Joesitz said:I've always felt that although Kwan would get the highest Presentation scores, Irina's presentation scores would be so close that it made Kwans appear negligible. Irina, for me, was always boring and those scores seemed always to hold her up. There was nothing in Irina's performance that I could say wow to except the jumps and that was technical. Through no fault of her own she always had bad line in performing.
I just don't agree, for much of the reason above and in this case a very sloppy skate by Irina. JMO.
Joe
seanibu said:At least she doesn't have over a thousand pairs of shoes when there are children with none.
She's pierced all over. Click HEREMathman said:The biggest thing I learned was: Irina had her tongue pierced!
attyfan said:I can understand why some people would be bitter about Oly disappointments, but there gets to be a point where people expect you to move on -- losing an OGM is not like losing a loved one. For example, I think many people would have been very sympathetic and understanding if, after Tonya pleaded guilty to (essentially) being an accessory after the fact, MK said that she felt she had been robbed of a chance to skate at Olys, but we would not feel the same way if she kept talking about it four years later.
attyfan said:In the moment -- yes. Not four years later.
hockeyfan228 said:There was a bad call in the last inning of the sixth game of the St. Louis/Kansas City World Series playoff that allowed Kansas City to get back in the series. That could be replayed over and over again on videotape, from every angle, and it wasn't even close.
In the SLC SP Kwan had a faulty landing on a 3F and possibly a flatz. Cohen had a flutz and an issue with closing the circle on her step sequence that I didn't see, but was described in many posts. Slutskaya had a serious break -- requiring a deduction -- between her steps and 3F and major travelling on at least one spin. Nonetheless, Slutskaya had the highest tech scores from six of nine judges, ties with Kwan from two, and lower tech scores from one judge, Hrachovcova (Slovak Republic). While not all judges deducted for Kwan's faulty 3F, not all judges deducted for Slutskaya's flaws, either. She lost by the pre score, which Kwan had dominated in most of their head-to-head competition. Kwan skated a high-quality Rachmaninoff SP, and there was no reason for her pre scores to have suffered. She received 5.9's across the board.
Slutskaya may feel wuzrobbed, but it is a highly debated wuzrobbed, not a given.
Mathman said:That's an interesting point Ptichka.
Boy, I don't know, though. I can't think it is good for either athletes or "ordinary people" to go through life thinking the judges hate me, I never get a break, everybody is cheating for my opponent, they'll never let me win no matter what I do.
I remember when Michelle came in second to Tara in the 1998 Olympics. Frank Carroll made a concerted effort to tell Michelle, "Yes, a lot of your fans will be telling you, 'Oh Michelle, you were robbed, you should have got the gold medal.' But don't believe it. You skated well. So did Tara. That's sports."
MM
krenseby said:Artistic scores reflect skating skills (line, carriage) and performance (passion, energy). Irina may not have much of the first, but she has plenty of the second. That's why it's not right to assume that she is always inferior in the artistic department. It simply isn't true. Irina isn't simply a jump machine, she is also an artistic skater.(as far as energy and passion are concerned.)
From what I read about it (in Christine Brennan's book, Edge of Glory, for instance), no, I think the story about the vodka was started by Tatiana Tarasova. It was only partly tongue-in-cheek. That is, she did feel that Frank Caroll had not played the political game as well as he should have on behalf of his skater.antmanb said:Really? I thought Frank Caroll started off (or certainly corroborated) the story that came out after Nagano that all Caroll should have done is slip the correct officials a bottle of vodka in order to get his girl to win?
Mathman said:From what I read about it (in Christine Brennan's book, Edge of Glory, for instance), no, I think the story about the vodka was started by Tatiana Tarasova. It was only partly tongue-in-cheek. That is, she did feel that Frank Caroll had not played the political game as well as he should have on behalf of his skater.
As the story went, "What did the Russian judges care which American skater won? A bottle of Vodka would have tipped the scales in favor of Michelle."
I might be wrong, though. To this very day Frank is wuzrobbin' about Linda Fratianne.
MM
antmanb said:Sorry did i miss somthing...did Irina in the latest article (i can't read the articles) say that she equated losing the gold medal to losing a loved one?
Ant
Yes. I've read the same line of comments from TT. And immediately after the game Frank said to MK "ppl would tell you, you are robbed. But you are not. You skated very well, but Tara skated better."......I think this helped young MK's psych late. It was not until shortly before 2002 game, after MK splited with Frank, that I saw Frank on a TV interview, openly commented that 1998 was a very close call. Judges may look for different things, but he would've gave it to Kwan. And Peggy said the very same thing.Mathman said:From what I read about it (in Christine Brennan's book, Edge of Glory, for instance), no, I think the story about the vodka was started by Tatiana Tarasova. It was only partly tongue-in-cheek. That is, she did feel that Frank Caroll had not played the political game as well as he should have on behalf of his skater.
As the story went, "What did the Russian judges care which American skater won? A bottle of Vodka would have tipped the scales in favor of Michelle."
I might be wrong, though. To this very day Frank is wuzrobbin' about Linda Fratianne.
MM
Mathman said:From what I read about it (in Christine Brennan's book, Edge of Glory, for instance), no, I think the story about the vodka was started by Tatiana Tarasova. It was only partly tongue-in-cheek. That is, she did feel that Frank Caroll had not played the political game as well as he should have on behalf of his skater.
As the story went, "What did the Russian judges care which American skater won? A bottle of Vodka would have tipped the scales in favor of Michelle."
I might be wrong, though. To this very day Frank is wuzrobbin' about Linda Fratianne.
MM
Joesitz said:Krensby - Don't get me started on passion. Passion is in the mind of the beholder and is different with each eithnic background in general. It is not judgeable but it could be appreciated for any reason. Slutskaya's so-called passion in Tosca didn't come near the great American soprano Maria Callas.
I contend Callas had passion - not Slutskaya. Slutskaya had jumps. but if you saw passion in Slutskaya, so be it.
Joe
antmanb said:In SLC there was no "artistic mark" it was a presentation mark. As far as i'm aware passion and energy were not criteria in the presentation mark. Things that Irina had as big plus points from the presntation mark were: speed, flow and ice coverage.
Ant