Untrue. Look at how many skaters get to compete at Worlds - this year 45 ladies went. Many of them only got to skate 1 of their programs.
24 skaters per Grand Prix event with 6 events = 72 skaters per year would get to skate at TWO international competitions and skate BOTH of their programs each time. Although, not everyone would be skating at 2 events. What you'd really see is something like 40 skaters getting two Grand Prix assignments per year and 64 skaters getting 1 assignment...that's 104 people who are getting international competition experience - WAYYYYYYYY more than the current system!
Each country would be allotted a certain number of placements for the Grand Prix based upon how well that country did in the previous year's Grand Prix. With 144 slots available, you can garuntee that every country gets to send at least 1 skater to a Grand Prix event every year. Maximum placements for a country would be 18 (sending 3 skaters to every single Grand Prix event). The number of placements a country has would be based upon how well they did the previous year in the Grand Prix. Skaters qualify themselves for 0, 1, or 2 assignments based upon how well they did in the previous year and then the Countries themselves decide further placements that are open....ie, if Japan has 18 placements for the ladies and 4 of their ladies automatically qualified for 2 assignments and 4 ladies automatically qualified for 1 assignment, they have 6 spots left to do whatever they want with. They can give a second event to a lady who only qualified for 1 assignment or they can send a lady who did not qualify at all to 1 or 2 events.
I believe this system would be a huge benefit to just about everyone.
~Z