salt and cheese may makes a tasty dish, for me, personally i prefer some thought and processing behind the dish, consider the occasional alternatives of seasonal organic vegetables, maybe char-grilled, brushed lightly with best olive oil from Tuscany. May be served with a bit of chef made sauce and FRESH herb to complement the secret seasoning. No FROZEN ready made meals for me thanks, it is not even worth my 5 mins in the microwave. :disapp: (I may make an exception for Abbott though, due to the previous under cooked factor.) Oh yeah... all the food puns are created just for you CarneAsada. ;)

Most audiences may be more satisfied with the crowd pleasing/spoon feeding/instant gratification type familiar delivery (I am thinking Kostner's signature hip/eyebrow wiggling; I fully expect her poseography/winking/flirting to return with a vengeance, likely at her SP, I will even put a tenner on it!) likely to thunderous woohoos from the largely European crowd...how predictable, how artistic, how Lori Nichols :sarcasm:

Although in theory COP is suppose to reward things like interpretation, choreography and such. In reality, I'd argue these are rarely marked accurately when the the depth of difficulty and the level of improvement between difficult/simple music edits /rhythm changes, choreography, depth of realization, improvement from previous / comfort zones are never accounted for, that is why skaters repeat old programs or stick to the same formulas. Just like elements are graded according to levels, I'd argue choice of music/musical interpretation and choreography should be given levels too or at least the judges should be aware of the differences. Under this system, it is entirely upon judge's own discretion (Yes I am still gutted for V&M's Carmen.) to reward qualities that is most important in art 'authenticity, originality, creativity, transcendence' and their aptitude of reading musicality and choreography movements to make good assessment of how to reward more complex, sophisticated and challenging piece of music/interpretations properly as oppose to a tick list system. Since music affects overall performance, timing, choreography, interpretation as well as the ability to demonstrate skating skills to the music.

For me, the original R&J will go down as one of the greatest men's program ever because precious qualities Hanyu were able to display at his age that can not be taught. It was unpredictable, unexpected and simply inspired. Even if he is to replicated the same choreography today, he might have scored higher due to reputation, and expect the expected, but I am not sure how will I feel about it, since it won't be fresh like the first time. If he repeat the old R&J, he'd be repeating 2 programs back to back exactly!! As such I won't recommend it, but I can see why some would love to see it return. I'd be curious how much his old coach has influenced over the delivery of that program, and whether it was his or her choreographic intentions, but there are certainly qualities that is missing from his programs since. A sense of freedom, abandonment and even recklessness that makes him such an exiting skater to root for.

In any case I have learnt enough to know the my favourite programs don't always win unfortunately, many factors goes into the judging on the day and over a season. There's no right or wrong way to do it, just depends entirely on the competition, environment, judges and the politics. (... and dare I say a lil bit/lot of luck.) The Olympics is a funny thing, as such I am not counting out on Plushy's tribute to himself just yet... after all, it is in the Grrreat Russia rePublic.
 

lcd

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Mar 11, 2007
It's funny about the recycling. Even the somewhat regular fans aren't all that aware. For sure the general once every four years fan has NO idea, so the concept of bringing forth a program which one can wear like a comfortable glove and has proven to be well received seems a very legitimate strategy. Especially when the real mental energy that matters is being put to nailing some quads. The more the better (kind of sadly).
 

Kelly

On the Ice
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Mar 20, 2004
It's funny about the recycling. Even the somewhat regular fans aren't all that aware. For sure the general once every four years fan has NO idea, so the concept of bringing forth a program which one can wear like a comfortable glove and has proven to be well received seems a very legitimate strategy. Especially when the real mental energy that matters is being put to nailing some quads. The more the better (kind of sadly).

Thank you, 0s168, for response for my question. But for the title of the thread, I think both Hanyu and Fernandez's long programs for this season are well choreographed and very IJS competitive and if either of them can skate in the zone in the Olympics, the audience will be given a feast of skating technics and artistry and no one including the judges would care if the music is recycled or compare to one's old program(s) just like lcd pointed out.
 
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