IIRC, a couple of years ago when these guidelines were revised to the present language, the intent of the ISU was deliberately to encourage the judges to use a wider range of GOEs. In exchange, the actual values of the GOEs were reduced (to 70% for triple jumps). So the intention was that for a really good jump. go ahead and give +3 GOE if you were really impressed, but that +3 would add only 2.1 points to the total. (There was a bit of controversy at the time of the change -- some people felt that it was directed specifically at Yuna Kim because she got such high GOEs in Vancouver. This way, she could still get +3 GOEs but it wouldn't put her so far ahead.)
Personally, I am not dismayed at the fact that the guidelines are only guidelines. We know going in that the GOEs represent the judges' opinions regarding the quality of the element. However, I think if you asked a judge, what was so great about that jump that you gave it a plus three?, that judge would find it very easy to say that besides the height and distance, it also had good flow throughout, extended landing edge, effortless throughout, matched to the music, etc.
Bottom line, of course, yes, if the judge wants to cheat outright no set of guidelines can prevent it.
I felt that the issue placement came only into context of inconsistent judging. I think if she felt the judging was consistent and fair, she probably wouldn't have fussed at the placement.
Actually, I think Ashley was questioning her placement as well--I thought I read where she questioned her placement being below someone who fell.
Is there something wrong to be hung up about BLATANTLY questionable judging bias? I can't get behind an argument that just asks everyone to "forget about it" and to turn a blind eye because what happened, happened.
If Yuna and Carolina are causing a ruckus, people would probably slam them for being poor sports (ala Wagner).
Didn't Gracie fall and her marks were ahead of Ashley. When she said that on NBC, Gracie was standing right next to her....was she referring to Gracie or Julia. The look on Gracie's face was priceless. Gracie said she was happy with placements.
Didn't Gracie fall and her marks were ahead of Ashley. When she said that on NBC, Gracie was standing right next to her....was she referring to Gracie or Julia. The look on Gracie's face was priceless. Gracie said she was happy with placements.
Didn't Gracie fall and her marks were ahead of Ashley. When she said that on NBC, Gracie was standing right next to her....was she referring to Gracie or Julia. The look on Gracie's face was priceless. Gracie said she was happy with placements.
If she felt the top three placements were fair, then who did she think she came ahead of out of Gracie, Julia and Mao?
I am a big Ashley fan. She gives it her all, bless her heart. What she does not understand, though, is that the basic quality of her skating is a notch below the top rung, including Gracie and Julia (we won't mention Kim, Asada and Kostner).
No, by all means continue with your hang ups if that's how you need to deal with it. I'm just saying blatantly questionable judging is nothing new to this sport. There has always been and will always be instances like this in scoring. I suppose I'm ready to move on b/c I realize, understand and have accepted that about this sport. Apparently other people feel the need to take up arms and attempt to fight back. To that I say if there was a way to correct it/prevent it from happening, it wouldn't continue to happen time and time and time again...hwell:
The sooner people understand that judging bias/favorites/snubs/lowballing/cheating/etc. is just the way it is, the sooner they'll learn to appreciate the sport for the skating rather than get hung up on the results. Honestly, that's the only reason I still continue to watch. I've made my peace with the "judging" aspect of the sport and no longer base my satisfaction on a fair outcome b/c fair figure skating competition is an oxymoron.
Enjoying the performances and complaining about or even getting angry at unfair judging are not mutually exclusive. Plenty of people complaining about the scoring also made appreciative comments about the performances. There's a place to simply enjoy skaters' performances and ignore how they're ranked: exhibitions. As far as I'm concerned, if we're going to have figure skating competitions there should be continuing effort made to make scoring as fair as possible. If you're correct in that events like this just can't be prevented no matter what, perhaps the detractors are right and this should not be an Olympic sport. *shrug*
I happen to care about the integrity of a sport I've followed for 20 years. I realize there will always be some subjectivity to it and people's biases toward their countrymen or their favourites, but multiple skating insiders from multiple countries expressing shock and suspicion is something else. It isn't about Yu Na or Carolina. I haven't really been an uber-fan of any singles skaters since Michelle Kwan, and I would have been fine with anyone winning here as long as they genuinely earned it. But I do care about the state of figure skating, so I would want to see something done to give the judging and results more credibility. I want to see reason to take it seriously; I want to see skaters and coaches and countries focus on being truly exceptional enough to achieve great results, rather than politicking to get them.
And I don't agree that controversies to this degree, ones that see skating insiders from all over the place drop their jaws in shock, happen all the time. This isn't like some Russians saying Plushy should have won in Vancouver or some Canadians saying Stojko should have won in Lillehammer or MK fans upset she didn't win Nagano. This is numerous former skaters, commentators, journalists, officials, etc. from countries that didn't have a skater anywhere near the ladies podium expressing great surprise and suspicion. We should just shrug and ignore it and let it keep happening? No thanks.
:agree:
A+ post Rachmaninoff.
A++ post Rachmaninoff.
A++ post Rachmaninoff.
Enjoying the performances and complaining about or even getting angry at unfair judging are not mutually exclusive. Plenty of people complaining about the scoring also made appreciative comments about the performances. There's a place to simply enjoy skaters' performances and ignore how they're ranked: exhibitions. As far as I'm concerned, if we're going to have figure skating competitions there should be continuing effort made to make scoring as fair as possible. If you're correct in that events like this just can't be prevented no matter what, perhaps the detractors are right and this should not be an Olympic sport. *shrug*
I happen to care about the integrity of a sport I've followed for 20 years. I realize there will always be some subjectivity to it and people's biases toward their countrymen or their favourites, but multiple skating insiders from multiple countries expressing shock and suspicion is something else. It isn't about Yu Na or Carolina. I haven't really been an uber-fan of any singles skaters since Michelle Kwan, and I would have been fine with anyone winning here as long as they genuinely earned it. But I do care about the state of figure skating, so I would want to see something done to give the judging and results more credibility. I want to see reason to take it seriously; I want to see skaters and coaches and countries focus on being truly exceptional enough to achieve great results, rather than politicking to get them.
And I don't agree that controversies to this degree, ones that see skating insiders from all over the place drop their jaws in shock, happen all the time. This isn't like some Russians saying Plushy should have won in Vancouver or some Canadians saying Stojko should have won in Lillehammer or MK fans upset she didn't win Nagano. This is numerous former skaters, commentators, journalists, officials, etc. from countries that didn't have a skater anywhere near the ladies podium expressing great surprise and suspicion. We should just shrug and ignore it and let it keep happening? No thanks.
I happen to care about the integrity of a sport I've followed for 20 years.
It isn't about Yu Na or Carolina.
But I do care about the state of figure skating, so I would want to see something done to give the judging and results more credibility. I want to see reason to take it seriously; I want to see skaters and coaches and countries focus on being truly exceptional enough to achieve great results, rather than politicking to get them.
We should just shrug and ignore it and let it keep happening? No thanks.