Are you really that ignorant or are u just trolling?People of different races also have different ways of their bodies development. Is there any race you want to discriminate?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Are you really that ignorant or are u just trolling?People of different races also have different ways of their bodies development. Is there any race you want to discriminate?
Are you?Are you really that ignorant or are u just trolling?
Why has 'technical difficulty' in figure skating been restricted to jumps? Surely there are other ways of making the sport difficult too. We could reward those as well.
When did they stop forcing the ladies to do a double jump in the SP? Wasn't that the requirement for years and years? A different double jump. Like this year it's the loop and next year it's the flip.
I think the rule was in place simply because none of the ladies were doing the quad so it wasn't an issue. Now it is. I think they will have to allow it now.
I actually think that skating is becoming more monotonous under the current system. The people who win all have the same body type (or maybe two body types), the programs are very similar stylistically (lots of arm and leg flailing) and the spins are pretty boring.
I don’t think the solution is to bar 15 and 16 year olds from competing but rather to reward those skaters who make their programs different and more interesting.
Current PCS scoring is a joke. Some skaters should be getting 0-5s.
I understand your point. Once again, you are right but in theory. The jumps are not only easier for common folks to understand - tech people do review them before making their verdict. I am sure that the decision on Trusova's level 2 was made beforehand. If they looked at it that was before the competition. Because the level appeared immediately after she finished it.
TS: Turns and the two different combinations of three difficult turns (clusters). The TS will call right/left foot for clusters and yes/no as they are happening so the ATS and TC can record it.
ATS/TC : One will look at the turns and clusters and the other will look for rotations and use of body. The individual responsible for rotation and body will say yes/no (i.e. no to body, yes to rotation) at the end of the step sequence or when achieved. The ATS and TC can do either of the roles mentioned above, as preferred....
If any of the panel members would like to review the step sequence, they will call the review after the call is made and not during the step sequence. The verification of features given and not given will be made during the review process so the TC and ATS can write them down for their notes.
It's physically impossible to count the elements change of direction degree of using the body etc in real time.
I think many are forgetting that when Kwan and Lipinski were winning, people wanted to raise the age- especially after Lipinski won the Olympics (and remains the youngest Olympic champion to date).
Why do you believe it's good for skaters' health to raise the age limit (and only for seniors), though?
I'm going to try to take a stab at this from what I believe is to be a non-biased view:
How do we know training quads is dangerous? We can talk about theory - like growth and the formation of bones, but all studies are conducted through experiments and analysis. To my knowledge, none of these studies have been published from a reliable source. No one has compiled a comprehensive study from the data we currently have. For something like this, we can only infer a correlation, not a causation. To do this, we'd have to look at the available data and break it town into three separate variables:
1) Does training quads lead to more injuries than not training quads (training doubles, triples, spins, skating skills, etc.): I don't have enough knowledge to answer this, it'd actually be very interesting if someone has compiled the data from current and past skaters.
2) Does training quads pre-puberty lead to more injuries than training them post-puberty: for the ladies we cannot say as there is no data on this currently, for men we have to look at skaters who trained quads pre-puberty and those to trained them only after puberty - again I do not know myself.
3) Does increasing the age limit prevent skaters from training quads (or is the answer that we have to apply a minimum age to start skating as a whole): This is the only question I can answer from the data I've seen in the ladies, and that is no. Quads are not trained for the sole purpose of senior competitions. In fact, all the ladies who have ever landed a quad in competition did it first in juniors, with the only exception of Tursynbaeva. Many of these ladies have started training these elements way before they even made their international debut (Shcherbakova, Liu, unsure about Trusova and Tusynbaeva, and Kihira and Tuktamysheva's 3A). So to reduce the quads, it would make sense to raise the age limit for juniors, ie. all international competition, to 18, or whatever age threshold is believed to lower the dangers of training quads. This is only the incidence of quads though, nothing about health (that is answered by the first two).
