Sorry to stray off topic again (or is it any more?) . . .
The one time, I will give you that Michelle's placement was completely unfair was at the 1997 National Championships, where Michelle Kwan fell all over the place and placed second. THAT, I will give you was a joke.
The problem was, there was really only one lady at 1997 Nationals who skated two clean programs, and that was Tara Lipinski. WHOEVER ended up with the silver was going to be someone who had one or more disruptive errors in at least one program.
Did you also watch the short programs?
Standings after the short were
1. Kwan
2. Lipinski
3. Kwiatkowski
4. Corwin
5. Nikodinov
6. Bobek
and then everyone else
Lipinski and Kwiatkowski "controlled their own destiny." Corwin and Nikodinov needed some other skater to get between them and Kwan in order to defeat her. Bobek needed two other skaters to get between.
Standings for the long were
1 Lipinski
2 Bobek
3 Kwan
4 Nikodinov
5 Corwin
6 Kwiatkowski
There's a good argument for putting Kwan 4th in the long, behind Nikodinov. If that had happened, the medal placements would not have changed:
2 1 Lipinski 1.0 + 1.0 = 2.0
1 4 Kwan 0.5 + 4.0 = 4.5
6 2 Bobek 3.0 + 2.0 = 5.0
5 3 Nikodinov 2.5 + 3.0 = 5.5
The only way for Kwan to have placed 3rd overall would have been for Nikodinov to defeat Bobek in the long and/or for Kwan to be 5th or lower in the long, behind Corwin. For her to have missed the podium entirely, both would have to have happened.
Looking beyond jumps landed and missed, there were good skating-related reasons why those things wouldn't have happened.