- Joined
- Nov 16, 2014
Yuna Kim's flawless performances at 2010 Winter Olympics are the greatest I have ever seen!




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Here is Chen Lu now, pictured with some of her students at her skating facility in Shenzhen (near Hong Kong). Same prominent cheekbones, same deep dimples. Add Lulu to the list of "fine wine" ladies who become more fascinating as they acquire maturity.
http://photogiving.smugmug.com/photos/223838453-M.jpg
Thanks Mathman. I change the word for Chen lu from exotic to exquisite. I recall her looking at the camera with incredible eyes that dimple and her burgundy velvet simple classy dress. One of my favorite ladies ever and I thought she should have won in 1996. Michelle was spot on perfect. Her ending pose on the beat. Incredible packaging turned Kwan from a pony tailed kid with no make up and a juvenile dress into Salome. If ever there should be a tie and two golds awarded it was this competition. I really loved them both. Tough call to this day
Here is Chen Lu now, pictured with some of her students at her skating facility in Shenzhen (near Hong Kong). Same prominent cheekbones, same deep dimples. Add Lulu to the list of "fine wine" ladies who become more fascinating as they acquire maturity.
http://photogiving.smugmug.com/photos/223838453-M.jpg
http://photogiving.smugmug.com/photos/223843369-M.jpg
Wow, She looks like Tennis Star Li Na who is also from china. https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/...jojS6P8vI6n4OMk3VsQT5U_x9mVwWlNkuKfrF2XGpUt_d
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/...024eaCLZtqs8VTJbY3_SSDyA39AzrrVf6qRGsq5s_3vUA

In what way do these two look alike, mrrice?![]()

^Do all Asians/Chinese look alike to you? Michelle and Bebe, Li and Lu look nothing alike...![]()
Honestly I just found your comparison a little amusing, but I am not at all laughing at you, mrrice.This is actually a good question and here's my honest answer.
First, they both have dark brown hair that is virtually the same length, they both have very pretty smile's and big dimples. The fact that they are both from China is a mere coincidence as I saw them both when they were in the US. To me, it would be no different than thinking that Michelle Kwan and Bebe Liang looked alike. I hope that made sense
I'm not sure where your question was going but, I will say this much. As a Black Man from Germany from US Parents. I learned a long time ago not to read too much into things. You'd be surprised at how many times people would say rude things about me when I was traveling "Assuming" I wouldn't understand......I loved busting them in their own language.![]()

It's pretty much speculation as to the reasons for the scoring change unless someone knows first hand. But there is no way Kim's long program at 2010 Worlds should have scored higher than Mao's, with a triple axel, no fall and no popped jump.
Honestly I just found your comparison a little amusing, but I am not at all laughing at you, mrrice.Actually they in no way look alike! I don't want to go into details to avoid offending some tennis fans...
![]()
It was a glitch in the system that allowed Yuna, with a fall and a popped axel, to place above Mao in the long program at 2010 Worlds. That is the likely reason why the value of GOE's was lowered.
I think it might have been a little of both. Yuna won the Olympics with such a huge gap over a good performance by Mao, and then controversially she won Worlds with a flawed performance. In any case the ISU responded by lowering GOEs, raising the value of a triple Axel, and disallowing skaters to cover up the lack of a jump (loop in Yuna's case) by doing three double Axels.
Yuna fans thought that the ISU was deliberately targeting Yuna and specifically elevating the chances of her chief rival, most likely thanks to sinister politicking by the Japanese federation. I don't know about all that, but they did tinker with the code of points in a way that they thought would produce more balanced results.
... I grew up hearing "All Black People Look Alike" ...

And some of us grew up hearing that all Chinese people look alike.
So the concern over your posts should be perfectly understandable to you.
I think it might have been a little of both. Yuna won the Olympics with such a huge gap over a good performance by Mao, and then controversially she won Worlds with a flawed performance. In any case the ISU responded by lowering GOEs, raising the value of a triple Axel, and disallowing skaters to cover up the lack of a jump (loop in Yuna's case) by doing three double Axels.
Yuna fans thought that the ISU was deliberately targeting Yuna and specifically elevating the chances of her chief rival, most likely thanks to sinister politicking by the Japanese federation. I don't know about all that, but they did tinker with the code of points in a way that they thought would produce more balanced results.
Did Peggy quote Sandra Bezic? I always thought Sandra said that before Michelle did her ex program to "Fields of Gold."
. Sponsors of ISU are mainly Japanese companies. Japanese federations are very active in supporting their skaters unlike Korean federations KSU. KSU are more interested in Speed skating. They are not happy about Yuna’s success. I think ISU would have happily changed scoring systems. Let's see what ISU would do about Hanyu. I seriously doubt they would make changes about scoring systems at least before olympics 2018.Gosh, I hate to disagree with Mathman, but the system, not Yuna, made being satisfied with sloppy jumps unsustainable. I seriously doubt that the perfection of Liza Tuk's triple lutz was inspired by anything other than the points, including the positive GOE's she was likely to garner from landing it. Likewise with the scoring revisions. It was a glitch in the system that allowed Yuna, with a fall and a popped axel, to place above Mao in the long program at 2010 Worlds. That is the likely reason why the value of GOE's was lowered.