Only if her name is Gabby Daleman... you realized that what you were saying did not make sense so you pretend only gabby Daleman can do it but we both know it is not true. I agree Karen does seem to struggle with growth, but her skating does not need improvement to be great. And yes, she's not miles ahead of the others, she is only much better than them. As for Ashley, it's the media thing. Without her it would seem so empty.
Only time will tell who is right, you or me. But I honestly cannot believe Karen will be fighting for a spot.
She has so much potential. I don't necessarily think top 3 should go. It's just the one competition, although I understand the need for people to have a clear cut selection criteria, it is not that simple.
If Karen doesn't up her game from what she's shown so far, she won't be sent (unless everyone bombs Nats, which I hope doesn't happen). Bradie's been by far the strongest US lady this season, and she's had good competition after good competition since June. Minimal mistakes across 3 (?) summer comps, a Challenger and a GP. Nationals will be more pressure, but she did fine with the increased pressure/attention at SA. If she skates like she has been, she'll be on the team. Especially with the team event - her consistency is a big asset for that. So that's one spot.
As much as Ashley's struggled this year, she beat Karen at Skate Canada and in the SP at Skate America. And if she finishes top 3, there's no way she's getting bumped for anyone.
And then Mirai. She beat Karen the US Classic and Japan Open. She was quite a bit stronger at NHK than Karen was at SA. And if she manages top 3 at Nats, I doubt the USFSA wants to bump her a 2nd time. I don't think there would be a justification for it - Karen hasn't been nearly impressive enough to rely on body of work. She has to skate well at Nats.
If Karen delivers at Nats like she did last year, she should definitely go. But there's not a good argument to putting her on the team if she misses top 3 imo. She doesn't have anywhere near the body of work that Ashley did in 2014.
According to a poster with access to the members section of the website, they have stated that they are also going to look at the trajectory of scores over the course of the season.
Athletes shall be selected based upon performance(s) in the events below. The events have been stratified into tiers from the highest value events in Tier 1 through the lowest value events in Tier 3. Events within each tier shall be evaluated at equal weight.
Tier 1
- 2018 U.S. Figure Skating Championships
- TBD
- 2018 ISU Grand Prix Final
- N/A
- 2017 ISU World Figure Skating Championships
- Karen (4th, ~14 points away from 3rd), Ashley (7th, ~20 points from 3rd), Mariah (12th)
Tier 2
- 2017 Grand Prix Series Competitions
Bradie (3rd, 204.10), Ashley (3rd, 183.94, WD), Courtney (4th, 182.57), Mirai (9th, 4th, 178.25, 194.46), Karen (7th, 8th, 170.40, 182.80), Mariah (6th, 9th, 188.56, 166.04), Polina (10th, 157.77), Amber (9th, 151.14)
- 2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships
- Mirai (3rd), Mariah (6th), Karen (12th)
Tier 3
- 2017 Challenger Series Events and other senior international competitions
- Bradie (4th, 196.70), Mirai (2nd, 183.54), Karen (3rd, 182.32), Angela (4th, 5th, 183.85, 160.04), Courtney (4th, 3rd, 174.16, 165.39), Caroline (6th, 4th, 167.95, 170.82), Amber (8th, 149.96)
- 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships
- Karen (1st), Ashley (2nd), Mariah (3rd), Mirai (4th), Caroline (5th), Angela (7th), Amber (8th), Bradie (9th), Courtney (12th)
- 2017 World Junior Figure Skating Championships
- Bradie (7th), Starr (12th)
- 2017 ISU Junior Grand Prix Final
- N/A
Back in 2014, Ashley had bronze at the GPF, gold and silver at her GPs, 5th at Worlds 2013, and was National champ in 2013. A much stronger body of work than Karen has.