Tell that to H/D who wiped out on their twizzles at Worlds FD or Weaver/Poje who lost 4CC 2016 due to Andrew's twizzle error. Or Chock/Bates all of last season. There are usually other elements that other teams mess up or get lower levels on that make up for smaller twizzle issues that the other teams have. That said, I do think there's some protocol judging going on where elements and specific PCS categories aren't being graded on their own but being used to rank teams to maintain a hierarchy...namely for Guignard/Fabbri and a slew of other lower-ranked teams. That's just ice dance though and every team that is enjoying success now had a wait your turn part of their career with some exceptions (like P/C who won Worlds on their second senior year, V/M who like P/C only really had one season of a "wait your turn" during their senior debut, and one can argue the Shibs who earned a World bronze in 2011 though the seasons after that were definitely wait your turn plus the Shibs stagnating a bit due to Maia's growth spurt and Alex's chronic back injuries).
I believe there is a "delay" with relation to PCS in dance. But "wait your turn" is not quite accurate.
No, you aren't suddenly going to grab higher PCS the first time your TES goes over another team. But let's look at Guignard & Fabbri, shall we? They had great technical scores in France. Now people are singing their praises. But people have short memories. Were they singing G&F's praises earlier this season? No. Why not? Because G&F missed their twizzles--very rare for them--at Rostelecom. And G&F bailed on a lift at Lombardia. And G&F had a spectacular fall at Europeans last season.
OK, so taking those into account, they got nowhere.
Same with Hubbell & Donohue last season. They started winning base value marks as early as Skate America. But did they repeat that level of performance? Nope. They had a glitchy performance at TDF, a fall at Nationals, obvious mistakes at 4CCs, a fall at Worlds.
PCS does not go up that way.
But you don't have to sit around waiting for someone to retire. Perseverance is for sure a strength because you
are going to have rough performances, competitions in tough locations, biased panels, what have you.
But what you have to do is go out and skate
strong. And skate strong again. And skate strong again.
That's how P&C got to the top in 2015. That's how the Shibs climbed the ranks in 2016. That is what Stepanova & Bukin are doing right now. Skating strong.
Not waiting. Not getting the marks right away. But throughout the course of several performances.
You
have to have the technical goods. But if you do and do your job over the course of several performances, you climb. You may not climb as fast as fans want you to. You may not climb past other teams with the technical goods. And you aren't likely to climb past those strong steady teams with mutual difficulty. You're probably going to have to have
superior difficulty or
more consistency.
But it's doable.