- Joined
- Feb 13, 2014
Where is the argument that Figure Skating's main goal is the mastering of blade? Again, Top contenders already jump bigger than most current men. Yuzuru's jumps are around 48.83 cm in average, his quad is around 60 cm in height (comepare this to a larger man aka Javi whose jumps are about 47cm height in average). Yuzuru's quad toe at Sochi was 3.72 meter. His quad Sal at NHK 2015 was 3.4 meter, how are these jumps small?Again, it's not about 6.0 era, it's about factual science, the physics of jump mechanics. Sport is supposed to quantify physical achievement. Jumping bigger, finishing all of your rotations in the air, landing with perfect posture...these things all take an exertion of energy and a control of the body to make it happen.
No one is ignoring history. I am stating that there are many ways to be amazing. The old style is amazing, and the new style is amazing too. One thing wrong is to define that the old is the ultimate correct one. You prefer the old style ok. But you can't expect people to share the same preference.Furthermore, why do you ignore history? There are great aspects to skating of the past decades that should NOT be forgotten and should still be valued. It's similar to film, you don't just ignore all of the films made 20 years ago, as if they are now useless. You look at the varying techniques and styles and compositions, try to see what worked best and why. The rules in figure skating are whatever we want them to be, the set of values that we ascribe to the process.
You're saying as if it's not the same in other field like music, dance... etc In fact it's the same with all other sports and arts. At least there are people paying money for their children to practice FS, that means there are interest. If there is none, you have no students in the first place.Parents who have the money, of course. There's no doubt that when a skater has immense success like Yu-Na, it's going to lead to others trying to copy that success for themselves. South Korea didn't have much of a figure skating program in the past, now it's better, but that still doesn't speak to sustained audience relation. People will do all manner of things in life simply to achieve success, but more people using figure skating as their method doesn't much help the sport in terms of being something that continually interests a large audience, like movies or music do. After the kids don't achieve the success and the parents stop paying, then what?
How is any of this more artistic than the current bad programs?Hmm, pushing the boundaries how exactly? "Artistry" used to be an important thing to achieve in skating and it's been diminished. Again, one thing pushed aside in service of another. Is the gain worth the loss? That's what is important to consider. Figuring out where to make gains without taking losses is really the ideal.
https://youtu.be/t_LIhHGAOdI?t=2m39s
https://youtu.be/3SHsxx0GE-I?t=46s
https://youtu.be/Q2uNj9JXIKs?t=2m37s
https://youtu.be/WaJwMU_PSmg?t=1m44s
https://youtu.be/sn0tltn83UY?t=3m43s
https://youtu.be/_kMPMyQ4WSk?t=1m4s
https://youtu.be/a_8XhM4n6wo?t=2m14s
https://youtu.be/Ixhmo_iuqH8?t=1m58s
https://youtu.be/5I_-8uUJ94M?t=2m13s
https://youtu.be/IkrfexVFctI?t=3m12s
ok if that's what you believe. Meanwhile Orser says he is forcing Yuzuru to visit the gym for at least 2 hours per day.It IS the system's issue. The guy is going out there an doing extremely difficult jumps, spins, transitions. There's clearly enough physical capability. The issue is where the focus is going, as per the scoring system. Holding your body into good positions, moving your body into interesting shapes, moving directly in time with the music, finishing off your movements, projecting to the audience...these things DO take a lot of energy and skill. That skillset has been pushed aside in the sport, to cram more turns into footwork sequences, more turns/steps into the transitions, twisted positions in spins, more jump combos...it's all more, more, more...instead of showcasing the highest form of dance and theater on ice possible, artistry in motion
Nah, at least with music you have notes to describe it. With dance and choreography you have what? Will you draw the choreography yourself? Unless there's animated video in motion, everything you say about choreography is just on paper and has same weight as paper.Right, but people understand how to read music for a reason, and people can recognize lacking aspects and how it could be better, the same as how editors look at a novel/film/essay and discern how to better arrange and alter the work into its best form.
Since we're on the topic, these have some relevance - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNaXQQbcgw0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zl-N2JleNeU&t=6m50s![]()
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Could we see an epic showdown for a new combination?