4) Alternatively we can also look at if increasing the age limit reduces injuries overall by looking at percentage of injuries in skaters above 18 and below 18 (if that's the chosen age limit). But this only tells is about figure skating as a whole, not about the quads and this would be about all competitions, not just seniors.
I think those 3 questions have to be answered before we can say that a rule to increase the age limit will be healthier for skaters, or if it even affects health at all.
Obviously, none of the studies would have the appropriate control: one skater cannot be used to test all these things so the biological and environmental variables would not be accounted for. Then, if we were to compile all the data and conclude that an increase in age would be healthier, what makes 18 the magic number? Why not 17 or 20? We'd need the study to determine the age.
This age limit argument has been going on for so long with both sides arguing for what they want for whatever reasons, but I don't think there has been any logical approach to answering how age limits affect the health of skaters.
. I do say that they raise in my mind questions that I would like answered.
I don't support discrimination based on race, gender, nationality or age.
US doesn't have age discrimination at the national level as far as I know. Liu was allowed to participate in Senior Nationals at the age of 13. I like it. It is a good example for the rest of the World. All discriminating limits must be removed.
Of course, this age limits are blatant discrimination.
Look at Kamila Valieva case, for example. She is currently one of the best figure skaters in the World (5th in the Seasons Bests list) and discriminated in so many ways.
1) Age - she is not allowed participate in Seniors competitions internationally and nationally. Also she can't include ChoreoSeq in her FS and 3A in SP not in combo and has to do compulsory 3Lo.
2) Gender - as a Lady, she is not allowed to do her 4T in SP, unlike Men.
3) Nationality - Russian Lady can be even number 4 in the whole World but still won't get WC spot, because country's spots are limited to three. This is obvious and blatant discriminatiion of skaters from countries with strong fields.
How does it solve #1? The skaters will need to train the jumps just as early anyway. In fact, in the worst case scenario it might end up causing the skaters having to take even more extreme measures to "delay puberty", and will cause many more skaters to give up on the sport considering how long it would take until they could reach the "reward" of skating in seniors. Until that point, the sport's very expensive and demanding.As I've mentioned before, I think there are at least three different "problems" to be "solved" by raising age limits:
1. Protect growing children from damaging their bodies until they reach physical and mental maturity/near adulthood
2. Emphasize skating skills that take place blade to ice with less emphasis on in-air rotation
3. Showcase the beauty of adult female women to appeal to casual (primarily hetero male) viewers who watch skating for the sex appeal, or more for artistic maturity (perhaps of more interest to adult women and gay men, if we want to generalize)
Higher risks mean higher rewards, makes sense to me. If the reward was reduced, hardly anyone would bother to take the risk.
Please show me in the rules where it says the division between tech and artistry should be exactly 50%?
Thank you for the post and for laying out the arguments in the way that you did:thumbsup:
I think we agree that there are no studies specifically on quads or on how training a particular jump impacts young skaters.
From my perspective, there are studies showing that intense physical activity affects the health of young athletes, for example these articles on the "Female health triad and adolescent athletes":
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5532188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3435916/
Now I am *not* saying that these articles support one viewpoint or another, I'm not looking for a dissection of those articles. I do say that they raise in my mind questions that I would like answered.
Also trying to be neutral, I believe the points of difference are:
1) specificity of studies: do we need to have studies specific to skating? specific to training quads? specific to anything else :think:
2) action in the meantime: do we wait for studies to come in before taking action? Do we take action and then wait?
My answers would be no to 1) and yes to 2).
There are some arguments (like losing out on an income stream or what young athletes will do "anyway") that don't affect the answers to those two questions for me. Or factors, such as who wins any ladies' comp ever, that matter less to me![]()
I understand that others have different opinions, and of course that is the way of the world.
