But if the USFSA sticks to its announcement that a skater's entire body of work will be taken into account in naming the team this year ....
afaik, USFS has never made an announcement that a skater's "entire" body of work will be taken into account.
If(??) the Olympic selection criteria are more-or-less analogous to the
2017 Worlds selection criteria, then the Olympic selection criteria would go back only as far as 2017 Nats (which would be in Tier 3 of the Olympic criteria).
Which would mean, for example, that the bodies of work under consideration would not include Ashley's silver medal at 2016 Worlds, but would include (in Tier 1 of the Olympic criteria) Karen's fourth place at 2017 Worlds.
Just catching up on the forums as I've been unable to check in for a bit...So, my 2 cents on a few things:
1. I started my own little spreadsheet to track scores over the season. Counting only Challenger series and the one GP event (anyone with 2 events, I took the higher score), I was surprised to see that Bradie Tennell has the highest score so for out of the US ladies by roughly 8 points. 2nd and 3rd are Mariah Bell and Angela Wang. I'm not saying that those are my picks for Olympic spots, but I think it implies that a lot is up in the air. ...
The
ISU Season's Bests list is a handy way to see the highest scores from Challengers and GPs.
11 | 196.70 Bradie TENNELL USA ISU CS Lombardia Trophy 2017 15.09.2017
20 | 188.56 Mariah BELL USA ISU GP Rostelecom Cup 2017 21.10.2017
25 | 183.85 Angela WANG USA ISU CS Finlandia Trophy 2017 08.10.2017
26 | 183.54 Mirai NAGASU USA ISU CS US Internat. FS Classic 2017 16.09.2017
28 | 182.32 Karen CHEN USA ISU CS US Internat. FS Classic 2017 16.09.2017
I love Angela Wang, but it is worth mentioning that Mirai's ISU SB is only 0.31 lower than Angela's.
And Karen's ISU SB is only 1.53 lower than Angela's.
So ... yes, I agree that a lot is up in the air.
I believe some of our pairs have taken lessons from Mozer over the summer. Sending some of our promising juniors to Eteri or some Japanese coaches? ...
Anecdotally and FWIW:
Something that has been happening at least to some extent in the past is that on visits to the U.S., some top non-U.S. coaches are working with U.S. skaters. What I recall off the top of my head (and I bet there are other examples):
- Mie Hamada was one of the coaches at the summer 2017 edition of USFS Jump On It! Camp in Colorado Springs.
- Mishin has worked with U.S. skaters (such as Mirai, IIRC) when he brought some of his skaters to the U.S. for summer training.
- Moskvina has worked in the U.S. (Florida, Colorado Springs, etc.) with lots of U.S. pairs.
Thinking about it - I'm a little concerned about Karen choreographing her own LP right before Skate Canada. ...
It just gives the impression that she doesn't need the top-tier everything because she's not an OGM contender. ...
If Karen is suddenly program-less, USFS should be getting her together with an amazing choreographer.
I just think it's a bad look. Perception matters.
Disagree.
Last season, Karen got her career-best results with her own choreography. First place at Nats and fourth place at Worlds.
To put it another way: To date, the choreographer who has gotten Karen Chen the best results is Karen Chen.
Don't understand why it would be a bad look for her to go with what has worked best for her in the past.