- Joined
- Sep 14, 2008
Isn't that, in fact, the rule? "Lacking rotatiion (no call) = -1 GOE"?
Yeah for a jump that doesn’t get called, but jumps that get called underrotated shouldn’t receive this deduction (unless it’s, like, a < call on a jump that’s an entire 1/2 turn short). An underrotated jump that gets called is generally not “lacking rotation”, the jump met the amount of rotation for that amount of base value, and can just be seen as an element of its own. The same can be said of forwards-landing (<<) jumps, which shouldn’t be seen as inherently worse than doing a 1/2 turn less rotation and landing backwards, if you are executing it fine. Doing more rotation is strictly more difficult; realistically a 4T<< should actually be given higher base value than a 3T. People don’t practice forwards-landing jumps, so there’s usually other problems with the landing on those types of jumps when they happen, since they are unplanned mistakes.
As I think I said earlier in the thread, I can't score with an open mind if I already know the result, and especially not if I already have opinions about them.
Knowing a result shouldn't change anything about how you evaluate it personally. I'd say that would be something to work on if you have trouble with it. We all already "have opinions" about a competition as we watch it. In our heads we are already thinking about what an element should score or what PCS someone should get as we are watching (at least for me), regardless if we write it down or not at that time. Just by using an internal estimation of what everything should be worth, it's already enough in many cases to have a confident feeling for where someone should place. Sitting down and plugging the exact numbers in only serves to confirm what our internal calculator was already telling us, in the clear-cut cases. In the closer cases, that is where the numbers may differ from a less precise overall feeling, if we were forced to quickly choose.
I have no doubt that for some fans the opportunity to "prove" the results wrong is the biggest part of the enjoyment. That is not at all of interest to me. Nor is trying to prove them right. I'm personally interested in the process of evaluating what I see, according my understanding of the rules in effect.
Hmm, "the biggest part of the enjoyment" is quite a stretch; people who love skating watch it for that reason, and they simply want to see GOOD results. The "process" of evaluating what you see is inherently going to either agree or disagree with judgements that were made. If you can see for yourself that something was called incorrectly, then what? You are just going to sit there with the information and be like "well, that was a nice process"? That's kind of like determining someone got in a car accident because they were speeding and then just leaving it there...
For Skating Skills and Choreography(Composition) especially, we have significantly less reliable input about the performances than the real judges had.
This is simply not true. Judges do not magically see things better just because they are sitting in that designated spot. They actually see things worse in some cases, because the view of the skater's blades are obscured from them near that wall; or if a skater is at a far end of the rink from where a judge is sitting, that can also objectively be a worse viewpoint. It's been debated for a long time that judges shouldn't all be sitting in the same area; there are good reasons to instead spread judges out around the arena. Either way, sitting in a single spot in an arena is never going to provide a better overall viewpoint than a well-filmed version. That's the reality of how skating operates within a long 360 degree space. It's not a typical theater, where everything is constructed to be seen from 180 degree (or less) angle, and where the performers are not moving in a rink-length of distance on the stage.

), and if you spread the judges out, there will be a disparity in how the performances are received. If there is an emotional/expressive section in one corner of the ice, then the judge closest to that might give higher interpretation scores than a judge placed at the other corner of the ice.
"Judge 2 at ice level, paging Judges 6 and 9 in the nose bleeds - I can confirm that there WAS good depth of edge on that counter turn! Over and out!" 


Also, we should check what results would be if the highest and lowest mark don't count in the final results. I think that rule existed back then too!?
