That plan was because of everyone seeing the video of Jin doing a perfect SP with 4Lutz+3Toe and 4Toe in competition. It doesn't matter that Jin hadn't yet competed on the Grand Prix, everyone already knew what he had done and what he was going to do.
Top athletes push the tech when there are new challengers that can seriously threaten them. Jin's clean SP with 2 quads only scored 90 in his first senior competition COC, which is much lower (10+ points) than Hanyu's clean SP with only 1 quad. It also scored much lower than Fernandez, Ten and Chan's clean 1-quad SP. So Jin is not a threat to any of the top skaters. None of Fernandez, Ten, Chan and Hanyu pushed the tech because of Jin. Nobody followed Jin because he did a two-quad SP. (It's the same reason nobody followed Goebel because Goebel was not a threat to either Yagudin nor Plushenko. Even with 3 quad and 2 axel, Goebel scored lower than both Yagudin and Plushenko who did only 2 quads. Similarly, nobody followed Kovtun and Reynold to do 2-quad SP because they are not threat to anybody.)
After Hanyu skated two consecutive competitions clean, all of Fernandez, Chan and Ten immediately upped their tech because Hanyu became a much bigger threat. (If Hanyu only skated clean once, other skaters might think it's just a fluke. In fact, nobody upped their tech after NHK. But skating clean twice makes him a much bigger threat. That's when (after GPF) the other top skaters all upped their tech.) Top skaters don't take risk casually just because there is someone out there trying risky elements. (There are many skaters who try risky elements.) They are actually waiting to see if there is someone who can succeed in risky layout and do it consistently and outscore them before they try more risky layout themselves because taking more risk will make them more inconsistent, increase the risk of injuries and lower their chance of winning.
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What sets Jin apart is that he can do three different quads.Now Uno has a quad flip. Can Hanyu's quad loop be far behind?