As I've mentioned before, I think there are at least three different "problems" to be "solved" by raising age limits:
1. Protect growing children from damaging their bodies until they reach physical and mental maturity/near adulthood
2. Emphasize skating skills that take place blade to ice with less emphasis on in-air rotation
3. Showcase the beauty of adult female women to appeal to casual (primarily hetero male) viewers who watch skating for the sex appeal, or more for artistic maturity (perhaps of more interest to adult women and gay men, if we want to generalize)
Are we aiming to protect children, to maintain standards of fundamental skating skills, or to appeal to adult viewers?
The solution to each of these issues may not be the same. So whenever a thread is started that begins by offering a solution (raise age limits) before defining which problem it's intended to solve, the discussion goes back and forth between different issues.
Absolutely! And also other ways to make jumping difficult aside from number of rotations in the air.
I could give a long history of short program rule changes over the past 47 years, much off the top of my head, but I won't interrupt this thread to do so now. To summarize the specifics that may address your question:
Between the 1973 and 1988 seasons, both men and women were required to do a specified solo double jump, and also a different specified double jump in the combination. The other jump in the combination could be double or triple.
Beginning in 1989 senior ladies could do any double jump they pleased as the solo jump. Starting in 1995 they were allowed to do any triple jump in that slot, and around the turn of the century (I don't remember if it started in 1999 or 2001 season), the senior ladies' solo jump was required to be triple.
Since the late 1990s, junior men and women have been required to do a specified solo jump in their short programs, rotating among lutz, flip, and loop. I'm not sure what the junior SP requirements were during the early-90s period when the senior solo jump was not specified.
With the number and success of ladies now attempting quads in their freeskates, I'm sure that the possibility of allowing quads in the short program will be up for discussion and possibly for a vote at the 2020 ISU Congress. I don't know whether it will pass then, but if so I don't expect it would take effect until the 2023 season.
I agree.
Yes, most skaters worldwide earn 0s to 5s. But the skaters who are good enough to compete internationally tend to be better than that. We do see plenty of 5s at lower level senior competition and plenty of 4s and often 3s at junior events.
Skate Canada recommendations for how tech panels should divide the work of calling singles step sequences (other federations and the ISU probably use similar procedures):
It may be impossible for you or for me, but not for former high-level skaters who have spent years practicing and in many cases even more years coaching these turns and know exactly what they should look like without having to think about it. They do get to divide the work so the same person doesn't have to count the changes of direction and also assess the amount of full body movement at the same time.
The big issue with changing the age limits occurred at the 1996 ISU Congress, when the current age limits went into effect with some exceptions that have since expired/been removed.
At the time the vote took place, probably foremost in the delegates' minds were Oksana Baiul winning 1993 Worlds at age 15 too young by the new rules (and then Olympics the following year -- by the new rules she would have been old enough for seniors in 1994 but if they had been in effect at that time she wouldn't have had a full year of senior experience and a world title under her belt) and Michelle Kwan winning 1996 Worlds as a third-year senior at 15 (7 days too young for seniors under the new rules), along with an impressive freeskate by 13-year-old Tara Lipinski who placed 15 at 1996 Worlds.
I.e., the 1996 changes were not a reaction to Lipinski winning, since she hadn't won anything yet, but rather to the trend of very young champions that Lipinski appeared poised to continue -- as indeed she did because of the exception that allowed her to compete as a 14-year-old senior after the rule change.
Most of my friends dislike figure skating, they (like many other critics) don't see it as a real sport because it seems to be more of a beauty pageant.
Why would anyone want to focus on that more? Sexualising young though "legal" female athletes so males have something to get off on? Am I seeing this correctly? What?
I think I'd rather see a thousand Trusova's compete than that.
wow...Showcase the beauty of adult female women to appeal to casual (primarily hetero male) viewers who watch skating for the sex appeal



Bye the way, whats the point of ChoreoSeq ban in Juniors? Is it dangerous element or is it just to discriminate Juniors in TES?