Vash01 said:
I did count the Russian nationals. However, I was thinking more of their competitions leading into the 2002 Olympics (that is, 2000-2002) because in 1998 Plushenko went to his first worlds and did not skate in the Olympics. I don't remember the results of all the GP's but in 1999-2000 he won all but the worlds (he fell apart in the LP). He won all the competitions after that (Yagudin may not have been in all of them) until 2002 GPF which he lost to Yagudin. It was a close competition, which could have gone either way.
The real point I was trying to make was that Yagudin was not unbeatable as the original poster wrote. Yagudin was the more developed skater of the two at that point, but he had been beaten by Plushenko many times particularly in the two years before the Olympics. Plushenko was in fact the reigning world champion at the 2002 Olympics.
Vash
Yagudin did go into total melt-down in 2001, losing all of the major competitions to Plushenko (2001 is the only year in which this occurred however). It is my understanding that this disastrous season led Yagudin to a renewed discipline toward his game, which made him *cough* unbeatable by 2002. Just MHO (smile).
Please see the following list of comps in which Y and P went head to head. Note that I list only the results of the Grand Prix Finals, not the individual GP comps, which may be contributing to the confusion on this matter. These results are taken directly from
http://www.usfigureskating.org/Events.asp.
1998 Worlds/Yag = 1st/Plush = 3rd
1998 Goodwill Games/Yag = 2nd/Plush = 3rd
1999 Grand Prix Final/Yag = 1st/Plush = 3rd
1999 Worlds/Yag = 1st/Plush = 2rd
2000 Worlds/Yag = 1st/Plush = 4th
2001 GPF/Yag = 2nd/Plush = 1st
2001 Worlds /Yag = 2nd/Plush = 1st
2001 Goodwill Games/Yag = 3rd/Plush = 1st
2001/02 GPF/Yag = 1st/Plush = 2nd
2002 Olympics /Yag = 1st/Plush = 2nd
Also -- did Plushenko win all the Russian Nationals from 1998 to 2002? if so, that is an incredible feat! I also agree with the other posters who said that Y and P drove themselves and their sport to new highs. I honestly believe that 1998-2002 will be looked back upon as the golden age of Men's figure skating, due largely to the competition between Y and P.