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Out of topic tho but this question occurred to me after reading OS' post. If ISU is pushing for more difficulty in jumps, layouts or combos, why did they increase the base value of the easiest jump? Why not increase the base value of harder jumps (Lutz, Flip, Loop, did not count Axel because its base value already increased) so that more skaters would try to do them [properly] more instead of, say, combos like 3T-3T? Isn't the reason behind elimination of a 3rd 2A in LP is so that skaters would try more difficult jumps? Aren't they contradicting themselves when they suddenly increased the base value of an easier jump but retaining/decreasing the base value of harder jumps? It's so confusing.
Out of topic tho but this question occurred to me after reading OS' post. If ISU is pushing for more difficulty in jumps, layouts or combos, why did they increase the base value of the easiest jump? Why not increase the base value of harder jumps (Lutz, Flip, Loop, did not count Axel because its base value already increased) so that more skaters would try to do them [properly] more instead of, say, combos like 3T-3T? Isn't the reason behind elimination of a 3rd 2A in LP is so that skaters would try more difficult jumps? Aren't they contradicting themselves when they suddenly increased the base value of an easier jump but retaining/decreasing the base value of harder jumps? It's so confusing.
It's a battle of different school of thoughts. Russians value difficulty over quality. They prefer athletes push their limits. But the quality will suffer a little due to the increased difficulty. My guess is, after Vancouver Olympics, the Russian fed pushed the rule change to encourage more quads and ladies going for more difficult jumps because that's how they train their ladies and men and the next Olympics would be held in Russia.
North Americans value quality over difficulty. They train their skaters to try easier layout with cleaner execution. They don't like skaters try harder layouts but give messy/sloppy performances. (That's why USA and Canada have quadless champions.) My guess is, since the world championship will be held in the USA this year, USFS pushed the rule change to encourage easier jump layouts with cleaner execution, thus more deduction for falling on quads, but less deduction for UR quads and higher BV for easier triples.
Only skaters who can execute difficult layouts with exceptional quality can excel regardless of the rule change and the location of the competition.
Thank you Krislite for this detail. You seem to have some good knowledge of the judging system, especially historical. Would you help me out some more? How do you know that the factored GOE led to more +2 and +3 after 2010 than before? Is this data published somewhere by the ISU? I would love to examine this kind of data. Also, how does the ISU encourage judges to give higher PCS scores? In fact, how does the ISU ENCOURAGE the judges to do anything?
Hmmmm so jumping a perfect jump is not quality?
Out of topic tho but this question occurred to me after reading OS' post. If ISU is pushing for more difficulty in jumps, layouts or combos, why did they increase the base value of the easiest jump? Why not increase the base value of harder jumps (Lutz, Flip, Loop, did not count Axel because its base value already increased) so that more skaters would try to do them [properly] more instead of, say, combos like 3T-3T? Isn't the reason behind elimination of a 3rd 2A in LP is so that skaters would try more difficult jumps? Aren't they contradicting themselves when they suddenly increased the base value of an easier jump but retaining/decreasing the base value of harder jumps? It's so confusing.
It is. But going for more difficult layouts increases the risk and makes skaters more likely to mess up. So in general, there is a trade-off between difficulty and quality. Often, one cannot have both. (We rarely see a very difficult layout executed flawlessly with outstanding quality.) So if they have to choose, (most) Russians would choose difficulty and (most) North Americans would choose quality, or less mistakes. (I mean the singles skaters, not pairs or ice dancers.) The skater that has both difficulty and quality will be the leader.
On the women's side, Ashley and Gracie have as much difficulty as the Russians. They generally fail to fully execute the difficult elements (Ashley) or randomly fail to execute a few jumps (Gracie). On quality, Ashley, Gracie, and Evgenia have edge issues on certain jumps, so I don't think it's accurate to say the North Americans have superior jump quality either.
Check out ISUResults protocals. Put them the data into a table and see it rise rise rise![]()
before
http://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2010/owg10_Ladies_SP_Scores.pdf
http://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2010/owg10_Ladies_FS_Scores.pdf
after
http://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2014/owg14_Ladies_SP_Scores.pdf
http://www.isuresults.com/results/owg2014/owg14_Ladies_FS_Scores.pdf
Did Adelina really get a higher TES than Yuna in the SP? Holy crap.
High levels and GOEs on the spins help a lot.
It is. But going for more difficult layouts increases the risk and makes skaters more likely to mess up. So in general, there is a trade-off between difficulty and quality. Often, one cannot have both. (We rarely see a very difficult layout executed flawlessly with outstanding quality.) So if they have to choose, (most) Russians would choose difficulty and (most) North Americans would choose quality, or less mistakes. (I mean the singles skaters, not pairs or ice dancers.) The skater that has both difficulty and quality will be the leader.
What is a North American? The last time I checked, Canada and the US were two separate countries with divergent interests, namely their own.
It is. But going for more difficult layouts increases the risk and makes skaters more likely to mess up. So in general, there is a trade-off between difficulty and quality. Often, one cannot have both. (We rarely see a very difficult layout executed flawlessly with outstanding quality.) So if they have to choose, (most) Russians would choose difficulty and (most) North Americans would choose quality, or less mistakes. (I mean the singles skaters, not pairs or ice dancers.) The skater that has both difficulty and quality will be the leader.
Canada and USA. They are both in North America geographically and they share similar values and philosophy/school of thoughts. Not just people from canada and USA have similar values. People from some other countries share similar values too. But USA and Canada are the leader in their school of thoughts.
canada and usa are completely different in skating imho
The only "North American", from amongst both Men and Ladies, fitting that description is Patrick Chan. So hardly "most".
When it comes to skating, it just isn't true that there is a "North American" school of thought. Isn't Elvis Stojko Canadian? He was the athletic type of skater you claim is typical of Russians. You can't generalize.