- Joined
- Dec 28, 2006
in answer to the original question, i hope that 2007 ladies chmpion puts out a clean, dramatic, daring, artistic, emotionl perofrmncae. may the lady(of whatever nationallity) that does this be the winner!
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Sorry, most of the Japanese are not interested in pairs and dance.
I don't understand this reasoning. Why SHOULD they be in parity? What if a skater is one-sided?This thread, along with the thread about whether Mao will break 200, raises the question of whether the ISU ought to tweak the factoring of the PCSs to bring the two scores back into parity.
The reason that the ladies' program component scores are factored by .80 for the SP and 1.60 for the LP is to keep the PCSs of roughly the same importance as the technical scores. For instance, 2003 Skate America Sasha had TES = 32.50 and PCS = 33.96, while the next week at Skate Canada she got 37.20 + 33.92. This is the ballance that the CoP evisioned.
But at 2006 NHK Mao's scores were TES = 40.30 and PCS = 29.20. This is way out of whack, reflecting the fact that the sport is advancing technically so fast that the artistic side can't keep up. Maybe next year they should change the weighting on the PCSs to something like 1.00 and 2.00 for ladies and 1.25 and 2.50 for men.
Mao would have got an extra 7.3 points on the PCSs at NHK, giving her 40.30 + 36.50.
Please pray for Mao's injury, otherwise, the US ladies might not win worlds and olympics for a while. Mao said before whatever the result at Vancouver, she will continue until 2014.
I don't know about should, but I think it was the original intention of the CoP that this would turn out to be the case. Under 6.0 scoring the two marks were given equal weight, except for tie-breaking.I don't understand this reasoning. Why SHOULD they be in parity? What if a skater is one-sided?
)I don't know about should, but I think it was the original intention of the CoP that this would turn out to be the case. Under 6.0 scoring the two marks were given equal weight, except for tie-breaking.
Any individual skater might be stronger on one side than the other, but I think the reasoning was that overall it is the balance between artistry and technical prowess that distinguishes and defines figure skating.
I would have to look at a lot of numbers to see whether there is cause for concern or whether Mao is just a dramatic exception. For instance, here are the scores for the ladies free skate at the Grand Prix Final (TES+PCS):
Kim: 61.78 + 57.36
Meier: 56.82 + 54.00
Suguri: 48.12 + 55.52
Asada: 48.14 + 57.04
Sebestyen: 41.69 + 51.60
Ando: 35.40 + 54.40
(um, never mind)
I think Mao deserves all the hypes.
At NHK trophy, she earned almost 200 points with two mistakes.
This score is practically impossible for Kim's potentials, and definitely enough to win this year's worlds (unless Ando skates perfectly WITH a quad).
At GPF, the difference between flawless Kim and four times mistaken Mao was ONLY 12 points. At last years Jr Worlds, Kim's score was 24 points higher than three times mistaken Mao. This means Mao made a great progress in this season. I guess who be shocked the most was Kim herself. It's clear that Mao can beat Kim with 2 or 3 mistakes.
Mao will be able to reach 210 mark with perfect performances. In short, she can almost always win even with one big or two minor mistakes.
satoratore, I grant you that if Mao skates consistently all the time with no mistakes, she will be absolutely unbeatable.
That said, I do wish there were at least one lady who could catch up to her. .
Actually, this can be quantitfied pretty directly. For every .25 difference in PCSs across the board (say, 8.0 versus 7.75 for every judge in every category), you gain 1.8 points in the total PCSs in the LP.This basically means that PCS cannot be relied to make up for significate deficits in TES scores. Only for two ladies with pretty much the same TES can the PCS play the deciding role in who comes out on top.
True, but you can't blame the big dog for winning all the time or his/her fans for cheering for their fave. It's up to the other skaters to do something about it.When someone wins all the time and no one else can beat them, it can get beat pretty boring for the viewers. Take the example of Plushenko. His constant #1 status has certainly brought him glory, but the competitions in which he participated were less fun to watch as a result of it. Knowing that he would win for sure made things less exciting.
1996 - Kwan vs Chen
1998 - Lipinski vs Kwan
.
blue dog wants to compare Mao to skaters like Kwan?
I don't see any senses.
In past (at least after Katarina Witt), there was no woman skater who is allowed to make mistakes and still win. The only possible comparison with Mao is Plushenko.
Actually, this can be quantitfied pretty directly. For every .25 difference in PCSs across the board (say, 8.0 versus 7.75 for every judge in every category), you gain 1.8 points in the total PCSs in the LP.
So, for instance, a skater who got straight 8.0s would have a 7.2 point advantage over a skater who got straight 7.0s (a triple Axel is worth 7.5).
In practice this effect is mitagated by the fact that if you land all your tech stuff the PCSs tend to go up on their own automatically.
Mao hasn't been around as long as either Kat or Kwan. No comparison. She hasn't withstood the test of time. None of these girls have.
Yeah the fact that the PCS goes up if all the tech stuff is landed is one of the things that negates the possibility of genuine advantage based on PCS.
But ....... judges could use PCS to tilt the score in favor of a skater that strikes their fancy... Let's pretend that Carolina Kostner has an amazing performance and the judges want to give her a medal ahead of someone who's landed more jumps. They'll merely bring down the PCS of that other competitor and bring Carolina's up. Politiking is possible ;-) Always!!!