Why the men’s free skate?
Like I mentioned before, the data that I used to produce these calculations comes exclusively from the men’s free skates for Olys, Worlds, 4CC/Euros, and Grand Prix competitions. There were a few reasons I decided to restrict my data set in this way. First, because of different PCS factoring and different required elements between the short and the free program and between, say, men’s and ladies’, score differentials are not comparable across different competition segments and different fields. The men’s free skate tends to have relatively large variations in scores relative to other fields and segments, as there are simply more available GOE and PCS points. Therefore, it wouldn’t make sense to put men’s free skate data in the same data set as the ladies’ free skate, or the men’s short.
Because of how time consuming it was to do the analysis for a single segment of a single field, I did not look at other segments or other fields, nor did I look at B level competitions. Sorry, even I don’t have that much time on my hands. However, I would like to note that the time consuming aspects of running the analysis can be automated, so the ISU could still run the same analysis as long as they were willing to pay the one time cost of hiring a programmer. I don’t know how to program, so I have to do it by hand.
As for why the men’s free, and not the ladies’ free, or the pairs’ short, or whatever, that’s just a matter of personal preference. The men’s event is my favorite event, so I’m more interested in data about it than data from other events. *shrug* Hey, if you want to see what the other events looks like, you can run this analysis yourself. It’s worth noting that almost all judges judge for more than one field, and if they’re biased judging for one field, they’re probably biased judging for other fields.